In the Mind of the Damned (found horror film; 2013): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
(→‎References: added category)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
|title=<center>In the Mind of the Damned (2013)</center>
|title=<center>In the Mind of the Damned (2013)</center>
|image=481293 10200366035576651 1719259548 n.jpg
|image=481293 10200366035576651 1719259548 n.jpg
|imagecaption=One of the only known images from ''In the Mind of the Damned''.
|imagecaption=Still from the film.
|status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span>
|datefound=24 Dec '18
|datefound=24 Dec 2018
|foundby=[https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrWZdo0d7OJUhAvsSvmdXsg Teddy Shows]
|foundby=Anonymous
}}
}}
'''''In the Mind of the Damned''''' is the second film of the Dunn-Lisak production group in 2013. It has been shrouded in obscurity since its release in early 2013. The Dunn-Lisak film group was best known for their z-grade monster movie, ''The Melonheads'' (2011) which gained popularity after being featured in a Cracked Magazine article<ref>[http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-monster-movie-ideas-hollywood-should-be-making-next/ Cracked article referencing ''The Melonheads''.] Retrieved 19 Mar '16.</ref>
'''''In the Mind of the Damned''''' is the second film of the Dunn-Lisak production group in 2013. It had been shrouded in obscurity since its release in early 2013. The Dunn-Lisak film group was best known for their z-grade monster movie, ''The Melonheads'' (2011) which gained popularity after being featured in a Cracked Magazine article.<ref>[http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-monster-movie-ideas-hollywood-should-be-making-next/ Cracked article referencing ''The Melonheads''.] Retrieved 19 Mar '16</ref>


The follow up film, ''In the Mind of the Damned'', was far less campy. It focused on the psychological aspects of a young man having a mental breakdown following an acid trip and was shot out of sequence related dream sequences interspersed. The film starred most of the male cast from ''The Melonheads'', and was primarily shot in and around Eastern Michigan University's now demolished historic east campus, likely months before its destruction.
The follow-up film, ''In the Mind of the Damned'', was far less campy. It focused on the psychological aspects of a young man having a mental breakdown following an acid trip and was shot out of sequence-related dream sequences interspersed. The film starred most of the male cast from ''The Melonheads'', and was primarily shot in and around Eastern Michigan University's now demolished historic east campus, likely months before its destruction.


According the the film's director, Dake Lisak, the film was pulled from general release on account of the actors' dislike for the film's plot, particularly in its drug use and murder themes. The film appeared briefly on a public domain website before being pulled due to legal disputes. It is likely in possession of the director. <ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2648138/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 IMDB Page for the Melonheads, the surviving film by Jake Lisak.]</ref> Little else is known about the film, but it is not available to the public.
According to the film's director, Dake Lisak, the film was pulled from general release on account of the actors' dislike for the film's plot, particularly in its drug use and murder themes. The film appeared briefly on a public domain website before being pulled due to legal disputes. It is likely in possession of the director. <ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2648138/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 IMDB Page for the Melonheads, the surviving film by Dake Lisak.]</ref> Little else is known about the film, but it is not available to the public.


On December 24, 2018, YouTube user [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrWZdo0d7OJUhAvsSvmdXsg Teddy Shows] received a copy of the full movie from Dake Lisak and uploaded it to [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jD7PdmAz6-_fZaXIqA5500ONoWVgoerC/view Google Drive].
On December 24, 2018, an anonymous user received a copy of the full movie from Dake Lisak and uploaded it to [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jD7PdmAz6-_fZaXIqA5500ONoWVgoerC/view Google Drive].
 
==External Link==
*[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jD7PdmAz6-_fZaXIqA5500ONoWVgoerC/view The full film on Google Drive.] Retrieved 24 Dec '18


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==External Links==
[[Category:Found films]]
*[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jD7PdmAz6-_fZaXIqA5500ONoWVgoerC/view The Full Film.]
 
[[Category:Found media]]
[[Category:Found media]]

Latest revision as of 23:29, 14 March 2023

481293 10200366035576651 1719259548 n.jpg

Still from the film.

Status: Found

Date found: 24 Dec 2018

Found by: Anonymous

In the Mind of the Damned is the second film of the Dunn-Lisak production group in 2013. It had been shrouded in obscurity since its release in early 2013. The Dunn-Lisak film group was best known for their z-grade monster movie, The Melonheads (2011) which gained popularity after being featured in a Cracked Magazine article.[1]

The follow-up film, In the Mind of the Damned, was far less campy. It focused on the psychological aspects of a young man having a mental breakdown following an acid trip and was shot out of sequence-related dream sequences interspersed. The film starred most of the male cast from The Melonheads, and was primarily shot in and around Eastern Michigan University's now demolished historic east campus, likely months before its destruction.

According to the film's director, Dake Lisak, the film was pulled from general release on account of the actors' dislike for the film's plot, particularly in its drug use and murder themes. The film appeared briefly on a public domain website before being pulled due to legal disputes. It is likely in possession of the director. [2] Little else is known about the film, but it is not available to the public.

On December 24, 2018, an anonymous user received a copy of the full movie from Dake Lisak and uploaded it to Google Drive.

External Link

References