Burnt Offerings

    Burnt Offerings
    1976

    Synopsis

    A couple and their 12-year-old son move into a giant house for the summer. Things start acting strange almost immediately. It seems that every time someone gets hurt on the grounds, the beat-up house seems to repair itself.

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    Cast

    • Karen BlackMarian Rolf
    • Oliver ReedBen Rolf
    • Burgess MeredithArnold Allardyce
    • Bette DavisAunt Elizabeth
    • Eileen HeckartRoz Allardyce
    • Lee MontgomeryDavid 'Davey' Rolf
    • Dub TaylorWalker
    • Joseph RileyBen's Father
    • Todd TurquandYoung Ben
    • Orin CannonMinister

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The New York Times

      Director Curtis times his audience immersions into the ice bath of terror with such skill that moviegoers will scarcely have the leisure to ask why some of the renters aren't a bit more observant and curious about their dwelling.
    • 60

      Time Out

      The current minor boom in American horror films has two notable features: the single-minded concentration on the nuclear family as a point of attack, and the consistent rejection of happy endings. This tale of a family taking a spooky old mansion for the summer would be strictly formula stuff were it not for these elements; but veteran Eugène Lourié's art direction helps.
    • 50

      Variety

      The horror is expressed through sudden murderous impulses felt by Black and Reed, a premise which might have been interesting if director Dan Curtis hadn't relied strictly on formula treatment.
    • 38

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Burnt Offerings is a mystery, all right. What's mysterious is that the filmmakers were able to sell such a weary collection of ancient cliches for cold hard cash.
    • 30

      Newsweek

      The movie merely piles on one special effect after another - none of them too special - and stalls for time. Even the title is a sham: nobody ever so much as lights a match. And nobody - not even the most gullible moviegoer - can expect to receive any present. [08 Nov 1976, p.108]
    • 25

      TV Guide Magazine

      Overlong, talky, predictable, and dull, dull, dull.

    Seen by

    • Metalshell