Amityville: It's About Time
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Amityville: It's About Time | |
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Directed by | Tony Randel |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Christopher Taylor |
Edited by | Rick Finney |
Music by | Daniel Licht |
Distributed by | Multicom Entertainment Group |
Release date |
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Running time | 95 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Amityville 1992: It's About Time (released as Curse of Amityville: The Final Chapter in the Philippines) is a 1992 American supernatural horror film directed by Tony Randel and starring Stephen Macht, Shawn Weatherly, Megan Ward, and Damon Martin. It is the sixth film based on The Amityville Horror. It was released direct-to-video in 1992 by Republic Pictures Home Video. In Mexico, the film was released in theaters in 1992.
Plot
[edit]Jacob Sterling, an architect from Burlwood, California, has just returned from a business trip to Amityville. During his absence, his ex-girlfriend, art student Andrea Livingston, took care of his two teenagers, Lisa and Rusty.
Excitedly, Jacob announces that Amityville has commissioned his firm to design a new neighborhood. He also brings back an old mantel clock he found in the ruins there, placing it on the fireplace and saying, "This is exactly what our home needed." However, the clock has stuck to the mantel, making it immovable.
Once it is on the mantel, things start to go wrong. The clock ticks loudly, and the sound can be heard upstairs. But the strangest of all is when Rusty goes downstairs in the middle of the night and turns on the living room light switch, the living room is replaced with an ancient-looking torture chamber. This happens until the lightbulb finally burns out.
The next morning, after Lisa and Rusty leave for school, Jacob finishes his jog. His digital watch stops, and he turns around to see his neighbor Mrs. Tetmann with her dog, Peaches. She releases Peaches, who attacks Jacob's leg. Jacob defends himself with a bottle. At the hospital, a doctor confuses Andrea for Jacob's wife and advises her to care for his wound. However, Jacob neglects his injury at home and denies her help.
Rusty skips school and goes to his neighbor Iris Wheeler to talk about something he saw. Iris thinks there is an evil force at play. She explains that it came to their home because its old place is gone and it needs a new home. When Rusty and Andrea visit Mrs. Tetmann to ask about Peaches’ rabies vaccine, she doesn’t understand and shows them that Peaches has no cuts. Rusty reflects on Iris's words.
Jacob is busy designing a new neighborhood model. At dinner, Andrea asks Rusty to fetch the phone book, and when he returns after a minute, he finds the kitchen empty and the table cleared. Shocked to learn that three hours have passed, he keeps this to himself.
Lisa lets Andrea sleep in her room while she takes the couch. The ticking clock keeps Lisa awake, and around 3:00 a.m., she asks to sleep with Andrea. After getting permission, Lisa goes to fetch her pillow, but the living room doors slam shut and lock her inside.
Meanwhile, Andrea feels something slimy on her bed and finds it soaked in black slime. She turns on the light but sees nothing. After unlocking the doors for Lisa, she wonders if Rusty locked them, but he claims he was out for a walk.
The next morning, Andrea discovers that Peaches was killed, with a swastika drawn in blood on Mrs. Tetmann's house. The police suspect Rusty. That night, Andrea's boyfriend Leonard hallucinates about Jacob interrogating him.
The next day, Rusty visits Iris, sharing strange occurrences since his father's return from Amityville. Iris discovers the clock is the source of the trouble, but as she tries to warn Rusty, a stork statue falls from a truck and kills her.
At the same time, problems arise at the Sterling house. Lisa's boyfriend, Andy, melts onto the floor, Leonard faces goo a zombie rises from the bathtub, and Jacob behaves aggressively. Now, Lisa and Jacob are fully under the clock's control. Rusty is forced to defend himself and kills Lisa.
Andrea fights off Jacob's attack but discovers that the clock has de-aged Rusty into a child as he tries to destroy it. Andrea tells the clock to let Rusty go and starts breaking open the wall. Inside, she finds giant clock gears and cannot destroy the clock. As the clock ages her into an old woman, she ignites a gas pipe, causing an explosion.
On the first night Jacob brought the clock home, Andrea, recalling everything, broke it in anger. When Jacob questioned her, she left. Meanwhile, Rusty noticed Iris across the street, and they smiled, sharing a moment of mutual remembrance.
Cast
[edit]- Stephen Macht as Jacob Sterling
- Shawn Weatherly as Andrea Livingston
- Megan Ward as Lisa Sterling
- Damon Martin as Rusty Sterling
- Jonathan Penner as Dr. Leonard Stafford
- Nita Talbot as Iris Wheeler
- Dean Cochran as Andy
- Terrie Snell as Mrs. Tetmann
- Kevin Bourland as Officer #1
- Margarita Franco as Officer #2
- William Jackson as Officer #3 (as William B. Jackson)
- Willie C. Carpenter as Doctor
- Dick Miller as Mr. Anderson
- Alan Berman as Van Driver
- Dylan Milo as Baby Rusty
Release
[edit]The film was released direct-to-video in the United States on July 16, 1992 by Republic Pictures Home Video and in July 2005 on DVD by Lionsgate, under license from previous rights holder Fremantle. In the Philippines, the film was theatrically released by Jemah Films as Curse of Amityville: The Final Chapter on February 11, 1993.[1] In 2019, Vinegar Syndrome, under license from Multicom Entertainment Group, released the film on Blu Ray in the US which was included in the boxset, ‘Amityville: The Cursed Collection’. In 2022, the film was released on Blu Ray in the UK courtesy of Screenbound Pictures Ltd.
Reception
[edit]On Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregate, the film currently holds an approval rating of 40% based on 10 reviews.[2] The film was ranked no. 10 on Game Rant's list of the "Best Amityville Horror Movies" in 2021.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "Grand Opening Today". Manila Standard. Kamahalan Publishing Corp. February 11, 1993. p. 24. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
A Horror Valentine Treat for Lovers Beyond Time, Beyond Place, Beyond Evil!
- ^ "Amityville 1992: It's About Time". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved October 15, 2023.
- ^ "Best Amityville Horror Movies". Game Rant. November 24, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2023.
External links
[edit]- 1992 films
- 1992 direct-to-video films
- 1992 horror films
- 1992 independent films
- 1990s American films
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s police films
- 1990s psychological horror films
- 1990s supernatural horror films
- American body horror films
- American direct-to-video films
- American haunted house films
- American independent films
- American police films
- American psychological horror films
- American sequel films
- American supernatural horror films
- Amityville Horror films
- Cultural depictions of Gilles de Rais
- Demons in film
- Direct-to-video horror films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Films about animal cruelty
- Films about architecture
- Films about dysfunctional families
- Films about infidelity
- Films about murder
- Films about psychiatry
- Films about psychic powers
- Films about rapid human age change
- Films about single parent families
- Films about time
- 1990s films about time travel
- Films about widowhood in the United States
- Films based on American horror novels
- Films directed by Tony Randel
- Films produced by Christopher DeFaria
- Films scored by Daniel Licht
- Films set in 1992
- Films set in California
- Films shot in Los Angeles
- Films about incest
- Juvenile delinquency in fiction
- Fiction about sentient objects
- Time loop films
- Films about siblicide
- Works about clocks
- English-language horror films
- English-language independent films
- English-language crime films