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Bubba Ho-Tep

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
53K
YOUR RATING
Ossie Davis and Bruce Campbell in Bubba Ho-Tep (2002)
Elvis Presley and a black "JFK" stay in a nursing home where nothing happens - until a wayward Egyptian mummy comes and sucks out the old people's souls thru their a-holes. The two decide to fight back.
Play trailer2:10
4 Videos
99+ Photos
B-HorrorDark ComedySupernatural HorrorComedyFantasyHorrorMystery

When residents of their nursing home start dying of dubious causes, an aged Elvis and an African-American senior who claims to be President John F. Kennedy discover that the perpetrator is a... Read allWhen residents of their nursing home start dying of dubious causes, an aged Elvis and an African-American senior who claims to be President John F. Kennedy discover that the perpetrator is an Egyptian mummy with murderous intentions.When residents of their nursing home start dying of dubious causes, an aged Elvis and an African-American senior who claims to be President John F. Kennedy discover that the perpetrator is an Egyptian mummy with murderous intentions.

  • Director
    • Don Coscarelli
  • Writers
    • Joe R. Lansdale
    • Don Coscarelli
  • Stars
    • Bruce Campbell
    • Ossie Davis
    • Bob Ivy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    53K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Don Coscarelli
    • Writers
      • Joe R. Lansdale
      • Don Coscarelli
    • Stars
      • Bruce Campbell
      • Ossie Davis
      • Bob Ivy
    • 425User reviews
    • 174Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos4

    Blu-ray Trailer
    Trailer 2:10
    Blu-ray Trailer
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Whispers
    Clip 2:06
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Whispers
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Whispers
    Clip 2:06
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Whispers
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Bruce Campbell On Becoming Elvis
    Featurette 0:54
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Bruce Campbell On Becoming Elvis
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Director Don Coscarelli On Creating The Mummy
    Featurette 1:20
    Bubba Ho-Tep: Director Don Coscarelli On Creating The Mummy

    Photos152

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    + 146
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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Bruce Campbell
    Bruce Campbell
    • Elvis Presley…
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Jack
    Bob Ivy
    Bob Ivy
    • Bubba Ho-tep
    Ella Joyce
    Ella Joyce
    • The Nurse
    Heidi Marnhout
    Heidi Marnhout
    • Callie
    Edith Jefferson
    • Elderly Woman
    Larry Pennell
    Larry Pennell
    • Kemosabe
    Reggie Bannister
    Reggie Bannister
    • Rest Home Administrator
    Daniel Roebuck
    Daniel Roebuck
    • Hearse Driver
    Daniel Schweiger
    Daniel Schweiger
    • Hearse Driver
    Harrison Young
    Harrison Young
    • Elvis' Roommate
    Linda Flammer
    • Room Nurse
    Cean Okada
    Cean Okada
    • Attending Nurse
    Solange Morand
    • Iron Lung Lady
    Karen Placencia
    • Baby
    Bruce Rawitz
    • TV Announcer
    Joseph Primero
    • Janitor
    Chuck Williams
    Chuck Williams
    • Elvis' Boy
    • Director
      • Don Coscarelli
    • Writers
      • Joe R. Lansdale
      • Don Coscarelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews425

    6.953.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5awalter1

    brilliant pop culture weirdness

    "Bubba Ho-tep" is a low budget movie that went for the B-movie feel on purpose, accomplishing its goal of being a "fine" piece of pop culture weirdness. The story is set in a current-day East Texas rest home and focuses on two residents who believe they are Elvis and JFK--the JFK character just happens to be black, and the rest home also houses a few other crazies, including the Lone Ranger. Elvis and JFK soon learn that an Egyptian mummy--who was stolen from his traveling museum exhibition--has come to life in their neighborhood and is killing the rest home residents by sucking their life force out their backsides (you can harvest a soul through "any major orifice," you know). Eventually, our decrepit heroes realize that only they can meet the mummy in a showdown.

    The film is really a clever piece of pop culture mythology, working up hilarious back stories for JFK (Ossie Davis who is recognizable from, at the very least, several Spike Lee films) and Elvis (Bruce Campbell of the "Evil Dead" movies). Campbell's performance is particularly excellent, Don Coscarelli's as director did a perfect job finding the right mood and balance of humor for the film, and the leisurely plot--from Joe Lansdale's original novella--is totally engaging and a cinephile's dream.
    8NokotaMustang

    Bruce Campbell shines in this funny and original title

    A great underrated gem. It is a movie that covers the topic of being old, and forgotten. Wrapped up as a comedy with a demon that preys on old people in a care home.

    This was funny, surprisingly touching, and sad in moments. It was shot wonderfully with a grainy and detailed camera film. I love the camera work and lighting. The music is excellent throughout and this really was enjoyable to watch. The acting was believable and Campbell in particular was great as an old Elvis.

    This film was written in a way that makes me question was it real at all? Was there really a demon? Were the old guys just crazy? Were they really old Elvis and black JFK? I don't know, but the film portrays it in that way on purpose, and it made me think about it which I love.

    8/10 for being original, well filmed, with excellent music and pulling on some emotions along the way.
    8Coventry

    Elvis has NOT left the building just yet!

