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Elvira's Haunted Hills

Elvira's Haunted Hills is a 2001 American fantasy comedy film directed by Sam Irvin and written by Cassandra Peterson and John Paragon. The second film starring Peterson in the title role, after the 1988 theatrical release Elvira: Mistress of the Dark, it also stars Richard O'Brien, Mary Scheer, and Scott Atkinson.

Plot
In 1851 in the Carpathian Mountains of Romania, Elvira and her maidservant Zou Zou (Mary Jo Smith), on their way to a can-can revue in Paris, get kicked out of an inn for a slight monetary discrepancy. After making their way out of the village, they are rescued by Dr. Bradley Bradley, who takes them to stay at Castle Hellsubus, in the hills high above the village. While there, Elvira meets the residents—and discovers that she happens to resemble the deceased former wife of his Lordship, the Count Vladimere Hellsubus. ==Cast==
Cast
Cassandra Peterson as Elvira / Lady Elura Hellsubus • Richard O'Brien as Lord Vladimere Hellsubus • Mary Scheer as Lady Ema Hellsubus • Scott Atkinson as Dr. Bradley Bradley • Gabriel Andronache as Adrian • Rob Paulsen (uncredited) as Adrian's voice • Mary Jo Smith as Zou Zou • Heather Hopper as Lady Roxanna Hellsubus • Remus Cernat as Nicholai Hellsubus • Lucia Maier as the maid • Jerry Jackson as the English gentleman • Theodor Danetti as the innkeeper ==Production==
Production
''Elvira's Haunted Hills'' was independently made and privately funded; Peterson and then-husband Mark Pierson mortgaged their house and the apartment building they co-owned to raise $1 million, with donations from relatives providing the remaining $500,000. Filming took place in Transylvania, Romania, and the film was promoted at film festivals and horror/sci-fi conventions. The film parodies the Roger Corman-directed Edgar Allan Poe films of the early 1960s – dedicated to the memory of the then-recently deceased Vincent Price after premiering at the International Rocky Horror Fan Convention on 23 June 2001. It was released direct-to-video on 31 October 2002. == Reception ==
Reception
In an unfavorable review, Ty Burr in the Boston Globe rated it as "A sloppy slapstick throwback to long gone bottom-of-the-bill fare like The Ghost and Mr. Chicken." In his review for The New York Post, Lou Lumenick wrote that it is "more entertaining than much of the big-studio schlock out there." Ian Jane of DVD Talk wrote in 2011 that "if (...) isn't a classic it's amusing enough for what it is, and that's a playful, harmlessly sexy parody." Also in 2011, on IGN, Rl Shaffer called it "a mess. It also holds a small place in my heart as the first film I ever walked out on. (...) But if you're an Elvira fan (...) is a must-watch." Cody Hamman of Joblo.com wrote that "Haunted Hills is seen as inferior, but the truth is, it’s just different." ==Awards==
Awards
• 2002 Provincetown International Film Festival: Best Feature – Audience Award ==See also==
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