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Saturday the 14th

Saturday the 14th is a 1981 American comedy horror film starring real-life husband and wife Paula Prentiss and Richard Benjamin, co-written and directed by Howard R. Cohen and produced by Julie Corman.

Saturday the 14th

Howard R. Cohen

Jeff Begun

Kent Beyda
Joanne D'Antonio

Parmer Fuller

  • August 14, 1981 (1981-08-14)
  • November 20, 1981 (1981-11-20) (Los Angeles)[1]

76 minutes

United States

English

$4 million[2] or $2.2 million[3]

Despite the implications of the film's title, it is a spoof of classic horror movies from the 1930s and 1940s, and not a parody of the Friday the 13th series or of slasher films of that type from the 1980s.[4][5] It was followed by Saturday the 14th Strikes Back in 1988.


In the film, the Hyatt family inherits the house of a deceased uncle and a magical book. The family's son reads the book and unwittingly unleashes monsters from its pages. The family has interactions with the vampire Waldemar and the would-be world-conqueror Van Helsing, who each want to acquire the book.

Plot[edit]

An all-American family inherits a deceased uncle's house. John and Mary Hyatt, together with daughter Debbie and son Billy move in, but Waldemar, a vampire, and Yolanda, his wife, want desperately to get into the rundown house because it contains a book of evil.


Billy finds the mysterious book. He reads of a curse hanging over the date of Saturday the 14th. As he turns the page, a monster is unleashed and with each turn, another disappears from the page and is materialized within or outside the home. The house is soon swarming with monsters.


Strange things start happening: eyes appear in John's coffee, sandwiches are mysteriously eaten, the television tunes into The Twilight Zone only, dirt is found in Mary's bed, dishes get done by themselves, neighbors disappear. As this is happening, neither John or Mary suspect anything, completely oblivious to the spooky occurrences around them.


Waldemar gets into the house by turning into a bat. Mary keeps hearing noises at night, which she thinks are made by owls, but are actually the sounds of Waldemar in bat form. John hires an exterminator to get rid of the bats. The exterminator turns out to be Van Helsing, who is also after the book of evil.


John and Mary begin planning a housewarming party for Saturday the 14th. Guests arrive, but they cannot leave. When they try, a thunderstorm appears outside the door. As the night unfolds, the monsters begin to kill the guests one by one.


Eventually a duel between Van Helsing and Waldemar and Yolanda erupts, where it is discovered that Van Helsing wants the book in order to rule the world and Waldemar and Yolanda were only trying to stop him from getting his hands on it. Good triumphs over evil, as Van Helsing and the monsters are defeated.


The Hyatts end up in an upscale new home, while Waldemar and Yolanda keep the original house as their own.

as John Hyatt, the father of the family

Richard Benjamin

as Mary Hyatt, the mother of the family

Paula Prentiss

as Waldemar, vampire looking to buy the house

Jeffrey Tambor

as Van Helsing, evil genius disguised as an exterminator

Severn Darden

as Debbie Hyatt, daughter of John and Mary

Kari Michaelsen

as Aunt Lucille

Rosemary DeCamp

Kevin Brando as Billy Hyatt, son of John and Mary

Nancy Lee Andrews as Yolanda, wife of the vampire Waldermar

as Attorney

Stacy Keach Sr.

as Cousin Rhonda

Roberta Collins

as The Major

Paul 'Mousie' Garner

Production[edit]

The film was based on an itea of Jeff Bergun who told it to Howard Cohen. Cohen wrote up a synopsis and sent it to Roger Corman. Corman asked Cohen to write it and Cohen agreed it he could direct.[6]


Julie Corman says "I thought, “This is a lot of fun. I’d like to produce it"."[7]


Filming took three weeks. Julie Corman recalls Paul Prentiss and Richard Benjamin "had very individual ideas about their characters. I didn’t get the feeling that one dictated to the other.Dick was generally in charge of presenting a message that maybe I wouldn’t like to say to Paula. For example, Paula, who’s supposed to be a vampire in the movie, didn’t want to wear fangs. I thought, “How can I tell Howard that Paula says she’s not wearing these fangs?” Dick assured me, “Trust me, you will believe she’s a vampire.” He was right."[7]


Despite being set in the fictional town of Eerie, Pennsylvania, the Spooky House Exteriors and Interiors, in which the Hyatt Family inherited from their Late Uncle by mistake in the film, is located in the University of Southern California district in Los Angeles at 1190 West Adams Boulevard.

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Saturday the 14th