Exhumed Films Presents 3-Dementia! A Hearty Slice of Early ‘80s 3D Genre

Get your tickets now for this Philadelphia event

The crew at Exhumed Films have outdone themselves yet again with another once in a lifetime cinematic event. 3-Dementia! will be taking over the Light Box theater in Philadelphia, Sunday, July 16th beginning at noon with five films projected in their native 3D, all from 35mm archive prints. This is thanks to a new proprietary system developed by Exhumed’s own Harry Guerro that uses special glasses and projection lenses to allow almost any theater to screen these films as originally intended.

The program itself, which is a fascinating snapshot of the 3D boom of the early ‘80s, features a few more well-known titles like Friday the 13th Part 3 and Treasure of the Four Crowns supplemented with such rarities as Rottweiller, Hit The Road Running, and Revenge of the Shogun Women. While Hit the Road Running channels the Dukes of Hazzard for its 3D hijinks, for a regional film that probably never screened outside of North Carolina, Revenge of the Shogun Women is pure martial arts rape-revenge insanity that would make Quentin Tarantino proud. Director Worth Keeter, who directed both Running and the animals attack thriller Rottweiller also screening, will be on hand to intro his films and answer audience questions. Keeping with the theme of the event, Keeter also has the distinction of directing more 3D films than any other director.

Tickets for 3-Dementia! are $40 for general admission and $30 for IHP members (purchase them HERE); and if that wasn’t incentive enough, tickets for Exhumed’s annual 24 Hour Horror-thon, which sold out last year in under two minutes, will also be on sale exclusively to attendees of 3-Dementia! So get your tickets now and check out the full rundown of the event below:

Doors at 11AM, show starts at Noon — $40 general admission / $30 IHP members

Join Exhumed Films as we present a mind-boggling marathon featuring some of the greatest 3-D films of all time, projected from original 35mm prints! The 1970s and 1980s saw a resurgence of three-dimensional movies, particularly in the realm of genre cinema. Some of the most infamous and beloved 3-D titles in history were released during this era; the majority have not seen the light of the projector bulb in over 30 years, but they are ready to be re-discovered! We will spotlight a few of the most famous films from the era, as well as some extreme rarities.

Exhumed is also pleased to announce that filmmaker Worth Keeter, who directed two of the features in our marathon, will be on hand to introduce his movies and discuss the heyday of 3-D mania!

3-Dementia! will feature the following flicks:

FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III 3-D

1982 / 35mm / Dir. Steve Miner / 95 minutes

While not necessarily the most original installment in the series, FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III is arguably the most influential slasher sequel of all time due to its introduction of the iconic hockey mask that would soon become a horror movie hallmark. Moreover, FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III features some of the most entertaining 3-D gags in cinema history, including an impressive assortment of deadly weapons protruding from the screen. The story is nothing new: unstoppable killer Jason Voorhees, apparently recovered from his injuries at the end of the last film, finds a new slew of torpid teens to terrorize. Rarely screened in its original 3-D format, FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III is an entertaining departure from the predictability of the average slasher movie.

TREASURE OF THE FOUR CROWNS

1983 / 35mm / Dir. Ferdinando Baldi / 97 minutes

The 1981 3-D Spaghetti Western COMIN’ AT YA! was a such a financial success at the box office that it effectively started the 3-D resurgence of the 1980s. The filmmakers behind that hit followed it up with TREASURE OF THE FOUR CROWNS, an action/adventure film clearly inspired by RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK. Tony Anthony stars as a soldier of fortune that assembles a team of thieves with the goal of stealing a set of mystical gems. The quest leads them to creepy caves and booby-trapped fortresses, setting the stage for a series of inventive 3-D gimmicks. Indiana Jones it ain’t, but TREASURE OF THE FOUR CROWNS is nevertheless an enjoyable artifact from a bygone era.

ROTTWEILLER

1983 / 35mm / Dir. Worth Keeter / 89 minutes

Producer/actor Earl Owensby created a series of low budget regional genre films throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and even built his own soundstage — EO Studios — in Shelby, North Carolina to accommodate his productions. When the 3-D craze of the early 1980’s began to take hold, Owensby quickly jumped on the bandwagon, bringing along his longtime collaborator, director Worth Keeter. Their first foray into the realm of 3-D was ROTTWEILLER (aka DOGS OF HELL), a horror thriller about a murderous pack of killer canines. Owensby stars as a small town sheriff who must defend the community against a group of deadly dogs that have escaped from a secret military project. If you love “Animals Attack” movies, then ROTTWEILER in 3-D is not to be missed!

HIT THE ROAD RUNNING

1983 / 35mm / Dir. Worth Keeter / 92 minutes

Worth Keeter and Earl Owensby followed ROTTWEILLER with HIT THE ROAD RUNNING, an action-packed 3-D car chase comedy. If ROTTWEILLER was born from films like JAWS and THE PACK, then HIT THE ROAD RUNNING takes obvious inspiration from SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT and the popular TV show THE DUKES OF HAZZARD. Owensby once again stars, this time as Beau Jim Donner: a fast talking, fast driving “good ol’ boy” who returns to his hometown to free his uncle and neighbors from the clutches of a corrupt land baron. Hijinks — and lots of car crashes — ensue. Exhumed Films is proud to welcome Worth Keeter to what is surely the first theatrical screening of HIT THE ROAD RUNNING in nearly 35 years!

REVENGE OF THE SHOGUN WOMEN

1977 / 35mm / Dir. Mei Chun Chan / 98 minutes

Exhumed Films wowed the crowd at eX-Fest this year with the 3-D kung-fu classic DYNASTY. As an encore, we present this equally epic bit of martial arts madness! REVENGE OF THE SHOGUN WOMEN (aka 13 NUNS) tells the tale of a group of women who are assaulted and degraded by a gang of bandits. In order to protect themselves from future attacks, our heroines become masters (mistresses?) of martial arts, and it is not long before they seek out vengeance against their attackers. Featuring a plethora of projectiles popping off the screen, REVENGE OF THE SHOGUN WOMEN is definitely one of the impressive 3-D features ever made.

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