Sugar Hill (1974) aka The Zombies of Sugar Hill (KL 1080p BluRay ...
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Peers Updated18 hours ago (2026-03-24 12:37:40)

Sugar Hill
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Meet Sugar Hill and her zombie hitmen... The mafia has never met anything like them!
When a nightclub owner is murdered by gangsters after refusing to sell his business to the mob boss, his grieving fiancé enlists the help of a voodoo priestess to avenge his death.
Director: Paul Maslansky
Cast: Marki Bey, Robert Quarry, Don Pedro Colley, Betty Anne Rees, Richard Lawson
Cast: Marki Bey, Robert Quarry, Don Pedro Colley, Betty Anne Rees, Richard Lawson
Description
Sugar Hill (1974), directed by Paul Maslansky, encoded in 10 bit HEVC with AAC sound, including original theatrical dual mono, and director's commentary.
IMDb : https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072225/
Video encoded in two-pass 15.0 Mbps x265 10bit with the veryslow preset for archive quality image. Audio encoded separately with Apple AAC for the highest-quality AAC sound available.
Note : Time for some more blaxploitation, and this one's directed by Paul Maslansky, who previously produced the excellent, underappreciated Death Line, and later the Police Academy franchise, and it turns out he wasn't a bad director himself, making this weird mix of crime film, zombie horror, and supernatural voodoo revenge more than the sum of its parts. There are some interesting visuals, in particular the look of the zombies, whose makeup includes dark reflective spheres over their eyes, which tend to catch the light in eerie ways, almost reminiscent of the glowing eyes in Demons more than ten years later, but more subtle. This, combined with the fact that several of the zombies are grinning, makes for some pretty unnerving scenes in what could otherwise have been a kind of goofy genre mashup. The quite good cast, decked out in their best mid-seventies street fashion, includes Marki Bey, Robert Quarry, Don Pedro Colley, Betty Anne Rees, Richard Lawson, Zara Cully, and Charles Robinson.
Diana "Sugar" Hill is a photographer in Houston whose boyfriend runs a nightclub, and when he refuses an offer to sell the club to a mob boss, he's ruthlessly murdered. Sugar swears revenge, and with the assistance of a former voodoo queen named Mama Maitresse, she summons Baron Samedi himself, who, in exchange for her soul, raises an army of zombies from a slave cemetery and puts them at her disposal, leading to the mobsters' gruesome demises. However, Sugar's ex boyfriend, police lt. Valentine, is investigating the killings, so it's a question of who will survive, and what will be left of their afros.
This is a decent enough transfer of a film that's notoriously slightly underexposed and grainy, but which looks fine otherwise. The image quality isn't fantastic, but the vibes are off the charts. The original dual mono track sounds fine, and the director's commentary track is full of film industry anecdotes, especially focused on the group around AIP.
Hot tip
IMDb : https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072225/
Video encoded in two-pass 15.0 Mbps x265 10bit with the veryslow preset for archive quality image. Audio encoded separately with Apple AAC for the highest-quality AAC sound available.
Note : Time for some more blaxploitation, and this one's directed by Paul Maslansky, who previously produced the excellent, underappreciated Death Line, and later the Police Academy franchise, and it turns out he wasn't a bad director himself, making this weird mix of crime film, zombie horror, and supernatural voodoo revenge more than the sum of its parts. There are some interesting visuals, in particular the look of the zombies, whose makeup includes dark reflective spheres over their eyes, which tend to catch the light in eerie ways, almost reminiscent of the glowing eyes in Demons more than ten years later, but more subtle. This, combined with the fact that several of the zombies are grinning, makes for some pretty unnerving scenes in what could otherwise have been a kind of goofy genre mashup. The quite good cast, decked out in their best mid-seventies street fashion, includes Marki Bey, Robert Quarry, Don Pedro Colley, Betty Anne Rees, Richard Lawson, Zara Cully, and Charles Robinson.
Diana "Sugar" Hill is a photographer in Houston whose boyfriend runs a nightclub, and when he refuses an offer to sell the club to a mob boss, he's ruthlessly murdered. Sugar swears revenge, and with the assistance of a former voodoo queen named Mama Maitresse, she summons Baron Samedi himself, who, in exchange for her soul, raises an army of zombies from a slave cemetery and puts them at her disposal, leading to the mobsters' gruesome demises. However, Sugar's ex boyfriend, police lt. Valentine, is investigating the killings, so it's a question of who will survive, and what will be left of their afros.
This is a decent enough transfer of a film that's notoriously slightly underexposed and grainy, but which looks fine otherwise. The image quality isn't fantastic, but the vibes are off the charts. The original dual mono track sounds fine, and the director's commentary track is full of film industry anecdotes, especially focused on the group around AIP.
Hot tip