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The Boogey Man is a 1980 American supernatural slasher film written and directed by Ulli Lommel, and starring Suzanna Love, John Carradine, and Ron James.The film's title refers to the long-held superstition of boogeymen beings, and its plot concerns two siblings who are targeted by the ghost of their mother's deceased boyfriend which has been freed from a mirror.
The Boogeyman: Ulli Lommel: Suzanna Love, John Carradine, Felicite Morgan United States [9] Cannibal Apocalypse: Antonio Margheriti: Giovanni Lombardo Radice, John Saxon, Wallace Wilkinson Italy Spain [10] Cannibal Holocaust: Ruggero Deodato: Robert Kerman, Carl Gabriel Yorke, Francesca Ciardi: Italy [11] Cardiac Arrest: Murray Mintz
Boogeyman II (known as Revenge of the Boogeyman in the United Kingdom) [1] is a 1983 American horror film directed by Ulli Lommel and starring Suzanna Love, Ulli Lommel, and Shannah Hall. It is a sequel to the 1980 film The Boogeyman. Like its predecessor, the film was banned in the United Kingdom as a "video nasty" during the 1980s.
The movie takes on the mythical creature of the boogeyman. Frances ( Erin Chambers ) starts noticing strange things happening in her community, such as dogs on her neighbors’ roofs and swimming ...
Inspired by King's short story of the same name, The Boogeyman focuses on the Harper sisters, 10-year-old Sawyer (Vivien Lyra Blair) and teen Sadie (Yellowjackets' standout Soph.
(Amazingly, The Boogeyman has maintained a PG-13 rating.) Those early reactions, plus a plea from famed author Stephen King, whose beloved 1973 short story the film is based on, changed The ...
In 2016, Hollywood Action House began developing Boogeyman Chronicles, a series of eight 45-minute episodes. Inspired by Lommel's 1980 cult hit The Boogeyman, the first episode was planned to begin airing worldwide on Halloween 2018. The new story line was developed after test audiences in the U.S. and Europe saw various cuts of a series of ...
These tropes collide — effectively, if without much originality — in “The Boogeyman,” a loose adaptation of Stephen King’s 1973 short story of the same name.