The House by the Lake (1976) Poster

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6/10
More Than Might Be Expected
Brakathor5 October 2009
I really was not expecting anything spectacular when going into this film. By the time i'd seen this, i'd seen virtually all of the murder/revenge films and just about everything that involved a group of chaotic thugs who terrorize some normal people, who in turn end up fighting back or trying to escape, and they pretty much all were cheap exploitative dribble that was wholly unrealistic and poorly layed out. This movie on the other hand does some things differently that elevate it above pretty much all the rest aside from "Deliverance" and "Straw Dogs" which I'm not sure fall into the same category anyways. A movie like this can never surpass "Straw dogs" who's plot allowed for much more meaning and emotional depth, done so perfectly, where the violence also inevitably seemed more plausible the way it played out.

The film opens with a very spectacular car chase where the thugs are harassing the dentist and his model companion who is at the wheel. Pretty soon I was saying to myself "come on.... no other cars use this road?" and then CRASH. Finally the scene ends with the thugs landing in a ditch as the dentist and model drive off, having completely disgraced them, setting off a desperate need for revenge in the thug leader. The film had delivered a very convincing opening act, and from this point I had the sense that this director knew what he was doing.

It' the little things that are all at play which end up making the film much more convincing than lesser efforts. For example, when the leader opens up pretending to be nice and reasonable with the dentist in a very sardonic way, and his 3 comrades are snickering at it, as characters they all seem so believable, and this scene really does get across a foreboding sense of bad things to come, as we have already been shown just how fierce the leader can be.

One scene that I found to be a huge detractor was where the drunken gas store workers were killed by the thugs with the dentists boat. Firstly it was very coincidental that they borrowed the dentist's boat at this propitious moment, but more importantly, the way that they taunted and tormented the dentist and model, and the way tension grew and grew was so successful, that it seemed very much like a situation of bad luck, and one thing leading to another, though when we see them so callously murder these 2 people on the boat, it destroys much of that very well produced tension, because it means they were going to kill the dentist and model from the very beginning and the fate was sealed.

The unfolding chain of death at the end was again, much better executed than in most movies of this type, though still as usual, a little contrived that the shed trap would work so perfectly, that the 2nd last thug would stumble into quicksand and die, while the model avoided the same fate. One thing that I think certainly could have been better handled was the transition from night to day. I would have loved to see shots of the sun rising, of the model shivering in the night, waiting for morning. Regardless, the final showdown between the model and the leader is quite intense, and I love the added irony that the wounded dentist ran off to the car the night earlier after being shot, but died in the car, as he had no car keys, though luckily for the model she learned how to hot-wire cars.

The ending shot of the movie can only be described as extremely bizarre, and its so very perverted in the a sado-masochistic sense of what it implies. In terms of drama and meaning, as with the rest of the film, it really does not delve beyond the mere surface, but it does serve as a final jolt to the viewer saying: Not a masterpiece, but this movie definitely has enough thought and effort put into it to place it above average sleazy schlock like "Last House On The Left" or "I Spit On Your Grave"
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Exhilarating in parts.
analoguebubblebath17 May 2001
"Death Weekend" is a more complex film than it appears on the surface.

The violence is initially against Harry's property which he values more than anything else. Even though Diane has spurned him one gets the impression that he considers her his property too. Her resilience against the grotesque mob of ugly greasers is exhilarating to watch and is comparable to the revenge actions that take place in the later "I Spit On Your Grave".

The film's closing images are unnerving, keeping in tone with the somewhat excessive terror factor of the second half.

Stroud and Vaccaro are excellent.

7/10
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6/10
Last House by the Lake
Jonny_Numb20 September 2003
I will throw "Death Weekend" (aka "House by the Lake") a bone as far as its influence over future revenge flicks is concerned ("I Spit on Your Grave" and "House on the Edge of the Park" come to mind), but truth be told, it can't touch the grand-daddy of them all: "Last House on the Left." It blatantly borrows from that film (and, to a lesser extent, "A Clockwork Orange") and mixes it up into a volatile yet shallow experience. While Don Stroud makes a fittingly vicious ringleader, his character is ill-defined (he's just really, really MEAN) and his 'droogs' are just too goofy at times. "Death Weekend" does deliver in the suspense department, and the pace keeps moving along, but it's strictly second-rate material. Yet those seeking a lean and mean revenge flick (and are familiar with the aforementioned above) will probably find much to like here.

