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The 1987 sequel Evil Dead II was thus distributed under the similar title La Casa 2, and also did well in the Italian box office. Attempting to capitalize on the successes of the Evil Dead films, Italian filmmaker Joe D'Amato produced an unofficial sequel titled La Casa 3 (later released in English-speaking countries as Ghosthouse ).
The film was shot in Spain from October to November 2006 [2] under the working title Mamba in Getxo, Sopelana, Mundaka, Vizcaya, País Vasco and Madrid. [3] The movie has been picked up for distribution by Voltage Pictures and was released in 2009. The official trailer and poster were released on February 26, 2008. [4]
The film was eventually picked up by distributor Achille Manzotti who re-titled the film in Italy as La casa 3-Ghosthouse where the film was distributed by Gruppo on August 11. [1] Naming horror films "La Casa" with houses in their titles was a popular trend in 1980s Italy, which began with the American films The Evil Dead and Evil Dead 2 being ...
The film has been well received in its country of origin, where it grossed $4.4 million [1] and became the highest-grossing horror film in the history of Venezuela. [2] After a festival run in which it won various awards, it also became the most distributed Venezuelan film in the world, showing in 33 countries.
The film had a budget of 4.6 million dollars. [1] Set design was made by Ferdinando Scarfiotti, while costumes were designed by Milena Canonero. [2] It was shot between Los Angeles, Cinecittà and the Mojave Desert. [1] To reproduce the movements of the mamba, Orfini used a steadicam technique. [3]
The Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art, known locally as the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (MAMBA), is a modern art museum located in the San Telmo district of Buenos Aires, Argentina. History [ edit ]
La casa is a 2024 Spanish slice-of-life drama film directed by Álex Montoya based on the graphic novel of the same name by Paco Roca. Its ensemble cast features David Verdaguer , Luis Callejo , Óscar de la Fuente, Olivia Molina , María Romanillos , Lorena López, Marta Belenguer, Jordi Aguilar, Tosca Montoya, and Miguel Rellán .
La Casa Muda was shot to look like it was in real time in one continuous 88 minute take. Its claims that it is one of only a handful of theatrically-released movies to be shot in a continuous long take, and that it is the first ever single-take horror film, are contentious, as the camera used, the Canon EOS 5D Mark II, can only film up to 15 minutes of continuous footage. [2]