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Drive-In Massacre is a 1976 American B-movie slasher film written and directed by Stu Segall, and co-written by John F. Goff and George Buck Flower.
Nov 18, 2011 · This is for two reasons. One, the Surgeon General was worried that the intended audience may be too distracted by seeing something with an actual plot, and two, they couldn’t afford the rights to anything, not even an industrial training film – and they’re free!
- Nigel Honeybone
Mar 13, 2017 · In fact, we owe the drive-in an even greater debt than you may realize, as the beautiful negative used for this must-have Blu-ray release from Severin Films was found in the sacred ruins of a former drive-in in Oxnard, California!
Dec 26, 2015 · Drive-in Massacre is one of those movies where the plot can be more or less guessed due to the title and poster. Suffice to say, this is about a series of murders that take place over the course of several days at a California drive-in with the killer using a sword to dispatch this victims.
The detectives start to narrow down suspects once they get a lead on a pervert who likes to drive around the drive-in and find couples making out in their cars. However more murders transpire and the bodies start to pile up and there is no conclusive evidence as to who is slicing up customers.
At no time does it seem like a bad idea to keep the drive-in open. Even when someone is killed every night! This movie's biggest problem is that in between deaths, it's an extremely dull police investigation, conducted by the world's most lackluster detectives.
It read "Drive-In Massacre has been deemed by an independent film board to be too terrifying for viewing by the average theatre patron. For this reason, it is suggested that those of you with severe emotional disorders or chronic coronary dysfunction NOT see this movie.