5.5/10
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6/10
One of the better Last House knock offs.
Corpus_Vile28 August 2010
A sleazy lothario dentist has brought a chick to his country retreat, under the false pretense that there's a party, when he really just wants her to be his next conquest. She's none to pleased on hearing this and an argument ensues. However, their argument pales when they are menaced by a quartet of scuzzy degenerates, who proceed to turn their weekend into a nightmare...

Death Weekend is a misleading film, in the sense that any fan of exploitation will probably feel short changed, as in regards to content, it's pretty tame indeed.

A film more interested in character exploration, it also takes its time to build to its effective and tense climax.

I went into Death Weekend expecting a nasty exploitative shocker but what I got was a solid enough well made film in its own right.

A recommended film for those seeking something just a little bit more offbeat, but again, exploitation fans should be aware that this will not be what they're expecting, and some may be underwhelmed by its slow burning style and tame content. I quite liked it overall though, and found its climax fairly gripping. A solid enough revenge film overall, and worth checking out.
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7/10
S10 Review's Death Weekend (1976)
suspiria1028 April 2008
'Weekend' starring Brenda Vaccaro is a lesser known entry in the rape-revenge sub-genre. It doesn't have the blood lust that most of the flicks do, in fact there isn't a whole lot of the red stuff at all (even less in many of the existing home video prints such as the Vestron version I saw). But 'Weekend' does have an above average atmosphere and the performances by the whole cast are solid. Don Stroud plays the lead baddie who just couldn't take being out driven by a girl in the beginning (a pretty well done car chase sequence) and eventually tracks down Vaccaro at a nice vacation lodge. Hardcore exploitation fans may find 'Death Weekend' to be a bit 'boring' but that may appeal to those who don't like films with an 'extreme' edge to them.
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4/10
Nice to see a resilient heroine.... otherwise a nasty, artless, inexcusable slice of exploitation.
barnabyrudge27 October 2004
In the 1970s, a handful of films like Straw Dogs, Death Wish and Last House on the Left pushed back a few cinematic boundaries. They also provided inspiration for many copycat movies - titles like Vengeance Is Mine, I Spit On Your Grave, The Visitors, Death Hunt and Death Weekend. The latter of these - Death Weekend - is a Canadian thriller produced by a certain Ivan Reitman (who would go on to become a director of box office juggernauts like the two Ghostbusters flicks and Kindergarten Cop). It is a fairly forgettable siege thriller with a few moments of gore and an interestingly resourceful heroine.

Diane (Brenda Vaccaro) and Harry (Chuck Shamata) are on their way to a remote house. Harry is a self-obsessed and successful dentist who owns the house. He spends most of his time buying objects to gratify his wealth, without realising their true value. Diane is his latest conquest (she doesn't know it, but she's just one in a long line of weekend flings for Harry). En route to the house the couple are subjected to a scary road rage ordeal at the hands of four drunken hoodlums, led by the foul-mouthed, foul-minded Lep (Don Stroud). Diane successfully out-drives the unpleasant foursome and causes them to crash. However, Lep tracks them down to their secluded love nest and, aided by his cronies, subjects them to an even more degrading and sadistic ordeal.

Vaccaro is far too good an actress for a sleazy, violent exploitation flick such as this. She gives a good performance, as you would expect, but it's wasted on the repellent material. Stroud also registers strongly as a deplorable villain, and Shamata is OK as the vain, heartless playboy. For gorehounds there are some worthwhile moments - the highlight being a chilling throat slashing scene - but it's a long wait until the nasty stuff gets underway. Death Weekend is essentially an intentionally mean-spirited thriller. It offers the lingering threat of rape as a form of entertainment, and asks us to enjoy scenes of drunken abuse, degradation, destruction, idiocy, and graphic murder. Ultimately, the unpleasantness becomes a turn-off. The thoughtfulness of Straw Dogs and the black humour of Death Wish is nowhere to be found. This is just unpleasantness for its own sake.... and that's just NOT what movies are all about.
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8/10
Thy shall not engage in road rage with thugs and then proceed to cut off from civilization.
Fella_shibby10 February 2021
I saw this for the first time recently and that too the uncut 89 mins version. Was on my radar for a long time.

This one aint that violent as The Last House on the Left or as nasty as I Spit on your Grave or as darker as Straw Dogs but it is horrifying at times.

The film starts off very well with the car race and the thugs showing their regard for law by torturing a lawman. The scene of the transition between night n day is a bit silly.

I didn't understand one thing, Lep asking the model, why did u stop. Was Lep impotent?

Don Stroud as Lep is reminiscent of Neville Brand from Eaten Alive and the character Chigurh from No Country...