    The Evil Dead series already made it pretty clear and – after Bubba Ho Tep – there's nobody who should question this statement ever again: Bruce Campbell is one major cool dude! Campbell stars as Elvis. Old, fat and supposedly out of his mind, he's a resident in an East-Texas rest home. An ancient Egyptian mummy that has been stolen from a museum wanders around in the area, soul-feeding on the weak victims of the nursery home. Elvis, tired of his indigent and pathetic life, teams up with a black man who thinks he's former president Kennedy to destroy the mummy once and for all. The story of Bubba Ho-Tep is remarkably simple… Too simple actually, and if it wasn't for Campbell and a few ingenious gimmicks, this would have been an unnoticed and forgettable comedy/horror film. Bruce gives away an outstanding performance and he is the KING in ways you can't imagine. The saddening, self-criticizing monologues he gives while lying on the hospital bed are some of the best lines in recent cinema and his charisma speaks for itself. Veteran Ossie Davis gives great feedback as the 'president', seeing conspiracies wherever he looks.

    The comedy aspects of Bubba Ho-Tep show right away, yet it also is a subtle drama, criticizing the way we often mistreat our elderly by placing them in a home and leaving them to their own devices. It is these outcasts that fight back here and save the day! Bubba Ho-Tep is filled with appealing one-liners and imaginative findings. How about the idea of a 2000-year-old mummy writing stuff like 'Cleopatra does the nasty' on a toilet's wall, like we all did in high school? The film also depends on the professional directing skills of Don Coscarelli. He finally found a worthy successor for his classic horror franchise 'Phantasm', even though that premise was a lot more complex and horrific. Recommended to fans of pop-culture flicks and bizarre gems. One of the better genre films since the new Millennium.

    Hail to the King, baby!
    10CuriosityKilledShawn

    All is well

    Who would have thought it? Don Coscarelli, the man who wrote and directed Phantasm a long, long time ago comes back out of nowhere, after spending his entire career in the dregs, with something like this. A film that is more an exploration of regret, fading dignity and growing old than it is about a soul-sucking mummy.

    Very old Elvis is brilliantly played by Bruce Campbell. The voice, the hair, the mannerisms are all perfect. He's stuck in Mud Creek rest home where the cynical staff believe he's really called Sebastian Haff, the man Elvis traded places with back in the 70s. And when Haff died, so did the Elvis the public loved. This only left the REAL Elvis free to live his life in peace and eventually indignity.

    He pals up with a man who believes he's JFK, only problem is he's black. Though it's more likely he's senile rather than a truth-teller like the so-called Sebastian Haff. Both men have one concern, to stop some kind of Bubba Ho-Tep mummy from taking the souls of all the rest home residents.

    Yes, it's insane. But also wildly imaginative and more than balances out the endless, heartless, conveyor belt Hollywood productions. Elements of the story will stay with you and the character development is graceful and important.

    The finishing touch is Brian Tyler's awesome score. The main theme is one of the best ever and will flood you will feeling and emotion. Not only is Bubba Ho-Tep blessed with a cast and crew who care about the film their making, it also has wonderful music too. I am lucky enough to have the rare score CD (autographed by Coscarelli and Tyler). Hunt it down, it's seriously worth it.

    Keep a lookout for Reggie Bannister as the rest home manager. And watch all the way to the end of the credits for a weird message...

    ELVIS RETURNS IN 'BUBBA NOSFERATU: CURSE OF THE SHE VAMPIRES'
    BaronBl00d

    Suspicious Minds

    I must confess I had reservations prior to seeing this film. I thought it would be some God-awfully childish film laden with sophomoric jokes, cheesy effects, and inane dialogue. Some of those elements do surface, but this film was a genuine pleasure to sit through. Imagine if you can that Elvis, the King of Rock and Roll, switched places with an Elvis impersonator and now lives a sad, lost life in a small, run-down nursing home in East Texas. Add to the mix Ozzie Davis as a man convinced he is John F. Kennedy and a mummy that sucks the souls of geriatric residents and you have the basic premise behind Bubba Ho-tep. But beyond all that and the jokes about Elvis's genitalia and other low brow references is a film with a tremendous amount of heart and a message about the elderly in our society and how we have, as a society, betrayed them and cast them aside. The script and effective direction of Phantasm's Don Coscarelli make this film work on several levels. It is a comedy. It is a drama. It is a horror film. It has all those elements. You care about the characters and are drawn into this seedy little world. The biggest asset the film has is its performances. Davis gives a fine turn and adds credibility to the film, but Bruce Campbell as the king just bowled me over. I had seen him before, but I had never seen him act like this before. You soon forget Campbell is acting and think Elvis is really there - now 68 and destitute. Campbell's inflection, mannerisms, and poise melt and fuse wonderfully into Elvis. This was one of the very pleasant surprises that come along every so often.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although Elvis is the main character, not one piece of Elvis Presley music is heard in the film. Director Don Coscarelli explained that it would have cost about half the budget to license even one Elvis song for the movie.
    • Goofs
      During the opening newsreel footage, the subtitles say that it is the discovery of the tomb of Amen Ho-Tep, but the voice over is explaining that it is the discovery of Tutankhamen's tomb (the sarcophagus shown is also that of Tutankhamen).
    • Quotes

      Elvis: No offense, Jack, but President Kennedy was a white man.

      JFK: They dyed me this color! That's how clever they are!

    • Crazy credits
      At the very end of the DVD, after the movie credits have ended, "Elvis" says "Remember to be kind, rewind...well, um, guess you don't need to rewind, with DVD these days."
    • Connections
      Edited into Making of 'Bubba Ho-tep' (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Prologue

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 10, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Bubba Ho-tep
    • Filming locations
      • Downey, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Silver Sphere Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,239,183
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $35,636
      • Sep 21, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,239,183
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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