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Dead Birds

There are worse things than dying.
2004 | 91m | English

(11752 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Alex Turner
Writer: Simon Barrett
Staring:
Details

Towards the end of the Civil War a group of Confederate soldiers hole up on an abandoned plantation after robbing a bank, and find themselves at the mercy of supernatural forces.
Release Date: May 19, 2004
Director: Alex Turner
Writer: Simon Barrett
Genres: Horror, Thriller, Western
Keywords bank, desertion, alabama, plantation, haunted house, black magic, supernatural, demon, bank robbery, super power, ghost, american civil war, vahşet, evi, sinister
Production Companies Silver Nitrate, Dead Birds Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $1,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Henry Thomas William
Patrick Fugit Sam
Michael Shannon Clyde
Nicki Aycox Annabelle
Isaiah Washington Todd
Mark Boone Junior Joseph
Muse Watson Father
Donna Biscoe Black Woman
Russell Durham Comegys Kormer
Melanie Abramoff Girl Ghost
David Dwyer MacCready
Name Job
Steve Yedlin Director of Photography
Shannon Makhanian Casting
Simon Barrett Writer
Michael T. Boyd Costume Design
Alex Turner Director
Jonathon Fuller Sculptor
Dean Jones Key Makeup Artist, Makeup Artist
Keith Christensen Conceptual Design
Youngki Lee Visual Effects
Chris Maynard Set Decoration
Marshall Garlington Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Brian Anton Editor
Ken Teaney Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ricky Damazio Transportation Coordinator
David Meng Sculptor
Christopher Eakins Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Effects Editor
Maggie Means Production Accountant
Horst Sarubin Location Manager
Christopher Burdett Conceptual Design
Vesa Holle Gaffer
Leslie Keel Production Design
Doug Sloan Stunt Coordinator
Al Frisch Costume Supervisor
Elvis Jones Mechanical Designer, Animatronic and Prosthetic Effects
Park Min-su Visual Effects
K. Lynn Martin Script Supervisor
Peter Lopez Original Music Composer
Cerina Silvestro Assistant Makeup Artist
Timothy Considine Special Effects Makeup Artist
Robert Hall Special Effects Makeup Artist, Makeup Effects Designer
Allan B. Holt Special Effects Makeup Artist
Garrett W. Roberts Key Costumer
Ingrid Armstead Seamstress
Nicholas Lee First Assistant Director
Colleen Casey Shariat Second Assistant Director
Jonathan Robinson Assistant Camera
Shawn Greene Best Boy Electric
Cesar Gustavo Quintanilla Best Boy Grip
Lou Chanatry Second Unit Director of Photography
Greg Lomas Dolly Grip
Chris Furukawa-Burgon Electrician
Michael Weeks Electrician
Wade Whitley First Assistant Camera
Adrian Arangua Grip
Colby Damazio Grip
Eric Damazio Key Grip
Larry Gianneschi IV Second Assistant Camera
Kevin Naugle Additional Set Dresser
Michelle Rolland Assistant Property Master
David Betancourt Carpenter
Tom Humphrey Property Master
Bruce Larsen Props
Christopher Dumas Set Dresser
Sacha A. Dzuba Set Dresser
April Glover Set Dresser
Joachim Seisay Storyboard Artist
Jae Lyoung Choi Animation
Man Hong Han Animation
Hyun Jin Kim Animation
Moon Sung-oh Animation
Min Hee Lee Compositor
Mi Sun Park Compositor
Seung Yong Lee Compositing Lead
Jennifer Goldstein Casting Associate
Joshua Kopple Local Casting
Suzanne Massingill Local Casting
Laura Warner Local Casting
Bob Fredrickson Color Timer
John Sellars Colorist
Marie Hélène Desbiens Negative Cutter
Brian Kibbie Negative Cutter
Erin Sarofsky Main Title Designer
Bill 'Splat' Johnson Props
John Marquis Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer
Douglas Kirkland Still Photographer
Barbara Harris ADR Voice Casting
Name Title
David Hillary Producer
Ash R. Shah Producer
Barry Brooker Executive Producer
Sundip R. Shah Executive Producer
Timothy Wayne Peternel Producer
Simon Barrett Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 16 33 10
2024 5 19 41 10
2024 6 16 28 10
2024 7 17 45 9
2024 8 14 31 8
2024 9 11 18 7
2024 10 12 37 5
2024 11 10 19 6
2024 12 11 19 7
2025 1 12 25 7
2025 2 8 12 3
2025 3 5 10 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 2 3 2

