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I Bury the Living (1957)

Edgar Allan Poe would have truly appreciated this "crisp little chiller" (Leonard Maltin) howlingly haunted with "dire happenings and eerie effects bound to please the spook set" (The Film Daily).  Starring rugged Hollywood leading man Richard Boone (TV's "Have Gun Will Travel") and folk singer Theodore Bikel as a dynamic dou of death, this little electrifying shocker may send you to an early grave - if it's not already occupied.

"Intriguing...eerie!"
-Variety

When a cemetery director (Boone) puts pins on a map of empty graves, the grave owners mysteriously die, driving the director crazy and real estate prices sky-high.  But there is something more devilishly demented behind the deaths - and digging for answers uncovers a most horrifying climax.

Director Albert Band's was the Executive Producer of "Honey, I Shrunk The Kids".

I Bury The Living writer Louis Garfinkle honed his craft and was nominated for a 1978 Oscar for "The Deer Hunter".

Gerald Fried, whose eerie musical score dominates the picture, created the themes for TV's "Star Trek", "Mission Impossible" and "Gilligan's Island".

Total Running Time Approx. 80 Minutes
Rated: PG

I Bury The Living is available on V.H.S. and D.V.D. as part of M.G.M.'s Midnight Movies series at
M.G.M.Com
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