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Basket Case
Frank Henenlotter

Basket Case

  • Comedy
  • Horror

The tenant in room 7 is very small, very twisted, and very mad.

Play Trailer
RELEASE

1982-04-02

BUGET

$0.0M

LENGTH

91 min

Description

A young man carrying a big basket that contains his extremely deformed, formerly conjoined twin brother seeks vengeance on the doctors who separated them against their will.

Reviews

 PFP

Wuchak

@Wuchak

Gory and amusing horror about separated Siamese twins in New York City, one vengeful

A young man from upstate New York, Duane Bradley (Kevin Van Hentenryck), travels to the seedy side of Manhattan with a mysterious wicker basket, looking for a couple of dubious doctors.

“Basket Case” (1982) is a very bloody ‘B’ horror with (mostly) low-key comedy that’s actually funny. The quaint low-budget effects consist of rubber puppetry & gloves with some stop-motion unapproved by Ray Harryhausen. Blonde Terri Susan Smith shines as Duane’s potential girlfriend, Sharon, while Beverly Bonner heartily rises to the challenge as Duane’s friendly next-door neighbor in hotel, Casey.

The flick is entertaining so I can see how it’s become a cult favorite, but the focus on the seedy side of Manhattan makes for a somewhat unpalatable experience. Yet it’s interesting going back in time to New York City in 1981. Some people lambaste “Basket Case” for being “amateurish” but, come on, it only cost $35,000, which would translate to about $100,000 today.

The film runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot in Manhattan with some stuff done in Glens Falls, New York.

GRADE: B-