Nightmare Sisters | |
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Directed by | David DeCoteau |
Produced by | John Schouweiler |
Written by | Kenneth J. Hall |
Starring |
Linnea Quigley Brinke Stevens Michelle Bauer |
Release date
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Running time
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83 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Nightmare Sisters (also released as Sorority Succubus Sisters) is a 1988 direct-to-video, low-budget, erotic comedy. It is notable as one of only two films in which 1980s scream queens Linnea Quigley, Brinke Stevens, and Michelle Bauer appear together.
Buck-toothed Melody, bespectacled Marci, and chubby Mickey are socially awkward sorority sisters. Desperate for some fun, they invite a trio of equally nerdy fraternity pledges over for a party. The party fizzles and the guys are on the verge of leaving when the girls try to liven things up by holding a séance. The crystal ball they use at the séance is cursed and causes the girls to become possessed by a succubus.
The suddenly sexy (and mostly nude) girls share some pie and a bath and then set out to seduce and murder their guests. The girls take on new personas to help them trap their prey. Mickey becomes a bikini-clad jungle girl, Marci transforms herself into a pigtail-sporting naughty girl, and Melody changes into a wild rock chick. The boys fight temptation and try to find help for the girls. The situation gets more complicated when the boys’ loutish fraternity brothers show up looking to score.
Music for the film was performed by the Los Angeles punk/metal band Haunted Garage, whose frontman Dukey Flyswatter also appears in the film as Omar. Songs include "Sorority Sister Succubus" and "Brain in a Jar". A later recording of "Brain in a Jar" appeared on the band’s 1991 CD Possession Park.
Linnea Quigley also sings “Santa Monica Blvd. Boys,” a song she performed with her band The Skirts.
Nightmare Sisters was filmed over four days in September 1987 for about $40,000 using left-over film, cast, and crew from the just completed Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama.
The film was shot in the producer’s rented home. Set decoration largely consisted of different colored lighting and covering the walls with posters. (One of the posters is for Creepozoids, another David DeCoteau film starring Linnea Quigley.) The actresses did their own make-up and provided their own costumes.