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Creepshow
The film tells about a diverse and exciting selection that tells of five terrifying tales. These tales are based on popular comic books in the 1950s, which bear a kind of torture, murder, destruction and blood that are scattered again. These tales include one full-length feature, and the film may evoke fears of traditional bogeymen and the agony that awaited everyone.
28 November 1950, Tenafly, New Jersey, USA
10 February 1938, Ohio, USA
21 September 1947, Portland, Maine, USA
3 November 1946, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
14 October 1936, Greenwood, Mississippi, USA
23 May 1926, Charleston, West Virginia, USA
19 May 1951, New York City, New York, USA
26 May 1957, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
29 December 1920, Uppsala, Uppsala län, Sweden
18 August 1916, Highspire, Pennsylvania, USA
30 June 1952, Long Branch, New Jersey, USA
11 June 1945, Sacramento, California, USA
25 September 1956, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
July 16, 2010
Genuinely creepy, satirical and occasionally daft horror tales with a distinctly moral bent.
June 20, 2008
The segments are consistent in quality and the film is still effective and entertaining.
August 30, 2004
Horror film purists may object to the levity even though failed, as a lot of it is.
April 18, 2007
Unfortunately, it never quite gels.
October 16, 2012
One of the rare horror anthologies with a sharp sense of storytelling and an intrinsic ability for irony and metaphor...
October 15, 2007
This horror omnibus tickles the funny bone while stripping it of its flesh, so that hysterical laughter comes as fast as the frights and as thick as the blood.
April 18, 2007
This five-part film, based on the format of 50s horror comics, marks one of the few times George Romero has directed someone else's script (it's by Stephen King), and the results are only mildly interesting by the standards of his Dead trilogy.
October 30, 2008
All of the pieces of Creepshow come together in a smorgasbord of ghastly images, welcome humor, and solid, old-fashioned storytelling.
November 12, 2012
As much as I love and admire Romero's zombie pictures... I may love Creepshow just a little bit more.
February 09, 2006
he old Amicus movies used EC originals to better effect and with more brevity, for all their cardboard sets.
March 26, 2009
George Romero, collaborating with writer Stephen King, again proves his adeptness at combining thrills with tongue-in-cheek humor.
October 23, 2004
Romero and King have approached this movie with humor and affection, as well as with an appreciation of the macabre.