Chuck Shamata's double chin n his sheer stupidity gets on the nerves. The rural Canadian areas are well shot and it does add to the isolated feel.

Aft tormenting n torturing innocent fellas, Don Stroud gets to wash off his sins by playing a priest in Amityville Horror.
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4/10
The typical overacting from the seventies.
deloudelouvain14 November 2019
The House By The Lake or Death Weekend, call it what you want, it doesn't matter but it doesn't change the fact that there is some pretty bad acting going on in this movie. I guess this movie did better in 1976 when people were used to watch overacting but I watched it in 2019 and so I will rate it like it was made in 2019. I think the overacting was something normal in those days, now it's just awful. The story itself isn't that bad if you like revenge movies, even though the behavior of some characters is cringing to watch. Some characters act like they are just and that's not a good thing to improve the quality of the movie. I really don't get the extremely positive reviews for this mediocre movie. I watched it once and will never watch it again.
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9/10
Highly intense and criminally underrated Canadian rape and revenge shocker.
HumanoidOfFlesh30 May 2006
"Death Weekend" begins with a sleazy super rich dentist on the way to his country mansion with a buxom beauty in tow.The dentist has actually deceived Brenda Vaccaro into the country weekend foray-the sole purpose of the trip is to enjoy his latest conquest.On their way in their car the couple come across four hillbillies who start hassling the couple and chasing them in their car.Vaccaro manages to leave 'em behind.The enraged goons vows to extract revenge.The orgy of mindless violence begins in the dentists mansion...William Fruet's "Death Weekend" is an ugly and brutal rape and revenge flick inspired by "Straw Dogs" and "Last House on the Left".The most surprising fact is that it was banned as the video nasty in UK.The acting is great,the atmosphere is suitably sleazy and there is enough violence to keep fans of grimy exploitation flicks entertained.Give this one a look.9 out of 10.
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7/10
A Feminist "Straw Dogs"
artzau11 February 2006
I'd never heard of William Fruet when I saw this film with Brenda Viccaro and Don Stroud back in '76 when it was released but I was struck by the resemblance to Sam Peckinpah's Straw dogs in both the story line and the violent action. None of the other faces have stuck with me to any great extent but, as other reviewers here have noted, Viccaro and Stroud stand out in their respective performances. Yes, the story will appeal to the more politically correct shoot'em/beat'em up fan (if indeed any exist), as the final message is that an independent woman will take no guff off a bunch of nasty, randy dudes and there is truth to the old adage, "Hell hath no fury like a woman...pi**ed." Stroud and Viccaro do indeed make the film. The sleaze ball orthodontist who just wants to have an orgy for the weekend and gets his come-upence from a pack of even sleazier balls, veteran character actor Chuck Shamata is the only other character I can remember. But, like the earlier Peckinpah classic, Straw Dogs, this film does stick in the memory.
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5/10
An unexceptional rape/revenge movie.
BA_Harrison23 April 2008
Harry (Chuck Shamata), a rich lothario dentist, invites model Diane (Brenda Vaccaro, who, at 37, is perhaps a little too old for the part) to spend the weekend with him at his remote lake-side mansion. On their way to the house, the couple have a run-in with four loutish locals who attempt to force their car off the road. After a high speed chase along winding dirt tracks, Brenda (who is at the wheel) succeeds in forcing the thugs to crash into a river. Peeved at having been bested by a woman, head thug Lep (Don Stroud) vows to find the couple and make them pay.

Tracking them to their weekend retreat, the gang terrorise the couple before finally killing Harry and raping Brenda. However, the feisty model eventually gets her revenge; she manages to escape from the house and proceeds to bump off her tormentors one-by-one.

Death Weekend, a violent rape/revenge thriller in the same vein as the infamous The Last House on the Left, contains all of the ingredients one might expect from such a film—a pretty protagonist, a gang of thoroughly vile bad guys, and violent retribution—but, thanks to particularly poor pacing and not enough in the way of graphic nastiness, winds up being less effective than many a movie from the same genre.

My main gripe with Death Weekend is that it takes ages to get going (an hour passes before the gang begin to kill and rape); whilst this admittedly gives us plenty of time to get to really hate Lep and Co. (a nasty bunch made all the more repulsive thanks to the way that they continually delight in mocking their victims with high pitched laughter), it doesn't leave enough time for a truly satisfying finalé.

