There’s a special corner of cinematic hell reserved for sequels that should never have been made, and Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes is in the VIP lounge. Released in 2006 as a made-for-television “event,” this third entry in the Pumpkinhead franchise manages to be neither scary, nor fun, nor even accidentally entertaining. It’s the kind of film that feels like it was cobbled together out of leftover scripts, stale Halloween candy, and a Romanian tax break.
If the first Pumpkinhead was a creepy morality play with a towering monster and a genuinely tragic edge, then Ashes to Ashes is the drunken karaoke version of that movie—out of tune, off-key, and deeply embarrassing for everyone involved.
The Plot: CSI: Appalachia (But Make It Dumber)
The story is basically the horror equivalent of reheated leftovers. A small town finds out that their local mortician, Doc Fraser (Doug Bradley, a.k.a. Pinhead from Hellraiser, here downgraded to Coroner Discount), has been selling organs on the black market and tossing the empty corpses into a swamp. Naturally, the townsfolk are outraged—not because of the moral violation, but because apparently they don’t like swamps being littered with bodies.
So what’s the logical solution? Therapy? Lawsuits? Public protest? No, of course not. This is Pumpkinhead. The solution is to hike over to the witch Haggis (played by Lynne Verrall as if she’s channeling a community theater Lady Macbeth with a sinus infection) and summon Pumpkinhead from beyond the grave using the mummified remains of Ed Harley (Lance Henriksen, who wisely sat out Pumpkinhead II but inexplicably said “yes” here).
Once summoned, Pumpkinhead does what Pumpkinhead always does: murders anyone who even looked at the summoners funny. It’s like hiring a demon lawyer who bills in blood.
The Monster: CGI Pumpkin Soup
The original Pumpkinhead monster, designed by the legendary Stan Winston, was a grotesque work of art—a lanky demon with a terrifying presence that felt as real as the dirt under its claws. The creature in Ashes to Ashes, however, looks like it was rendered on a PlayStation 2 after the console had been left in the sun too long.
Gone are the practical effects and puppetry that made the creature so memorable. Instead, we get a rubbery CGI abomination that floats around like a rejected Mortal Kombat character. Watching Pumpkinhead in this film is like watching a Halloween screensaver murder people—it’s impossible to feel scared when your brain keeps whispering, “This was probably done in Microsoft Paint.”
The Cast: Horror Royalty on Clearance Sale
There’s a weird kind of tragic dignity in seeing Lance Henriksen return as Ed Harley… only to discover he’s a ghost who drifts in and out of scenes like a bored mall Santa. Henriksen looks like he’s reading his lines off cue cards held just out of frame, probably wondering how many more sequels he has to endure before his contract with the devil is up.
Then there’s Doug Bradley, fresh off his Hellraiser fame, now playing Doc Fraser. Bradley tries his best to chew scenery, but the problem is the scenery looks like it was built out of wet cardboard. The rest of the cast is a parade of accents that wander from Appalachian to “Romanian actor trying very hard to sound American.” The film was shot in Bucharest, and boy, does it show—every “small-town” extra looks like they were borrowed from a Dracula tour group.
The Setting: Romania, Starring as Generic Appalachia
Speaking of Romania, let’s talk about the setting. Ashes to Ashes wants us to believe we’re in a dusty, God-fearing corner of the rural American South. Instead, we get what looks like a Romanian backlot with suspiciously Eastern European architecture and extras who pronounce “y’all” like they’ve only seen it on Walker, Texas Ranger.
The effect is surreal. It’s like watching an Appalachian folk tale performed by expats who’ve only read about Appalachia in a Lonely Planet guidebook. Every time someone says “small town” you half-expect Dracula to wander by and offer them a lantern.
The Direction: Jake West’s Romanian Vacation
Director Jake West, whose earlier film Evil Aliens at least had the decency to be gleefully trashy, here turns in something weirdly lifeless. The kills are uninspired, the atmosphere is nonexistent, and the pacing drags like Pumpkinhead’s tail on a hardwood floor. West seems torn between making a reverent sequel and a campy gorefest, which means we get neither. Instead, we get a film that tries to honor the original while simultaneously neutering its monster with cheap effects.
It’s like throwing a surprise party for your best friend but forgetting to invite them—and then replacing the cake with wet cardboard.
The Tone: Death by Boredom
One of the joys of a good slasher or monster flick is watching creative kills. You don’t come to Pumpkinhead for nuanced character studies—you come for rural vengeance, dark folklore, and the occasional spine ripped out like a wishbone. Ashes to Ashes somehow manages to botch this.
Pumpkinhead’s murders feel like afterthoughts, perfunctory insert shots spliced in between scenes of people mumbling exposition. The gore is minimal, the scares nonexistent. Even the witch Haggis, who should be the creepy MVP of the film, looks like she’s suffering from indigestion rather than channeling dark forces.
By the third act, the film stops even trying to build tension. Instead, it becomes a slog of bad CGI, limp jump scares, and characters you can’t remember even as they’re being killed.
The Legacy: Swamp Gas and Regret
Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes was filmed back-to-back with Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud in Romania, proving that Hollywood sometimes prefers quantity over quality. Watching Ashes to Ashes feels like watching a franchise’s obituary being written in real time. The original film had atmosphere, tragedy, and a monster that felt like a genuine myth. This sequel has Lance Henriksen’s ghost, Doug Bradley’s paycheck, and CGI that could barely pass for a Syfy Channel promo.
Fans of the original deserved better. Pumpkinhead deserved better. Honestly, even Romania deserved better.
Final Verdict
Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes is proof that not all sequels should rise from the grave. It’s a cheap, lifeless retread that trades the eerie rural gothic of the original for bad CGI and a cast that looks like they’re thinking about their next meal between lines. It’s not scary, it’s not gory, and worst of all—it’s not even fun.
If you’re looking for a film about vengeance, folklore, and a towering demon from the swamp, watch the original Pumpkinhead. If you’re looking for a film about regret, wasted talent, and the dangers of shooting horror movies in Romania on a budget, then Ashes to Ashes is the movie for you.
But don’t say I didn’t warn you. This is less Ashes to Ashes and more Trash to Trash.

