Evil Spirits (1991) Poster

(1991)

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4/10
The lines are open! Vote now for the craziest person of this house.
Coventry24 April 2022
It can never be a good sign when you have a cast literally chock-full of fantastic and beloved B-movie actors/actresses, and yet the film itself is completely unknown.

Oh well, "Evil Spirits" perhaps isn't the schlocky & purely fun horror flick that it should have been, but it's worth seeing if only for the names in the cast and the wondrously absurd characters they are depicting. Karen Black, one of the most astounding horror-wenches in history, shines as utterly deranged landlady Ella Purdy who butchers the residents of her LA boardinghouse, but keeps collecting their social security cheques. That's not such an unusual plot for a cheap horror flick, but the film is memorably because every single resident in the house is utterly insane. Mrs. Purdy herself, of course, because she kills and still has conversations with her sarcastic dead husband George. Also her tenants are quite bonkers, including a peeping tom novelist (Michael Berryman), a self-declared spiritual medium (Martine Beswick), a mute girl addicted to dancing (Debra Lamb), and an alcoholic who somehow resurrects after every murder attempt. Oh right, there's also a sort of cannibalistic ghoul chained in the basement.

"Evil Spirits" is primarily silly and tongue-in-cheek; - not too gory and definitely not scary or suspenseful. There are a couple of lovely highlights (Lamb's strip-dance, a few eye-stabbings, dead George's sardonic remarks, ...) but the film is overall too slow-paced, occasionally dull, and unsurprising. More veteran horror icons show up in tiny supportive roles, like Robert Quarry, Bert Remsen, and Yvette Vickers.
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4/10
Not good ...not bad ... not evil ... not worth seeing ...............
merklekranz24 November 2009
A nice assortment of cult and over the hill actors cannot save this horror - comedy. Karen Black is the same whacked character you've seen in any number of her horror films. Michael Berryman is totally wasted as a writer/voyeur. Martine Beswicke as a séance medium overacts to the extreme. The rest of the oddball borders include the most stereotypical drunk ever, and Artie Johnson shows up for a paycheck as a Social Security investigator. Almost the entire movie takes place in a claustrophobic Victorian house, and the whole thing just sort of grinds on to a very underwhelming conclusion. Those curious only because of the unusual cast have been warned. - MERK
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Survivor Benefits...
azathothpwiggins31 January 2022
EVIL SPIRITS is a fun, schlocky, madhouse of a movie starring the incredible Karen Black as Ella Purdy. Ella runs a boardinghouse in much the same way as Norman ran the Bates motel. Her tenents just can't seem to stay alive for long, leaving Ella with the chore of burying them and cashing their Social Security checks.

This movie is filled to bursting with oddball characters including a nonverbal girl who dances continually, a drunk, a medium, and Michael Berryman as a writer / peeping Tom. There are murders aplenty, as well as cannibalism, a seance, and the disembodied voice of Ella's late husband.

Watch for Arte Johnson as a Social Security operative, Yvette Vickers as a nosey neighbor, Robert Quarry as a doctor, and Hoke Howell as the mailman!

This is Cinema...
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2/10
Waste of a good cult cast
udar5511 March 2011
Boardinghouse owner Mrs. Purdy (Karen Black) likes to off her elderly tenants but keep their Social Security checks coming. Her deadly scam risks exposure when investigator Lester Potts (Arte Johnson) starts sticking his nose around. This is really lousy stuff and moves at a snails pace. There are a few slightly gory murders and one big nude scene but you'll be heading for the film enhancement button (FF) with the "loony" stuff of Purdy always hears her dead husband's voice crack wise whenever anyone says or does something. There is a surprisingly game cast including Martine Beswick, Virginia Mayo, Bert Remsen, Yvette Vickers, Robert Quarry, Anthony Eisley, and Michael Berryman (whose face with a gouged out eyeball adorns the VHS cover). Sadly, none of them are given anything interesting to do outside of of Berryman being a peeping tom.
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8/10
Hilarious--Black is Whack and we love her for it!
ThrownMuse4 October 2007
Batty widower Ella (Karen Black!) rents out the rooms in her giant house to various boarders in order to make ends meet. When one of his clients goes missing from the residence, a snoopy social services agent discovers her boarders have an abnormally high "turnover" rate. YES! "Evil Spirits' is tailor made for fans of Karen Black's zany side. While this film is really just a vehicle for her weirdness (at one point she's talking with her parrot, making the strangest noises I've ever heard come out of her mouth, all while crossing her eyes and smiling at it like it's lunch), it's actually a pretty good ride. Unlike later films where her charm is the only redeeming quality, such as "Auntie Lee's Meat Pies," "Evil Spirits" is an all-around hoot. Ella is such a kooky character. Several scenes just feature her laughing maniacally for extended periods of time. This is priceless, prime Karen Black! Even though her husband is dead, Ella still talks to him on a regular basis (the Danny Devito-ish voice that retorts back with silly comment is one of the movie's more grating downsides.) While many of the boarders are older and/or ready to kick the bucket (hmm!), she does have a few eccentric younger folks staying with her. A young lady named Tina is like a throwback to Vulnavia from "Dr. Phibes," gracefully dancing (or, um, flailing) about the other characters at random times, except instead of ornate outfits and headpieces she has a leotard and 80s hair. There's also a spastic and pretentious author (Michael Berryman refreshingly playing against type) who spends much of his time staring through peepholes at Tina undressing as she dances. And don't forget "Neighbor," a bitchy middle-aged lady who doesn't appreciate that the yard next door smells like doody! It's a witty performance by drive-in starlet Yvette Vickers*. So, okay, okay, "Evil Spirits" is not incredibly original and it's completely predictable. It's a bit of a throwback to films like "Whatever Happened to Aunt Alice?" and even Black's film from two decades earlier, "Burnt Offerings." However, it's tongue is planted so firmly in it's cheek that it bursts right through. Black and company go full throttle with the whackiness, and it's a wonderful time.

