The House of Usher (1989 film) explained

Screenplay:Michael J. Murray
Producer:Harry Alan Towers
Starring:
Cinematography:Yossi Wein
Editing:Michael J. Duthie
Studio:Breton Film Productions
Distributor:21st Century Film Corporation
Runtime:92 minutes[1]
Language:English

The House of Usher is a 1989 horror film directed by Alan Birkinshaw and starring Oliver Reed, Donald Pleasence, and Romy Walthall. It is an adaptation of "The Fall of the House of Usher" by Edgar Allan Poe.

Story

Molly and her fiancé Ryan travel to London to visit his uncle. On the way, Ryan swerves to miss two ghostly children who appear in the road, crashing their car. Molly runs to the estate to get help and walks into a nightmare. Ryan's uncle Roderick wants Molly for himself and has imprisoned his brother Walter in an upstairs room. Walter escapes by murdering the maid and then also murders her daughter before attacking Roderick in an attempt to end the family line. Roderick however, throws Walter from some stairs as the house catches on fire. During their fight, Molly flees and frees Ryan from his drugged stupor inside a sarcophagus, Ryan and Roderick fight as Molly flees the house. The film ends with a replay of the scene of Molly and Ryan lost trying to find his uncle's house: this time Molly suggests going back the way they came.

Release

The film has been released on Blu-ray by Vinegar Syndrome under their Vinegar Syndrome Archives label.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The House of Usher (1989). Rotten Tomatoes. live. https://archive.today/20220215045810/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_house_of_usher. February 15, 2022.
  2. Web site: The House of Usher (VSA). Vinegar Syndrome (company). 3 April 2022.