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Ottaviano Dell'Acqua as Kurt; Geretta Geretta as Chocolate; Massimo Vanni as Taurus; Gianni Franco as Video; Ann-Gisel Glass as Myrna; Cindy Leadbetter as Diana; Henry Luciani as Duke ...
Deadly Eyes (also known as The Rats, Rats and Night Eyes) is a 1982 Canadian horror film directed by Robert Clouse, very loosely based on the 1974 horror novel The Rats by James Herbert. The story revolves around giant black rats who begin eating the residents of Toronto after ingesting contaminated grain.
I really took the job because they were filming in Moscow and I wanted to go there. I had never been and I'd always wanted to go." [4] She later recalled, "I was also supposed to be working with 50 trained rats, but there were only 16 and I think eight of them were dead. The rest had only been trained to eat anything that smelled like fish.
Willard is a 1971 American horror film directed by Daniel Mann and written by Gilbert Ralston, based on Stephen Gilbert's novel Ratman's Notebooks. Bruce Davison stars as social misfit Willard Stiles, who is squeezed out of the company started by his deceased father.
Two models, Marlis and Peggy, are on a Caribbean Island for a photoshoot. One night, Peggy is found dead and her body seems to be eaten by rats. The victim's sister, Terry, arrives on the island and helped by Fred Williams, a mystery novel writer she meets at the airport, starts to investigate.
Rats, also known as Rats NYC, is a 2016 American documentary horror film directed by Morgan Spurlock. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Based on a book by Robert Sullivan and distributed by the Discovery Channel , the film chronicles rat infestations in major cities throughout the world.
On the first night in her new bedroom, Alice hears a voice calling "Come back, Alice"; the next morning, she pretends to go to school, only to sneak back to the house, which reveals itself to be sentient by unlocking the front door, "smiling" with its heating grate, communicating via the lights, and even providing marshmallows and a fire to ...
Black Rat was screened on 5 June 2010 at the Human Trust Cinema Shibuya in Tokyo, Japan. [4] The screening was accompanied by a stage greeting event, with director Kenta Fukasaku and actors Misaki Yonemura, Hiroya Matsumoto, Rina Saito, Makoto Sakamoto, and Rihoko Shimomiya present.