Dawn of the Mummy is a 1981 American horror film directed by Frank Agrama, who also served as writer and producer on the film. While not prosecuted for obscenity, the film was seized and confiscated in the UK under Section 3 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959 during the video nasty panic.

Dawn of the Mummy
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFrank Agrama
Written byFrank Agrama
Ronald Dobrin
Daria Price
Produced byFrank Agrama
StarringBrenda King
Barry Sattels
George Peck
John Salvo
Ibrahim Khan
Joan Levy
Ellen Faison
Dianne Beatty
CinematographyLarry Revene
Sergio Rubini
Edited byJonathon Braun
Music byShuki Levy
Distributed byHarmony Gold USA
Goldfrab Distribution
Release date
  • December 11, 1981 (1981-12-11)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$500,000

Plot

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In Egypt during the fourth millennium BC, slave raiders abduct villagers to be servants for Pharaoh Sefirama's burial. They are ordered to stand around Sefirama's sarcophagus, killed with poison gas, and the entrance to his tomb is sealed.

Thousands of years later, three men, Rick, Tariq, and Karib, detonate the tomb and uncover its entrance. The burial's high priestess, now an elderly woman, screams, saying that the tomb is cursed, but is scared off when Rick shoots his pistol at the air. Rick tells Tariq and Karib to guard the tomb for the night and drives away in his Jeep.

That evening, three grave robbers arrive and are greeted by the priestess, who tells them to close the tomb to prevent its curse. They enter the tomb but get infected by its poisonous gases. One robber dies, while the other two escape.

A group of American models travel to Egypt for a fashion shoot. En route to the tomb, one of their tires gets punctured, and the group stops to replace it. Model Lisa asks the director, Gary, to look at the other side of a dune. They race to the bottom of the other side, but Lisa falls and gets scared by one of the grave robbers' severed heads lying on the sand. The rest of their group takes them back to their location.

Rick and his group return to the tomb and explore its burial chamber. Rick attempts to chisel a passage into the chamber, but Tarak and Karib detonate its entrance with dynamite and open Sefirama's sarcophagus to look for more treasures.

After settling near a riverbank village for the night, the models' group moves on the next morning to shoot photos near the tomb. Karib shoots his gun at them, thinking that they are intruders, but Rick and Tariq stop him. The models' group proceeds to the tomb against Rick and his henchmen's objections. While doing so, their hot lights accidentally revive Sefirama. Rick snaps off the cable on one of their spotlights. Model Jenny is asked to go and find a battery for their spotlights, but spills a bowl containing one of Sefirama's organs, infecting her hand. Sefirama's followers also are revived.

Tariq is left to return to his home, while Jenny's infection persists and burns her. Karib enters the tomb alone, cuts open Sefirama's mummy, and steals his crook and flail. A door to another chamber opens. Karib enters but is incapacitated by the door and dragged away. The following day, Rick and Tariq enter the tomb while searching for Karib and find Sefirama's crook, flail, and other treasures.

At a campfire that night, the models find the two robbers's corpses. Their heads are crushed. Meanwhile, the priestess enters the tomb, and the mummy kills her.

The next day, a model gets lost in the tomb. Meanwhile, Gary and Ahmed go to town for a rest. Local Omar gives Jenny and Gary a "smoke." Jenny sees the mummy and runs to Gary. However, the mummy is gone when he looks.

The mummy decapitates one of the tomb raiders at the tomb. Models Lisa and Melinda take a swim at the nearby oasis. Melinda leaves to take a walk and runs into the mummy and one of his "soldiers." They kill Melinda by biting and tearing out her throat.

The next day, Rick finds Tariq dead, enters the tomb and calls for the God of the Sun. A wall slides back, and Rick finds the treasure. The mummy returns and kills Rick. Bill and Gary go to town to see Omar, who is celebrating his wedding.

Meanwhile, Lisa looks around the tomb. Bill finds the gold there and calls out. Rick's severed head falls from the ceiling and lands in Bill's arms. He returns to the camp, running from the mummy's "soldiers." Bill shoots the mummy, to no avail. The mummy decapitates Bill. Jenny gets eaten alive by the "soldiers" while the two remaining models, Lisa and June, flee in a jeep.

At Omar's wedding celebration, the "soldiers" eat the bride. Everyone runs, but the soldiers kill many in the street. Lisa and June arrive and throw dynamite at the mummy with little effect. Aided by Omar, the models spread gasoline, light a fuse in a box of dynamite and blow up a shed with the mummy in it. Gary arrives, and walks away with Lisa, June, and Omar. The mummy's hand later rises from the rubble.