Not only does Brenda dispatch all of the thugs in very quick succession, but she also does so in a fairly bloodless manner. Being a gore-hound, I wanted her to get real nasty, but instead of buckets of gore, we get a tame throat slashing, an immolation, a drowning, and death by car.

Death Weekend will definitely be of interest to fans of gritty, 'grindhouse' cinema, but I certainly wouldn't class it as essential viewing.
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6/10
Being a "heavy" must be an occupational hazard
newslogger4417 August 2022
I often wonder how casting directors for violent films of this type go about selecting ideal candidates for the "heavies".

WANTED: Men wanted for film role. Must be physically unattractive, capable to convincingly simulating a surly, juvenile, loutish demeanor, fake drunkenness, have the ability to portray a threatening and even murderous intent toward females, children, law officers, indeed ANYONE who dares to cross them.

Then one wonders exactly WHO would WANT to apply for such a role, undoubtedly anticipating a negative reaction by family members, friends, secondary employers, etc., who see them onscreen and think, "Good grief, I wonder if this guy is (or was) a real criminal or social outcast; otherwise why on earth would he sign up for such a negative role? Maybe he needs the money?".

Certainly, while some of the top-tier actors can and have routinely switched back and forth from being a bad-ass to a hero with apparent ease, such as Clint Eastwood, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Chuck Norris, etc., but in "The House by the Lake", I cannot imagine that Don Stroud's toady, slime-ball accomplices would dare show their undisguised faces in public without fearing that somebody might recognize them and throw a punch or two--or worse.
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7/10
70s sleaze
jj_hansell12 January 2021
Sleaze, but pretty entertaining. You have to overlook a lot of things, like these dudes are nearing middle age, way past the time when you spend your leisure time hot-rodding around the countryside with a case of beer. I first saw this when I was 16 or so, and naturally I enjoyed seeing Brenda Vaccaro naked, not realizing until viewing this movie several years later that the nude female I had lusted after was actually a body double, Harry the dentist is a hoot, a completely emasculated man who does nothing about his home being invaded, and when he finally hatches a plan it consists of grabbing a shotgun from upstairs, which is immediately taken away from him, at which point he's reduced to throwing records at the bad guys. Fun stuff, if you're in the mood for some retro cinematic sleaze.
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4/10
Sadism, slobbering morons and a constant threat of rape, with only one decent character in the picture...
moonspinner551 September 2015
Savvy model Brenda Vaccaro, on a weekend date with a dentist she hardly knows, runs a car full of drunken thugs off the road; they vow revenge. Repugnant, unpleasant Canadian-made B-movie, though admittedly well-made and well-acted of its type, slipped by virtually unnoticed in 1976, this due in part to several films with similar scenarios already in circulation (and more were to follow). By having Vaccaro's date (a wealthy womanizer--and Peeping Tom to boot!) turn out to be as loathsome as the surly gang who invades the house by the lake, writer-director William Fruet seems to be making an ironic point on the thin line between rich creeps and poor creeps. Either way, it's still 75 minutes of watching creeps...and waiting for La Vaccaro to turn the tables on them. *1/2 from ****
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10/10
It began with a rape... and ended with a massacre!
ray-1002 April 2002
Rich playboy (Chuck Shamata) and his 'supposed weekend fling' (Brenda Vaccaro) embark in some road rage with four thugs. The thugs track them down at their weekend mansion, then a weekend of terror begins.

A well acted and directed thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat. Not as violent as other similar titles such as 'Last House on the Left', 'Fight for your Life', and 'Late Night Trains' but far more exciting.

A film well worthy of a re-release.
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1/10
Health Warning
Critical Eye UK9 December 2001
Devoid of the directorial brio that graced Russ Meyer's off-the-wall essays in violence, 'Death Weekend' remains an inglorious example of cinema at its ugliest.

Vicious, joyless, witless and pointless, it is one long contrivance of outrage, a uni-dimensional affair which having discovered the Newtonian principle of the greater the action, the greater the reaction, proceeds to exploit it with tedious predictability.

There are no insights into the human condition, though a great many into the minds of those responsible. Stroud, who until this dross had the potential to be a cinema headliner, must look back now and wonder if his career wasn't buried along with so much else at The House by the Lake. As for Fruett, consignment to the world of TV episodes seems charitable.

See it and be demeaned.
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8/10
'It was Thanksgiving weekend, and Diane had nothing to be thankful for...'
Nightman8528 December 2005
Solidly-done, low-budget thriller from Canada is a great tale of survival.

In route to their weekend get away, a woman and her gentleman friend anger a gang of thugs and end up paying for it.

