Trapped Ashes is a 2006 American horror anthology film with segments directed by Sean S. Cunningham, Joe Dante, Monte Hellman, Ken Russell, and John Gaeta. It stars Jayce Bartok, Henry Gibson, and Lara Harris.[1][2]
Trapped Ashes | |
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Directed by | Sean S. Cunningham Joe Dante Monte Hellman Ken Russell John Gaeta |
Written by | Dennis Bartok |
Produced by | Independent Film Fund, Cinema Investment |
Starring | Jayce Bartok Amelia Cooke Lara Harris Ryo Ishibashi Scott Lowell Luke Macfarlane Michéle-Barbara Pelletier Tahmoh Penikett Tygh Runyan Rachel Veltri John Saxon Henry Gibson |
Cinematography | Zoran Popovic Makoto Watanabe |
Edited by | Marcus Manton |
Music by | Kenji Kawai |
Distributed by | Independent Film Fund Cinema Investment Tokyo Broadcasting System |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
In the frame story seven strangers visiting Hollywood movie studios are brought to an ill-famed House of Horror by Desmond the tour guide (Henry Gibson) and find themselves locked inside. To leave the trap alive, they have to tell their most terrifying stories.
Phoebe (Rachel Veltri) receives breast implants made of reconstituted human corpse tissue but the implants exhibit an appetite for human blood.
Henry (Scott Lowell) and Julia (Lara Harris) visit Japan, where Julia is seduced by a spirit attempting to draw her into Jigoku.
Leo (Tahmoh Penikett) has an affair with fellow filmmaker Stanley's (Tygh Runyan) girlfriend Nina (Amelia Cooke), a witch who drinks the blood of her lovers to gain immortality.
Natalie's mother Martine (Michèle-Barbara Pelletier) cannot treat her tapeworm without losing her unborn child and must allow them both to grow inside her. Once born, Natalie continues to be compelled to feed the worm.
The film received a 33% approval rating on a Rotten Tomatoes review (average rating 4.3/10).[3]
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