Cast

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  • Brenda King as Lisa
  • Barry Sattels as Bill
  • George Peck as Rick
  • John Salvo as Gary
  • Ibrahim Khan as Karib
  • Joan Levy as Jenny
  • Ellen Faison as Melinda
  • Dianne Beatty as Joan
  • Ali Gohar as Tariq
  • Ahmed Rateb as Omar
  • Bahar Saied
  • Ali Azab
  • Ahamed Labab as Ahamed
  • Laila Nasr as High Priestess/Old Hag
  • Kandarp Raval as The servant boy (Mummy)

Production

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Dawn of the Mummy was filmed in Egypt[1] with a mostly Italian crew leading many to mistake it as an Italian film.[2]

Unlike traditional interpretations of mummies in cinema, the film's portrayal of the undead is quite unique. In the film, the mummies are portrayed as ravenous flesh-eaters, similar to the popular portrayal of zombies in which both share many similarities.[3]

Due to the film's surprisingly graphic content, the film was originally subject to several cuts in the UK in order to trim down the film's more graphic scenes; approximately 1 minute and 43 seconds were cut from 12 different scenes in the film. Some scenes included The Mummy ramming a machete into the character Tarak's head, a man being gutted by the mummy, and scenes where the mummy's undead servants feast on several characters. The cuts were waived for the 2003 Anchor Bay DVD.[4]

Release

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Home media

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Dawn of the Mummy has been released in VHS and DVD format. The film was released in region 1 by Madacy Entertainment, as a VHS transfer. It features an audio commentary track by director Frank Agrama.[5]

The film was released uncut in the UK by Anchor Bay Entertainment. It features an anamorphic widescreen 1.77:1 transfer, plus the 4:3 full-screen transfer, DTS Digital Surround, Dolby Digital 2.0 & 5.1 Surround. The extras include Director's Audio Commentary, Stills Gallery, Production Notes, and Trailer.[6]

Reception

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The film has received mixed to negative reviews from critics.

John Stanley awarded the film 2 / 4 stars stating, "Hashish smokers in a Cairo square are as exciting as it gets in this tale".[7] Popcorn Pictures.com gave the film 6/10 stating, "It is an arduous struggle to get past the first half of Dawn of the Mummy but stick with it and you'll be rewarded with one of the more entertaining zombie flicks of its period: a guilty pleasure of trashy exploitation at its finest. If the entire film had been as enjoyable as the last half, you'd be looking at a bonafide classic right here".[8]

It was awarded a score of 0 / 4 by VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever which panned the film's plot and acting.[9]

Remake

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Anthony Hickox wrote 2012 the script of the remake Prisoners of the Sun, which directed by Roger Christian and stars Joss Ackland, Carmen Chaplin, Nick Moran and John Rhys-Davies.[10] The film was released in April 2015 in the United Kingdom on DVD and Blu-ray.[11]

References

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  1. ^ Sally MacDonald; Michael Rice (15 October 2003). CONSUMING ANCIENT EGYPT. Left Coast Press. pp. 46–. ISBN 978-1-59874-203-9.
  2. ^ Jay Slater (25 September 2002). Eaten alive!: Italian cannibal and zombie movies. Plexus. ISBN 978-0-85965-314-5.
  3. ^ Alan Jones (2005). The Rough Guide to Horror Movies. Rough Guides. ISBN 9781843535218.
  4. ^ "Dawn of the Mummy (Comparison: BBFC 18 VHS (Apex) - German DVD) - Movie-Censorship.com". movie-censorship.com. Eiskaltes Grab. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  5. ^ "Dawn of the Mummy review". eccrentic-cinema.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
  6. ^ "Dawn of the Mummy DVD". hkflix.com. Retrieved 10 November 2010.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ John Stanley (2000). Creature Features: The Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Movie Guide. Berkley Boulevard Books. ISBN 978-0-425-17517-0.
  8. ^ "Dawn of the Mummy (1981) | Popcorn Pictures". Popcorn Pictures.com. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  9. ^ VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale CENGAGE Learning. 2012. p. 251. Archived from the original on 9 October 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  10. ^ "Dawn of the Mummy Remake". Gale CENGAGE Learning. 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  11. ^ "Stephen Romano's RETRO 13 – Dawn of the Mummy… Part 2?". DC. 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
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