Death Weekend is a little known thriller, which is a shame since it's a good entry in the vengeance/exploitation genre. While Death Weekend isn't as violent or disturbing as Last House on the Left (1972) or I Spit on Your Grave (1978), it does possess a powerful tension and makes for a pretty strong watch. Director William Fruet gives this film tight action and dark, suspenseful atmosphere. It does have the occasional burst of shocking violence - especially during the terrifically intense climax.

The films two stars are a strong point as well. Brenda Vaccaro is great as a victim trying to survive. She is an excellent actress and shows it well in this film. Also excellent is villain Don Stroud. Stroud has a powerful kind of presence in this film as the ruthless, but not unattractive leader of the gang.

Death Weekend is a nicely edgy shocker that deserves a wider audience. For thriller, exploitation fans it's worth finding!

*** out of ****
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8/10
More than just 'The Last House by the Lake'...
The_Void17 September 2006
Anyone who has seen 'The Last House on the Left' will know exactly what to expect from this film, and indeed it's clear that Death Weekend has took a lot of influence from it's illustrious predecessor. In terms of Last House rip-off's, this probably isn't one of the best; but Death Weekend succeeds in drawing the audience into its premise, and overall - this is a hugely enjoyable slice of 'rape and revenge'. Directed by William Fruet and originating from Canada, the film certainly gives the Italian heavyweight nasties a run for their money, and provides a social commentary different to the one portrayed in Wes Craven's earlier famous shocker. The plot is thin and focuses more on characters than plot points. At the start, we are introduced to rich playboy dentist Harry, who takes a different woman home every weekend. This time he's got a model in tow, and the pair run into trouble on the road and end up getting into a car chase with four drunken men. Naturally, the action ends up back at the playboy's mansion, and pretty soon the pair are being held hostage by the unpredictable madmen.

The film was given the alternative title 'The House by the Lake' in an obvious attempt to cash in on Last House on the Left, and although the two are undoubtedly similar, this film plays out along different lines. Craven's film focused on ultra-violence, whereas this one manages a social commentary along the same lines as Dawn of the Dead and pokes fun at consumerism, as the playboy at the centre fears more for his house and material possessions than his own life and that of his companion. It's obvious that director William Fruet was restrained by his budget, but he still manages to implement a great atmosphere, which is more chaotic than many of the film's genre counterparts. This sort of film is obviously put on the back foot from the beginning as many will merely pass it off as another rip-off; but while the film may not be as nasty as some others, Death Weekend still succeeds at doing what it set out to do; namely, delivering a raw film with gratuitous nastiness and violence. The acting isn't up to much, although everyone does an adequate job of portraying their characters, and while this might not be a 'great' genre film; it's certainly a very good one.
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8/10
home invasion nightmare
disdressed128 December 2007
i wouldn't call this movie a horror movie in the usual sense.it's certainly a thriller,and it is terrifying.it's a lot like deliverance but it takes place an isolated area,with no none around for miles,except the psychopaths and their victims.this is a very disturbing movie,with lots of very coarse,and crude sexual language and strong sexual references.but the most disturbing thing is that the events could happen as they did in the movie.it's very authentic.the performances are terrific from everyone and the intensity is through the roof in this one.if you're squeamish or don't like strong language or sexual references,you might want to avoid this movie.once it gets going,it doesn't let up.but for me,Death Weekend is an 8/10
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8/10
Both tense and fun
crystallogic21 July 2018
This was simply a great 70s exploitation film. There were similarities to others I have seen, sure, and predictably perhaps, I Spit on Your Grave came to mind, but this movie does things quite differently and is the better for it. There's also no protracted, difficult-to-watch rape scene, so there's that, although it is possible to argue that this actually makes Death Weekend/house by the Lake more exploitative because it pulls its punches in showing you just how horrible a victimised woman can be treated by a group of horny, ignorant men. Nevertheless, I really had a good time with this (which you can't properly say about I Spit on Your Grave without feeling weird), and it was even a lot of fun. It's also full of familiar southern Ontario locations, as it was mostly shot in and around King City and Kleinberg. The former place has changed quite a bit since 1975, but you can still find some very nice, beautiful and roomy houses like the one that gets gloriously trashed in this film.

