Stars: Ferdy Mayne, Leon Askin, Jeffrey Combs, Luca Bercovici, Nita Talbot, Leon Askin, Jennifer Starrett, Barbara Pilavin, Alan Stock | Written and Directed by Norman Thaddeus Vane
Fandom takes on a whole new meaning when a group of film loving college students decide to pay the ultimate respects to their favourite horror icon, the recently deceased Conrad Radzoff (Ferdy Mayne). How do they do this? Hold a memorial? Have a Radzoff horror marathon? Nope, they decide to steal his freshly buried body and give hime the ultimate farewell house party back in their mansion! Like most cases however, this is one of those instances were one of your heroes is actually an arsehole (Cough-Tom Savini-Cough!). You see, Radzoff had an often fatal temper. Not even a cameo from Leon Askin (The Robe) is safe! To make matters infinitely worse for our group of corpse stealing cinephiles, Mayne decides to...
Fandom takes on a whole new meaning when a group of film loving college students decide to pay the ultimate respects to their favourite horror icon, the recently deceased Conrad Radzoff (Ferdy Mayne). How do they do this? Hold a memorial? Have a Radzoff horror marathon? Nope, they decide to steal his freshly buried body and give hime the ultimate farewell house party back in their mansion! Like most cases however, this is one of those instances were one of your heroes is actually an arsehole (Cough-Tom Savini-Cough!). You see, Radzoff had an often fatal temper. Not even a cameo from Leon Askin (The Robe) is safe! To make matters infinitely worse for our group of corpse stealing cinephiles, Mayne decides to...
- 9/11/2018
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Exhibition industry investors continued to send mixed signals of sorts Monday, this time after the latest earnings report from Cinemark Holdings Inc. that was good enough to encourage the company to pay its first dividend.
However, analysts have been slightly disappointed in boxoffice results in the second quarter, which failed to meet robust expectations, and Cinemark shares closed unchanged at $16.98.
Cinemark reported a profit of $47.9 million in the second quarter, up from $13.1 million a year ago, on revenue that surged 49.1% to $440 million.
The large increases were driven primarily by the October acquisition of Century Theatres, boosting Cinemark's footprint to 4,568 screens in 402 theaters in 38 states and a dozen countries.
Cinemark said that it has initiated a quarterly dividend of 18 cents per share -- prorated down to 13 cents this time around -- payable to shareholders of record as of Sept. 13. The dividend reflects Cinemark's "strong performance and outlook," CEO Alan Stock said.
However, analysts have been slightly disappointed in boxoffice results in the second quarter, which failed to meet robust expectations, and Cinemark shares closed unchanged at $16.98.
Cinemark reported a profit of $47.9 million in the second quarter, up from $13.1 million a year ago, on revenue that surged 49.1% to $440 million.
The large increases were driven primarily by the October acquisition of Century Theatres, boosting Cinemark's footprint to 4,568 screens in 402 theaters in 38 states and a dozen countries.
Cinemark said that it has initiated a quarterly dividend of 18 cents per share -- prorated down to 13 cents this time around -- payable to shareholders of record as of Sept. 13. The dividend reflects Cinemark's "strong performance and outlook," CEO Alan Stock said.
- 8/14/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.