It stars Ferdy Mayne, Luca Bercovici, Jennifer Starrett, Nita Talbot and Barbara Pilavin, along with Jeffrey Combs in his horror film acting debut.
Eve decides to watch a movie and is lured out of her room by the sound of Donna's voice, only to be smashed into the wall by Conrad's coffin, and hidden with Oscar's body.
Stu runs upstairs to get a flashlight since Saint's car will not start, only to be decapitated by Conrad who then sends his severed head out onto the front lawn of the mansion.
The final scene shows a video being played on the television installed in the crypt of Conrad informing the audience that hell is actually quite pleasant and hopes that more respect will be shown for the dead.
"[6] Bill Gibron of DVD Talk referred to it as "a monotonous mess, made even less memorable by its lack of anything closely resembling a movie – like characters, plot or purpose.
"[13] He concluded that the film is "far too slow and somber for a modern macabre audience, and its supposedly ingenious premise pales in comparison to those that would later really fidget with the scary movie dynamic.
"[13] However, in his book The Essential Monster Movie Guide, writer Stephen Jones called the film an "enjoyable low-budget horror thriller.
"[5] Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting wrote that the film "has some pretty great death sequences", and called it "'80s slashers meets Gothic horror, but full on weird.