Blue Sunshine | |
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Theatrical poster to Blue Sunshine (1978)
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Directed by | Jeff Lieberman |
Produced by | George Manasse |
Written by | Jeff Lieberman |
Starring |
Zalman King Deborah Winters Robert Walden Mark Goddard Brion James Charles Siebert |
Music by | Charles Gross |
Cinematography | Don Knight |
Edited by | Brian Smedley-Aston Russ Kingston |
Distributed by | Cinema Shares International |
Release date
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Running time
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94 mins. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $550,000 |
Blue Sunshine is a 1978 American horror film written and directed by Jeff Lieberman and starring Zalman King, Deborah Winters, and Mark Goddard. The plot focuses on a series of random murders in Los Angeles, in which the only common link between the perpetrators is a mysterious strain of LSD that they had all taken years prior.
Over the years, the film attracted a cult following, and was released on special edition DVD by Synapse Entertainment in 2003.
In the midst of a party a reveler croons to the rest of the room and has his hair suddenly pulled off by a curious friend. The bald crooner then has a psychotic break and starts killing everyone. Jerry Zipkin (Zalman King), is wrongly accused of the murders, and tries to gather evidence to prove his innocence with the help of Alicia Sweeney (Deborah Winters). He discovers that ten years prior, a group of college kids had taken a new form of LSD called "Blue Sunshine," which causes its users to lose their hair and become homicidal maniacs many years after their trip is over. Zipkin manages to defeat the crazed bodyguard of a local politician (Mark Goddard), and save the shopping mall discothèque by carefully remembering the advice of the gun shop employee.
AllMovie gave the film a mildly favorable review, calling it "too uneven to please a general audience" but "offers enough moments of interest for fans of horror films and offbeat cult items."