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Damnation and Doom at the Plantation of the Dead. Dead Birds is directed by Alex Turner and written by Simon Barrett. It stars Henry Thomas, Nicki Aycox, Isaiah Washington, Patrick Fugit, Michael Shannon, Mark Boone Junior, Harris Mann and Muse Watson. Music is scored by Peter Lopez and cinematog ... raphy by Steve Yedlin. 1863 and it's the back end of the American Civil War, a group of Confederate deserters rob their own army's gold being delivered to the bank of Fairhope. Leaving a bloody trail in their wake, the group set off for Mexico but must stop for rest and recuperation at a deserted farm mansion over looking a long dead plantation. With a storm moving in and tempers among the thieves running high, it soon becomes evident that something otherworldly resides at the house and the surrounding area… Dead Birds is a little cracker, a straight to video horror film that to my mind puts to shame some of the big budgeted piles of crap that get released to the multiplexes on a seemingly weekly basis. Of course, horror is very subjective, where along with comedy it forms a pair of genres guaranteed to produce films that will never ever please everyone. Falling into the haunted house sub-genre of horror, Dead Birds, in spite of its unique Civil War period setting, has been lambasted by many a horror fan for not being fresh, that it's a collage of other horror movies. There's some truth to that, but we could level that charge at 98% of horror movies anyway! But Dead Birds (crap title btw) does have a cult fan base, a fan base I'm very much proud to be part of. Alex Turner, for his first feature length debut, has crafted a haunted house picture that positively pulses with dread, with its slow deliberate pacing and hushed conversational tones, the atmosphere crackles with unease. The opening credits are jet black and rise from the earth like spectral portents of death. Then after the fireworks of the robbery, things settle into a sort of ethereal rhythm. The gang make their way to their doom through a murky landscape until they reach what they don't know is their final destination; the plantation, a place that just reeks of death and disharmony. The cornfield is long dead and home to a strange creature, the battered old scarecrow looks ripe for a fright and a dead bird on the floor is ominous. The house itself is a two story wooden type not used often in tales of this type. It looks moody, as does the servants quarters, there's also a creepy barn with its hayloft and a water well of course. These are genre staples for sure, but Turner gathers all the clichés and gives them a new lease of life in a new period setting. The secret is in the lighting, Turner and Yedlin (Brick/Looper) light from down low, giving off a wonderful eerie effect as the gang trudge around this place of misery. It may sound like an oxy-moronic statement, but this is one beautifully shot horror film. Then there's the shocks, the boo-jump moments (sadly revealed in the trailer for those unfortunate to not see the film first), these are not frequent so as to make the film reliant on them, they are used sparingly and only to advance the plot as the plantation's history literally comes to life. The cast are on fine form (Thomas and Washington standing out), working well with a dynamic infused with greed, mistrust, jealousy and racism. Lopez's musical score blends foreboding rumbles with spine chilling shards of noise, while Turner slots in some oblique angles to further enhance the feeling of hopeless disorientation. It may cover familiar ground, that of a bunch of folk in a spooky house being bumped off one by one, with suspicions aroused, but Dead Birds is very much its own animal. Hee, literally. 8/10

May 16, 2024
viciouslollipop
4.0

Dead Birds-Worth a Look, But Not Much More? Great atmosphere, good acting, decent ending twist, so-so plot. Worth a rent but not much more. Not too confusing if you pay attention and like horror movies anyway. I also thought it would be more scary, but the kids were creepy. The hollowed-out eye-s ... ockets were what got me. The score also set a great sense of dread and foreboding. I suppose for a first time director it wasn't absolutely awful. But as I said before, strong performances(especially Isiah Washington and Patrick Fugit), the location(great Southern period "feel"), a very creepy score, and the little twist at the end are what saves this movie from being very mediocre to just plain bad.

Jun 23, 2021