*not to be confused with Aussie icon Jacque Vickers.
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8/10
An enjoyably silly tongue-in-cheek horror black comedy hoot
Woodyanders15 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Something very strange and sinister is going on at a gloomy, moldy, dilapidated Los Angeles boarding house run by endearingly batty landlady Karen Black. Lots of residents who check in check out permanently so Ms. Black and her dead, but still present wheelchair-bound husband (who speaks with Karen telepathically from beyond the grave) can continue to collect their welfare and pension checks without having to spend extra cash feeding and housing the poor folks. Said tenants are a colorfully kooky bunch played by a game cast of genre favorites hand-picked to please the horror fans: Martine Beswicke as an edgy, intense psychic, Bert Remsen and Virginia Mayo as a bickering elderly couple, screenwriter Mikel Angel as a perpetually sloshed stewbum alcoholic, Michael Berryman as a creepy peeping tom, and the astonishingly cute'n'cuddly Debra Lamb as an adorably waifish mute dancer. Popping up in fun secondary roles are Arte Johnson as a meddlesome Social Security worker, Yvette Vickers as a shrewish neighbor who's always complaining about the odd foul stench emanating from Ms. Black's basement (hmm, I wonder what that could be?), Robert Quarry as a doctor, Anthony Eisley as a cop, and Hoke Howell as a friendly mailman.

Ace veteran cinematographer Gary Graver directs with a sure playfully wiggy touch, keeping the tone of this cheerfully macabre horror black comedy amusingly off-kilter throughout. Meanwhile, the pace clicks away at a solid steady tempo, the photography is impressively polished, and the lashings of mild gore and gratuitous nudity ensure that on a pure exploitation level this lightweight diversion is satisfying enough. But ultimately it's the uniformly lively and enthusiastic performances that make this amiable fluff so entertaining. Karen Black in particular brings a disarmingly wacky charm to her juicy nutjob part, making her character so totally personable in her ditzy loopiness that even the fact that she's a killer does nothing to lesson her daffy appeal. Sure, "Evil Spirits" certainly isn't the kind of film anyone will ever hail as a bona-fide cinematic masterpiece, but it's nonetheless still a perfectly enjoyable little Grade B fright flick just the same.
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8/10
Karen Black And Michael Berryman, What More Could You Want?
ladymidath20 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Evil Spirits itself isn't that great, the story is your typical loony murderous landlady film that has been done a few times. What lifts it up are Karen Black and Michael Berryman. Arte Johnson and Virginia Mayo are terrific in this as well. They are the saving grace of what could have been another early 90s slasher/horror flick. The pure insanity of it all, the man being held prisoner in the basement who is killing those who venture down there, the drunk who stumbles through everything believing he is suffering with the DTs, the social worker who puts two and two together. This could have ended up being a disjointed mess, but with clever acting and some truly crazy moments, especially from Karen Black's character, this has ended up being an entertaining horror movie. This is one for fans of Black and Berryman who is given a pretty decent role here as a writer who likes to peep on women. Grab the popcorn for this one.
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a masterwork of mediocrity.
EyeAskance28 May 2005
"So-so" sums it up...simply marginal on every level, with ensemble "anything for a paycheck" cast the only redeeming quality. Karen Black is her usual hammy self as the psychotic landlady of a rooming house for various misfit characters. They mysteriously disappear at random, while smiling Ms. Black continues collecting on their monthly government checks. She converses with an unearthly male voice from time-to-time...a spirit from beyond the grave, or just a madwoman's rambling dementia?

Not many great thrills to be had in this, but not bad enough to be harshly criticized, either...EVIL SPIRITS is a take-it-or-leave-it crap shoot- some may find this one entertaining(and gore mongers should find it acceptably gross), but I personally was left underwhelmed and rather put off by it's occasionally over-the-top comical silliness.

Hmmm.... 4.5/10, coulda been worse.
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Minor comedy-horror
lor_30 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
My review was written in October 1991 after watching the movie on Prism video cassette.

Vet talent gives an interesting wrinkle to the tongue-in-cheek thriller "Evil Spirits". Direct-to-video horror pic has some gore but is mainly for camp followers.

Head campster is Karen Black, who has recently taken grotesque roles in dozens of low-budget features that evidently tickled her fancy for black humor. Here she' a deranged boarding house owner who is becoming rich cashing the monthly checks of her growing roster of dead tenants.

Though all evidence points to Black being a murderess, it turns out she's merely covering up for the real guilty party. Meanwhile she is constantly carrying on imaginary conversations with her dead husband, whose mummified corpse is kept in the bedroom a la Mrs. Bates in "Psycho".

Director-cameraman Gary Graver maintains a creepy atmosphere for this claustrophobic film. Buffs highlights will be seeing Virginia Mayo back on screen after an 11-year absence as one of the tenants and the return of '50s starlet Yvette Vickers as an uppity neighbor. Pic's sex appeal is amply provided by the nude dancing of ingenue Debra Lamb.

Horror mainstay Michael Berryman (of "The Hills Have Eyes" fame) is almost sympathetic playing a normal person here, but his Peeping Tom activities re: Lamb cause his grisly demise.

Film should not be confused with ""Spirits", also shot in early 1990 with Graver as cameraman and Fred Olen Ray directing; these similarly titled pics both have Robert Quarry in the cast.
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