Death Ship

Death Ship

198091 min
5.2/10
HorrorMysteryThriller

Plot Summary

Survivors of a tragic shipping collision are rescued by a mysterious black ship which appears out of the fog. Little do they realise that the ship is actually a Nazi torture ship which has sailed the seas for years, luring unsuspecting sailors aboard and killing them off one by one.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (14)

George Kennedy

George Kennedy

Captain Ashland

Richard Crenna

Richard Crenna

Trevor Marshall

Nick Mancuso

Nick Mancuso

Nick

Sally Ann Howes

Sally Ann Howes

Margaret Marshall

Kate Reid

Kate Reid

Sylvia

Victoria Burgoyne

Victoria Burgoyne

Lori

No Image

Jennifer McKinney

Robin Marshall

No Image

Danny Higham

Ben Marshall

Saul Rubinek

Saul Rubinek

Jackie

No Image

Murray Cruchley

Parsons

No Image

Doug Smith

Seaman No. 1

Anthony Sherwood

Anthony Sherwood

Seaman No. 2

🎬Crew

Director

Alvin Rakoff

Writers

John Robins, Jack Hill, David P. Lewis

Producers

Derek Gibson, Harold Greenberg

🖼️Gallery (28 images)

Death Ship backdrop 1
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🏷️Keywords

rescueshipnazioceanshipwreckpossessionghost shipslasherdemonblood showercanuxploitation

💬Reviews (1)

W

Wuchak

10/27/2019

***Ten people trapped on a ghostly… death ship*** A dilapidated German freighter from WW2 curiously rams a modern cruise ship and ten survivors board the mysterious vessel. But will they ever get off alive? George Kennedy plays the retiring captain of the cruise vessel while Richard Crenna appears as the up-and-coming captain. "Death Ship" (1980) takes the “Poseidon Adventure” (1972) template and adds a horror angle à la the later “Ghost Ship” (2002). But it’s the least of these and isn’t even as good as the low-budget “Ghost Voyage” (2008). Speaking of which, I didn’t view the movie until over a decade after its release and it struck me as low-budget. The constant shots of the navigation equipment and giant pistons operating on their own were particularly dubious and tiring. Seeing it again, it’s not as bad as I remember and delivers the goods as far as ghastly scenes go. Furthermore, Victoria Burgoyne has nice legs and a horrific blood bath (actually a shower). Unfortunately, the bright daytime setting of most of the film works against creating a haunting mood. “Ghost Ship” and “Ghost Voyage” didn’t have this problem. Furthermore, the way one of the ten is mysteriously hoisted up by crane cable lacked finesse in its placement, not to mention the unrealistic reaction of the other nine. But I liked the authentic defunct ship setting. The film runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot on a defunct German WW2 freighter that was a Kriegsmarine prison vessel used for torturing (how fitting). Additional footage was shot in Quebec City (I’m assuming studio work) whereas some footage was swiped from other flicks, such as the falling grand piano from “The Last Voyage” (1960), the radar sequence from “King Kong” (1976) and the giant pistons from “S.O.S. Titanic” (1979). GRADE: B-

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