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Nightfall
1999, regia di Kevin DeLullo

Scheda: Nazione: USA - Produzione: Troma Team, Nightfall One L.P. - Distribuzione: Troma Team Video - Soggetto: Kevin DeLullo - Sceneggiatura: Kevin DeLullo, Clyde Lewis - Fotografia: Greg Kiefer - Montaggio: Domenic De Saboto - Musiche: Bernard Danvlik, Terry Hansen, Jeff Phelps, Shawn Vincent - Effetti speciali: Denver Robbins - Formato: Color - Durata: 81' (90').
Cast:
Dave Blanchard, Charles De Lullo, Randy De Lullo, Kevin DeLullo, Thomas Dives, 
Dave Evanoff, Jeff Gertino, Glenn Golen, Jesse Gomez, Willie Gray, Brent Hansen, 
Mike Hardy, John Henson, Greg Heugly, Kirk Hinnen, Jeff Holder, Joe Jepson, Greg 
Kiefer, Jimmy Krakor, Rob Larsen, Sean Larsen, Clyde Lewis, Gary Mathie, Bryan 
Nielsen, Tyler Page, Dave Plunkett, Jeff Rector, Adam Smoot, Rich Stephenson, 
Tony Toscano, Tyson, Steven Udy, J.R. Vasquez, Todd West, Mike Worthen.
 
 

 
 

 
 

 Plot Summary, Synopsis, Review: 
 IMDb - 
allmovie.com
- 
vampyres-online.com - 
horror.cz
- 
listal.com
- 
filmprices.com
- 
myskreen.com
- 
de.getamovie.org
- 
enterplay.com.br
- 
flixster.com
- 
taliesinttlg.blogspot.com:  «One 
of the taglines of this movie is “You’ll pray for daylight!”. Hmmm… Quite 
frankly, no. You see, I sleep better when the sun is down, call me old fashioned, 
and as the film droned on and on I really felt that I was falling asleep. 
Eyelids became heavy and a desire to shut down all waking thought overcame me. 
You see, the film is just that darn boring. There is, however, a brief shining 
moment of lore. The film concerns special agents Jack Talbot (Jeff Rector) and 
Brian Guthrie (Adam Smoot). Jeff Rector, you may recall, was the lead actor, the 
director and the writer of the flick Revamped. One hopes that Revamped was an 
attempt to blot this from memory, it wasn’t a perfect film but it was certainly 
a vast improvement on this. Smoot as Guthrie seems way to young to be an FBI 
agent – even on his first assignment, something the script does recognise. They 
hunt the killer of at least 10 women, all drained of blood and all with needle 
like marks on the neck. They haven’t a clue, seriously not a single one. So 
Brian gets them a lead by asking psychic Ann Vorhees (Cherry Love). Now, though 
the spelling is different you’d be thinking – a killer on the loose and advice 
from someone with that surname, not a good mix. She is on the level however. 
Jack can’t see it and so lets Brian check out the address she proffers on his 
own. He finds a body and realises the person is still alive. He cuts the bonds 
but the person has turned and attacks. Somehow Brian manages to stake his 
attacker through the heart. Does he then go for backup? Does he heck, he wanders 
down to the cellar! In there he finds a lot of bodies. Now this is the shining 
moment of lore, though it is only later that we discover what we are looking at. 
In this vampires and water don’t mix, and that is any water. Also a bite is 
likely to turn a victim. The bodies in the cellar have been thrown into a 
shallow puddle of water and later we discover that vampire victims are placed in 
water when the vampire is preventing them from turning. We won’t go into the 
impracticality of any water hurting vampires as it takes away from the nice 
moment of putting the bodies in the water. Brian, however, is not in the water 
and is attacked by the main vampire (Thomas Dives) and killed. The vampire then 
escapes and sends himself, hidden in a coffin, by plane to a new city. When 
reports start coming through of deaths, Jack heads out that way and soon becomes 
convinced that he is dealing with the undead. Unfortunately, by then you are 
lucky if you’re not fast asleep, your mind retreating to the Land of Nod in 
order to escaping the endless boredom of the images on screen. Not even the one 
decent (ish) effect is enough to rouse you from lethargy. This effect is when a 
vampire burns in the sun, though it is less burn and more melt. It is not as 
though the film is particularly bad – compared to other low budget, straight to 
video flicks. It isn’t. But, my word, it is just plain old tedious and 
lacklustre».
 Plot Summary, Synopsis, Review: 
 IMDb - 
allmovie.com
- 
vampyres-online.com - 
horror.cz
- 
listal.com
- 
filmprices.com
- 
myskreen.com
- 
de.getamovie.org
- 
enterplay.com.br
- 
flixster.com
- 
taliesinttlg.blogspot.com:  «One 
of the taglines of this movie is “You’ll pray for daylight!”. Hmmm… Quite 
frankly, no. You see, I sleep better when the sun is down, call me old fashioned, 
and as the film droned on and on I really felt that I was falling asleep. 
Eyelids became heavy and a desire to shut down all waking thought overcame me. 
You see, the film is just that darn boring. There is, however, a brief shining 
moment of lore. The film concerns special agents Jack Talbot (Jeff Rector) and 
Brian Guthrie (Adam Smoot). Jeff Rector, you may recall, was the lead actor, the 
director and the writer of the flick Revamped. One hopes that Revamped was an 
attempt to blot this from memory, it wasn’t a perfect film but it was certainly 
a vast improvement on this. Smoot as Guthrie seems way to young to be an FBI 
agent – even on his first assignment, something the script does recognise. They 
hunt the killer of at least 10 women, all drained of blood and all with needle 
like marks on the neck. They haven’t a clue, seriously not a single one. So 
Brian gets them a lead by asking psychic Ann Vorhees (Cherry Love). Now, though 
the spelling is different you’d be thinking – a killer on the loose and advice 
from someone with that surname, not a good mix. She is on the level however. 
Jack can’t see it and so lets Brian check out the address she proffers on his 
own. He finds a body and realises the person is still alive. He cuts the bonds 
but the person has turned and attacks. Somehow Brian manages to stake his 
attacker through the heart. Does he then go for backup? Does he heck, he wanders 
down to the cellar! In there he finds a lot of bodies. Now this is the shining 
moment of lore, though it is only later that we discover what we are looking at. 
In this vampires and water don’t mix, and that is any water. Also a bite is 
likely to turn a victim. The bodies in the cellar have been thrown into a 
shallow puddle of water and later we discover that vampire victims are placed in 
water when the vampire is preventing them from turning. We won’t go into the 
impracticality of any water hurting vampires as it takes away from the nice 
moment of putting the bodies in the water. Brian, however, is not in the water 
and is attacked by the main vampire (Thomas Dives) and killed. The vampire then 
escapes and sends himself, hidden in a coffin, by plane to a new city. When 
reports start coming through of deaths, Jack heads out that way and soon becomes 
convinced that he is dealing with the undead. Unfortunately, by then you are 
lucky if you’re not fast asleep, your mind retreating to the Land of Nod in 
order to escaping the endless boredom of the images on screen. Not even the one 
decent (ish) effect is enough to rouse you from lethargy. This effect is when a 
vampire burns in the sun, though it is less burn and more melt. It is not as 
though the film is particularly bad – compared to other low budget, straight to 
video flicks. It isn’t. But, my word, it is just plain old tedious and 
lacklustre».
Datato 1995 secondo vampyres-online.com.