The Outing | |
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Theatrical poster by Drew Struzan
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Directed by | Tom Daley |
Produced by | Warren Chaney |
Written by | Warren Chaney |
Starring |
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Music by |
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Cinematography | Herbert Raditschnig |
Edited by | Claudio M. Cutry |
Distributed by | Moviestore Entertainment |
Release date
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Running time
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87 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1.1 million |
The Outing is a 1987 American horror film that was directed by Tom Daley, based on a script by Warren Chaney. The film was originally released in the United Kingdom on April 28, 1987, as The Lamp and was retitled The Outing for its release in the United States on September 11 of the same year. The film stars Andra St. Ivanyi and follows a group of teenagers who decide to spend the night in a museum, but end up getting stalked by an evil genie.
The film was filmed in Houston, Galveston, Texas, and Los Angeles.
In 1893, a young woman wears a magical bracelet and the dark shadow of an evil jinni (genie) looms over a bloody scene, foreshadowing the violence to come.
In modern day, three criminals burglarize a house owned by the now elderly woman with the magical bracelet. The criminals kill her with an axe to her face and find the lamp. A genie is released from inside and possesses the old lady’s corpse to kill one of the burglars by head butting him with the double-headed axe still lodged in the corpse’s skull. The genie finds and murders the other two intruders and the female intruder’s breasts are exposed.
After surveying the crime scene, an officer sends the evidence, including the lamp and bracelet, for display at a natural science museum. From inside the lamp, the genie observes the museum's curator, Dr. Bressling, cataloguing the newly arrived artifacts. Dr. Bressling's teenage daughter, Alex, is also present and she tries on the magical bracelet. In a fit of adolescent angst, she says to her father, "Sometimes I wish you were dead!" She’s unable to take off the bracelet.
Alex’s class goes on a field trip to the museum where her dad works. The genie possesses Alex’s body and convinces her friends to go on an "outing" later to spend the night at the museum. The genie levitates Dr. Bressling’s body and decapitates him with a ceiling fan. The genie embodies more people and museum artifacts to commit acts of violence. Many bloody murders ensue. In the form of a resurrected snakeskin, he murders an opera-singing security guard. Alex’s friend, Babs', breasts are exposed as she takes a bath at the museum. Babs is killed by the demonized snakes during her bath. The genie’s true form is finally revealed as he chases Alex and her friends down the halls of the museum. Help arrives and together, they try to “destroy the lamp to destroy the jinn.”
At the end of the credits, the opera-singing security guard returns to take a bow.