If you’ve ever wanted to see a film where the embalmed dead get more action than the living, then Mortuary is your ticket to awkward terror and unintentional comedy. Directed by Howard Avedis, this 1982 slasher does for mortuaries what a chainsaw does for doorframes: it leaves you wondering why you ever came in the first place.
The plot is a deliciously convoluted tangle of sleepwalking, séances, and family dysfunction so severe it makes a Thanksgiving dinner look like a meditation retreat. Mary Beth McDonough’s Christie navigates a world where her father’s death is suspicious, her mother may be practicing occult hobbies in her spare time, and her new boyfriend, Greg, somehow survives a tour of a mortuary warehouse without contracting a serious mental illness. Bill Paxton’s Paul is a walking reminder that a little therapy might’ve saved everyone a lot of stabbing; his devotion to embalming and Mozart symphonies gives the film an aura somewhere between Psycho and a very confused funeral.
The movie shines brightest when it leans into its creep factor—dimly lit rooms, mysterious masks, and corpses arranged for what is either a wedding or the world’s most unsettling dinner party. It’s a testament to Avedis’ direction that a film about dead bodies and a sleepwalking heroine can feel both tense and completely absurd, as if Hitchcock had a drunken cousin who was obsessed with embalming.
And yet, for all its ridiculousness, Mortuary works. The cinematography gives Southern California a gloomy charm, the performances range from competent to gloriously melodramatic, and the pacing keeps you teetering between dread and the urge to laugh at how every single adult in this movie apparently failed high school logic class. Watching Paul attempt to romance Christie among a cemetery of corpses is the cinematic equivalent of mixing red wine with cough syrup: horrifying, yet you can’t look away.
Mortuary isn’t just a slasher—it’s a masterclass in the fine art of creepy camp. It’s the kind of film that reminds you horror doesn’t always need subtlety; sometimes it just needs latex masks, a little sleepwalking, and a lot of dead bodies pretending they’re part of a musical number. A perfect mix for anyone who likes their scares with a side of dark humor and a garnish of “what the hell did I just watch?”
Verdict: Watch it if you want a horror movie where death is sexy, family counseling is nonexistent, and a makeshift wedding with corpses is somehow the climax of human drama. Mortuary proves that sometimes, the only thing scarier than a killer is a family with zero boundaries—and excellent taste in mortuary décor.

