The Curse (film series)

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The Curse (film series)
Promotional Poster Artwork for the Tetralogy
Directed byDavid Keith, Frederico Prosperi, Sean Barton, David Schmoeller
StarringWil Wheaton, Claude Akins, Bo Svenson, Jill Schoelen, Christopher Lee, Jenilee Harrison, Tim Van Patten
Release date
1987-1993
CountriesItaly, United States, United Kingdom, Japan, South Africa
LanguagesItalian, English

The Curse pentalogy is a horror series of five originally unconnected films that were retitled to be part of a supernatural franchise for the American home video market. The series started in 1987 with The Curse. 1993's Curse IV: The Ultimate Sacrifice is notable due to the fact the fourth film was originally made in 1988, predating the third film Curse III: Blood Sacrifice which was released in 1991. The only loose connections between the films are the first two are Italian productions produced by Ovidio G. Assonitis, otherwise the films are completely unrelated.

Films

The Curse (1987)

An international co-production film between Italy and The United States.

Knoxville, utilized his farm property in Tellico Plains, Tennessee for the film, while the interiors were shot in Rome.[1][2] Many of the crew members, who were Italian, were billed under American names, including associate producer Lucio Fulci.[1] Actor Treat Williams was reportedly set to star in the film, but was not involved with the film itself.[1] The Curse opened in Los Angeles and New York on September 11, 1987.[1] It earned $1,169,922 from its opening weekend in 326 theaters, and finished grossing $1,930,001 at the box office.[3]
The film went on to be a major home video success in the rental market causing three unrelated films to be retitled as sequels.

Curse II: The Bite (1989)

An international co-production film between Italy, The United States and Japan. Originally filmed with the title The Bite, the film was later retitled Curse II: The Bite by the American distributors, who had also bought the rights to two Italian Ovidio G. Assonitis, this and Beyond the Door III. The film was retitled to capitalize on the home video success of The Curse.[4][5]

Curse III: Blood Sacrifice (1991)