Basket Case

The tenant in room 7 is very small, very twisted, and very mad.

6.3
19821h 31m

A young man carrying a big basket that contains his extremely deformed, formerly conjoined twin brother seeks vengeance on the doctors who separated them against their will.

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Original Trailer

Original Trailer

Thumbnail for video: 4K UHD Unboxing

4K UHD Unboxing

Thumbnail for video: Freakout

Freakout

Thumbnail for video: Surgery

Surgery

Thumbnail for video: Basket Case ≣ 1982 ≣ Trailer #1

Basket Case ≣ 1982 ≣ Trailer #1

Thumbnail for video: Arrow Video Selects - Basket Case by Louise Buckler

Arrow Video Selects - Basket Case by Louise Buckler

Thumbnail for video: Outtakes Clip

Outtakes Clip

Thumbnail for video: Original TV Spot

Original TV Spot

Thumbnail for video: The Arrow Video Story

The Arrow Video Story

Cast

Photo of Robert Vogel

Robert Vogel

Hotel Manager

Photo of Diana Browne

Diana Browne

Dr. Judith Kutter

Photo of Catherine Russell

Catherine Russell

Hotel Tenant

Photo of Jerry Butler

Jerry Butler

Casey Greeter (uncredited)

Photo of Frank Henenlotter

Frank Henenlotter

Theater Patron (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

W

Wuchak

6/10

***Gory and amusing horror about separated Siamese twins in New York City, one vengeful***

A young man from upstate New York, Duane Bradley (Kevin Van Hentenryck), travels to the seedy side of Manhattan with a mysterious wicker basket, looking for a couple of dubious doctors.

“Basket Case” (1982) is a very bloody ‘B’ horror with (mostly) low-key comedy that’s actually funny. The quaint low-budget effects consist of rubber puppetry & gloves with some stop-motion unapproved by Ray Harryhausen. Blonde Terri Susan Smith shines as Duane’s potential girlfriend, Sharon, while Beverly Bonner heartily rises to the challenge as Duane’s friendly next-door neighbor in hotel, Casey.

The flick is entertaining so I can see how it’s become a cult favorite, but the focus on the seedy side of Manhattan makes for a somewhat unpalatable experience. Yet it’s interesting going back in time to New York City in 1981. Some people lambaste “Basket Case” for being “amateurish” but, come on, it only cost $35,000, which would translate to about $100,000 today.

The film runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot in Manhattan with some stuff done in Glens Falls, New York.

GRADE: B-

You've reached the end.