Nudist Colony of the Dead is a 1991 horror comedy musical film written and directed by Mark Pirro (who has also worked under the names Marky Dolittle and Marky Elfman). The film was shot on Super-8 film and produced on a budget of $35,000.
Nudist Colony of the Dead | |
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Written by | Mark Pirro |
Produced by | Mark Pirro |
Starring |
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Music by |
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Distributed by | Artistic License Video |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,500[1] |
"Sunny Buttocks Nudist Colony" is shut down by Judge Rhinehole and his band of religious zealots for offending the local community. The nudists decide to protest by entering into a suicide pact, vowing to return one day to terrorize the people who took over their land. Five years later, a bunch of kids are sent to the ex-nudist colony, which has now been transformed into a religious retreat. True to their promise, the nudist corpses rise from the grave, seek revenge on the zealots who condemned them and sing big production numbers, as the campers begin to experience an attrition problem.
Nudist Colony of the Dead was shot in Sacramento, California.[2]
Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle said, "[T]his amateur summer-camp slasher spoof isn't as wacky as it thinks it is".[3] It was also reviewed by the Cinema Snob, who briefly lost his mind listening to one of this film's songs, titled "Inky Dinky Doo Dah Morning".
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