Blood Dolls | |
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Directed by | Charles Band |
Produced by | Charles Band |
Written by | Robert Talbot, Charles Band (story only) |
Starring | Jack Maturin Debra Mayer Nicholas Worth |
Music by | Ricardo Bizzetti |
Cinematography | Tom Callaway |
Edited by | Steve Nielson |
Distributed by | Multicom Entertainment Group Inc., Full Moon Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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84 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,000,000 |
Blood Dolls is a 1999 direct-to-video film directed by Charles Band.
Virgil Travis is a wealthy, soulless psychopath who lives in seclusion in his mansion home with his dwarf butler (Phil Fondacaro) and his murderous, clown make-up-wearing maniac right-hand man. Tortured and forcibly mutated as a child by a woman who put him through body transforming procedures, Virgil has an abnormally sized head. Basking in the suffering, degradation, pain, and death of others, Virgil has already killed, and kidnapped a female rock group that he keeps imprisoned in his basement to help satisfy his constant need for perverse amusement. Never satisfied, though, Virgil decides that he will once again try to fill the emptiness that exists within him, and so creates a trio of deformed, living dolls to systematically murder any and all people who have ever wronged him. What Virgil doesn't anticipate, though, is meeting his match and finding love, both of which come in the form of a woman who is even more evil and twisted than he is.
The film has 2 different endings:
In the film, there is a character by the name of Mr. Mascaro. He is a human version of the character Jack Attack, who is a character from Demonic Toys.
Virgil Travis is the son of Myron Stackpool and from the yet-to-be-made Bride of the Head of the Family, Georgina.