Evil Town

Evil Town is a 1987 American zombie horror film directed by Curtis Hanson, Mardi Rustam, Larry Spiegel and Peter S. Traynor. Evil Town was the last film with the actor Dean Jagger.

Synopsis
The film depicts an evil scientist's (Dean Jagger) campaign to achieve eternal youth, through synthesizing a drug derived from human pituitary fluid. In extracting the fluid, he creates mindless zombies from the donors. Because the local town residents are in on the plot, to achieve immortality, they help the scientist, by abducting visitors who come through town.

Cast

 * James Keach as Dr. Chris Fuller
 * Dean Jagger as Dr. Schaeffer
 * Robert Walker Jr. as Mike
 * Doria Cook-Nelson as Linda
 * Lynda Wiesmeier as Dianne
 * Michele Marsh as Julie
 * Christie Houser as Terrie
 * Dabbs Greer as Lyle Phelps
 * Regis Toomey as Doc Hooper
 * Lurene Tuttle as Mildred Phelps
 * Richard Hale as Lester Wylie
 * Hope Summers as Mrs. Wylie
 * E. J. André as Earl

Production
The film went into production in 1984 and went through numerous re-writes and re-edits before release in 1987. It is made up of footage of several older films, with major footage coming from the unfinished Dean Jagger film God Bless Dr. Shagetz (1974). When the pieces of the various older films were patched together, there was inclusion of some new footage, including some with Jillian Kesner and nude scenes with Playboy Playmate Lynda Wiesmeier.

Pre spin-off
When beginning work on Evil Town in 1984, director Mardi Rustam liked the story enough to make his own version, which he released as Evils of the Night (1985), two years before the release of Evil Town.

Reception
Cavett Binion of All Movie Guide called it a "silly horror film" and noted that it was an assemblage of parts of earlier films, including an unfinished one from the 1970s, and that it was "spiced up with some gratuitous nudity courtesy of former Playboy playmate Lynda Wiesmeier". While remarking that the editor's efforts to maintain continuity were commendable, he concluded that "the end result seems hardly worth the effort".

Release
The film was scheduled for release on June 3, 1987, but due to the high level of anticipation for the movie, many theaters began showing it on the evening of June 2, 1987. It was released in the United States on VHS in November 1987.