House of Dust | |
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Directed by | A.D. Calvo |
Screenplay by | Nevada Grey & Alyssa Alexandria |
Story by | A.D. Calvo |
Produced by | A.D. Calvo Todd Slater |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Christo Bakalov |
Production company | Budderfly / Goodnight Film |
Distributed by | Anchor Bay Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
House of Dust is a 2014 supernatural thriller film directed by A.D. Calvo.[1] The movie had its world premiere on May 20, 2014 and focuses on a group of college students that become possessed by the ghosts of former mental patients. Filming took place in Willimantic, Connecticut and Mansfield, Connecticut at the Mansfield Training School and Hospital, University of Connecticut, and Eastern Connecticut State University during the summer of 2011.[2][3]
Plot
1951 - Having already killed OCD patient Billy Brown (Michael Goodin) at the Redding House Asylum, a psychiatrist (Stephen Spinella) experiments on simple-minded inmate Melvin Veman (Peyton Clarkson) and sociopath Levius Laitura (John Lee Ames). With Levius still alive, the psychiatrist has his orderlies put the bodies of all three men inside the crematorium to burn them.
Present Day - Camden College student Dylan (Eddie Hassell) tells his girlfriend Gabby (Holland Roden) and his roommate Kolt (Steven Grayhm) about the now abandoned asylum's haunted history. New student Emma (Inbar Lavi) moves in as Gabby's roommate and Kolt takes a liking to her. However, fellow students Allyson (Alesandra Assante), Christine (Nicole Travolta) and Blythe (Joy Lauren) do not.
Dylan, Kolt, Gabby and Emma break into Redding House after a party to look around despite a warning from campus security guard Clyde (Justin James Lang). Emma has strange experiences while exploring on her own. The other three knock over a container of cremated ashes and inhale the dust of the three men burned there in 1951.
A recovering psychiatric patient herself, Emma begins experiencing haunting visions upon returning to the dorm. The behavior of the other three students gradually changes as Billy possesses Dylan, Melvin inhabits Gabby and Levius takes control of Kolt's body.
Allyson is killed by someone unseen while doing laundry. Christine is later killed while taking her dog outside. Suspecting that the disappearances and the odd behaviors are related to the asylum, Emma tries to go back to Redding House, but Clyde prevents her from going inside.
With Levius in full control of his actions, Kolt attacks Emma. Emma eventually flees into the asylum and confirms her suspicions when she examines patient records and finds the empty urn knocked over by the others. Emma then finds the dead bodies of Allyson, Christine and Blythe (who was killed off screen).
Kolt captures Emma, but Dylan knocks him unconscious (he also knocks Emma unconscious as well) and traps Kolt in the crematorium with Gabby. Emma recovers and frees Kolt and Gabby from the fire, which releases everyone from their possessions. Dylan coughs up Billy's spirit as well. The four students escape Redding House with Clyde's assistance. The crematorium dust goes through the chimney and into the air, ultimately possessing a little boy (Anthony Scarpone-Lambert) playing in the park with the other children nearby.
Cast
- Inbar Lavi as Emma
- Steven Grayhm as Kolt
- Eddie Hassell as Dylan
- Holland Roden as Gabby
- John Lee Ames as Levius Laitura
- Peyton Clarkson as Melvin Veman
- Michael Goodin as Billy Brown
- Stephen Spinella as Psychiatrist
- Justin James Lang as Clyde
- Alesandra Assante as Allyson
- Joy Lauren as Blythe
- Nicole Travolta as Christine
- Anthony Scarpone-Lambert as Boy
Reception
HorrorNews.net panned House of Dust, praising the movie's cast while stating that the movie "didn’t bring anything new to the table and was just lackluster and forgettable overall".[4] DVD Verdict gave a mixed review and commented that while the movie was "no classic", that "A.D. Calvo directs the action well and gets good performances from actors lacking much experience" and that it would appeal best to fans of independent horror or films set in mental institutions.[5]
References
- ↑ "'House of Dust' Cast Revealed, Shooting Underway". Bloody Disgusting. 3 August 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
- ↑ Lenker, George (19 May 2014). "Longmeadow filmmaker assists in new horror release, 'House of Dust'". MassLive. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
- ↑ Chaiken, Mike. "New horror flick uses Connecticut as its backdrop" (PDF). The Step Saver/ The Observer. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
- ↑ Martin, Todd (13 May 2014). "Film Review: House of Dust". HorrorNews.net. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
- ↑ Loomis, Daryl (22 May 2014). "House of Dust (review)". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2014.