This movie is really about a strong woman pitting her wits against five guys. yes, five guys: her new boyfriend, harry, if you can even call him that, is a pathetic loser who cares for nothing but his property and money. To my mind he was the most despicable guy in the film, moreso than the hooligans who come after the unhappy couple. His motives are totally trashy and he comes across as a nasty bullshitter. Just hateful. The four home-invaders are ignorant and aggressive, but are by contrast, a bit relatable in a way, and I almost forgot what scum they were for a moment as I laughed and cheered them on as they wrecked the house and totally went to town smashing everything in sight, pouring beer everywhere and just seemingly having the time of their lives. Honestly, that was probably a selling point for the young actors in this movie. Their leader, though, is a bit of a calculating sort, and I did think the hint of Stockholm syndrome at the endd was a little misplaced. Then again, the movie is ambiguous enough about it that it shouldn't really piss anyone off, and there's after all no doubt that the guy is dead -- it was just a strange final scene to close on, as she remembers this guy and what he did and, seemingly, has a hint of regret about killing him.

The deaths though are generally well done and appropriate. Diane really kicks arse and the actor put in a great performance. She's a very tough female protagonist in a 70s movie and that's just a joy to see. Even the comic relief drunk guy was on point. This film did a great job with its cast of characters in a style that's perhaps not too recognised for such things. This is a great edition to the small but notable Canadian exploitation/horror canon and a bit of an unsung classic in the genre.
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8/10
A darkly compelling B-thriller that concludes dramatically in a gruesome, spectacularly vengeful manhunt.
Weirdling_Wolf3 October 2023
Slick, cocksure rich creep, Harry (Chuck Shamata) is on a breezy weekend jag with his fiesty squeeze, Diane (Brenda Vaccaro) when they fatefully have a high-speed vehicular beef with a boozy gang of thugs that grimly escalates into a thrillingly tense, sporadically brutal home invasion nightmare! Also known as 'The House by The Lake', this pacy Canadian exploitation gem is less sleazily mean-spirited than 'The Last House on The Left', and yet, for me, 'Death Weekend' is more of a riotously entertaining hell ride! Matching, William Fruet's gutsy mise-en-scene, the continued watchability of his 'Death Weekend' is, perhaps, due to the memorably combative sequences between, Don Stroud's hyperbolically hateful villain, and, Brenda Vaccaro's bruised, yet resolutely unbowed Valkyrie.

Fruet's gritty backwoods Canuxploitation, while derivative, is a luridly well-made, darkly compelling B-thriller that concludes dramatically in a gruesome, spectacularly vengeful manhunt. While it would be fair to say that the grindhouse, wheel wasn't reinvented with, Ivan Reitman/Andre link's production Death Weekend, it is certainly no less crushing than its sleazier US/ european counterparts. The escalating frenzy of redlining Muscle cars,home-invading headcases, arbitrary sadism, and righteously bloodthirsty revenge is percolated to an espresso shot of visceral intensity by capable director, William Fruet!
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Weekend Warriors...
azathothpwiggins8 September 2020
While Diane (Brenda Vaccaro) and Harry (Chuck Shamata) are tooling around in Harry's Corvette, they're taunted by a Camaro-load of maniacs. These miscreants are led by Lep (Don Stroud), who is crazier and far more dangerous than his cohorts. Taunting turns into road rage, causing Lep and his fellow thugs to be run off the road. Lep is a bit upset by this, and swears revenge. Finding Diane and Harry now becomes his gang's sole mission.

Meanwhile, the young couple end up at Harry's rural vacation home, where Harry, a voyeuristic pervert, believes he's about to hit the jackpot with Diane. After causing mayhem in the nearby town, Lep and company arrive at the homestead, and the living hell begins.

DEATH WEEKEND (aka: THE HOUSE BY THE LAKE) is a particularly nihilistic home invasion / revenge film. The senseless property damage is epic! Stroud's Lep is very intimidating, being the sort of role he seems to have been born to play. Ms. Vaccaro is convincing in her victim-turned-avenger part. Looking back, it's somewhat astounding that this movie, and several others, formed their own "rape / revenge" sub-genre...
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Longer version currently available on Comcast On Demand (June 2014)
kdl23415 June 2014
June 2014: This movie is currently available on Comcast/Xfinity On Demand (as part of the "Fearnet" free movies) as DEATH WEEKEND.

The Comcast version is slightly different than the Vestron Video version available on VHS in the United States. First, the American International logo is missing at the beginning, and is replaced by "A Cinepix Video Presentation." More significantly, the climactic throat-slashing scene is more explicit than in the Vestron Video release. Here, we see a longer shot of Diane wielding the piece of glass; two lingering shots of Runt's slashed throat, including Runt grasping his throat as blood spurts through his fingers; and Diane being splattered with blood. All of these shots are missing from the Vestron version.
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