A small village off the mainland is about to receive a huge winter storm. It won't be just another storm for them. A strange visitor named Andre Linoge comes to the small village and gives the residents havoc. He knows everything about them, and when he tells the truth about one of them, that person denies it. The town constable, Mike Anderson, tries to keep everyone in check with the huge storm and Linoge. Linoge keeps telling the people, "Give me what I want and I will go away"...
The devil (Colm Feore) has come to the small town of Little Tall Island, Maine during the heaviest snow storm in the last 100 years. He brings with him the darkest secrets of all the townspeople and uses his knowledge to control and drive some of them to suicide and murder. But with every event, he leaves the clear message "Give me what I want and I'll go away." But first, he has to convince everyone that he has the power to destroy the village, if they don't comply.
The Stand:
When a government-run lab accidentally lets loose a deadly virus, the population of the world is decimated. Survivors begin having dreams about two figures: a mystical old woman, or a foreboding, scary man. As the story tracks various people, we begin to realize that the two figures exemplify basic forces of good and evil, and the stage is set for a final confrontation between the representatives of each
The human race is wiped out by a government invented super flu. The remaining survivors take sides in the forces of good and evil. A mysterious old woman who is a servant of God and a powerful and deadly man who might be the devil himself. A gas station attendant, a rock star, a mute, a professor, a farmer, a socialite, a mildly retarded man, a judge, a teenager, a mother, and a nerd take forces
i think he means let sleeping corspes lie
im crap at writing reviews so i will paste one from another website
As I mentioned earlier, Let Sleeping Corpses Lie is one of the more under seen classics in the zombie cinema canon. Fortunately, that will now start to change thanks to Anchor Bay. Anchor Bay (who really is a cult horror lover’s best friend) has released Let Sleeping Corpses Lie in several formats. There’s the traditional VHS, presented in widescreen and featuring an interview with director Grau and several trailers, a DVD which I believe features pretty much the same stuff as the VHS, and a limited edition (only 5,000 copies made) DVD in a collector’s tin case (a la The Beyond) which features even more goodies (including a 24 page booklet about the film). If you’re at all into horror, then you need to run out and support Anchor Bay by buying these releases—they’re dedicated to helping the fans get hard to find films and presenting them in the best possible condition.
In the end, Let Sleeping Corpses Lie is one of the best zombie films that no one’s ever seen. It owes a great deal to Romero’s Night of the Living Dead, yet it also manages to stand quite nicely on its own merits. While the film does have a few script and pacing problems, it more than makes up for them with it’s excellent atmosphere and solid gore work. If you’re at all interested in zombie films, then Let Sleeping Corpses Lie is a must see.
http://home.vicnet.net.au/~parsoto/let.html
http://www.horrordvds.com/reviews/a-m/lscl/
its definetly worth getting