Looking for a sign for your family pet cemetery? How about your man cave? Look no further. Here we have a Pet Sematary sign custom built handmade horror prop replica.
This is made from a
cedar plank. The dims are 24" x 5" x 1". It has 2 drilled eyelets in the
top to mount with the added rustic string. This is handmade, all the
details carved and cut in to age the look.
Hand stained and painted. Made to look like the sign from the 2019 remake Pet Sematary. These are made to order average ship time is roughly 2 days after order is placed. By Camp Horror Hound.
Pet Sematary is a 2019 horror film directed by Kevin Kölsch and Dennis Widmyer and written by Jeff Buhler. It is the second adaptation of the 1983 novel of the same name by Stephen King, after the 1989 film.
Pet Sematary sign will be custom built to match the pics below.
Actual screenshot featuring the sign from Pet Sematary (2019).
Directed by: Mike Marvin Produced by: John Kemeny Written by: Mike Marvin Starring: Charlie Sheen, Sherilyn Fenn, Nick Cassavetes, Randy Quaid Music by: Michael Hoenig, J. Peter Robinson Cinematography: Reed Smoot Editing by: Scott Conrad, Gary Rocklen Distributed by: New Century, Alliance Entertainment Release dates: November 21, 1986 Running time: 93 min Country: United States Language: English Budget: $2.7 million Box office: $3.5 million ($1,402,535 US) Plot: After a young man is murdered by a road-racing gang of motor-heads, a
mysterious fast-driving spirit descends from the sky to take revenge. Info: The Wraith is a 1986 American independent action horror film produced by John Kemeny, written and directed by Mike Marvin, and starring Charlie Sheen, Sherilyn Fenn, Nick Cassavetes, and Randy Quaid.
The film was released theatrically on 288 screens in the U.S. by New
Century Vista Film Company (later New Century Entertainment
Corporation). The Wraith tells the story of an Arizona teen who mysteriously returns from the dead as a supernatural street-racer intent on taking revenge on the gang who murdered him.
Production: While filming a chase sequence shot on a mountainside outside of Tuscon,
a crew member was killed and another was critically injured. According
to supplementary material on the DVD a camera car was overloaded and
overturned. This was the only serious accident during the filming. The Wraith was shot entirely in and around Tucson, Arizona;
shots of the hilly road leading into the fictional "Brooks, AZ" were
filmed on Freeman Road on the city's south side. Keri's (Sherilyn Fenn)
home is located at 2128 East 5th Street; "Big Kay's Burgers" was a set
built especially for the film at 2755 East Benson Highway and no longer
exists.
The Wraith original 1986 trailer.
Film Facts: The black car featured in the movie was a real-life technological
wonder, the Dodge M4S. A joint effort of the Dodge Division of Chrysler
Motors and PPG Industries, one of the highly sophisticated PPG Pace Cars
for the PPG-CART Indy Car World Series. The M4S was designed and
constructed at an estimated cost of $1.1 million, and featured
performance and technology to match that lofty figure. The innovative
body design was developed in the Chrysler studios, while PPG developed
the finish - a special bronze pearl paint job formulated just for this
car. The M4S was powered by a Chrysler 2.2 liter four-cylinder
one-of-a-kind engine that exceeded 194 mph. According to Gary Hellerstein,
transportation coordinator for this film, a total of seven versions of
the M4S were needed for filming. The original, on loan from Dodge, was
used for close-ups and details. Two more "drivers", consisting of
perfectly detailed bodies on dune buggy chassis, were used for stunt
driving chores. There were four "shells", empty bodies on bare, towable
frames, that were sacrificed in various crash scenes.
The "futuristic" weapon wielded by The Wraith is a Franchi SPAS-12
shotgun, with a folding stock. It was a 12-gauge tactical shotgun made
in Italy, and has the unusual property of functioning in both pump and
semi-automatic modes. The odd hook on the weapon is for firing the
weapon one-handed with the stock extended, as it wraps around the
forearm.
Packard Walsh drove a late-1970s Chevrolet Corvette with a custom paint
job and nose clip, with the tail of an 84 Vette; Oggie drove a 1986
Dodge Daytona Turbo Z; Minty drove a 1977 Pontiac Firebird with a
highly-visible (but apparently non-functional) supercharger; Skank and
Gutterboy drove a beat-up 1966 Plymouth Barracuda; Rughead was driving a
late-70's GMC pickup. The couple who are cheated out of their car in
the first race were driving a similar Daytona Turbo Z. The police drove a
variety of mid-1980's Plymouth Caravelles and Gran Furys, as well as
early-1980's Chevrolet Malibus; Sheriff Loomis drove a "civilian"
Plymouth Caravelle.
Although listed as Plymouth Caravelles in other notes. The cop cars and
Loomis's car are Dodge 600s as Caravelles have a plain grille and 600s
have the cross-hair grille. Rugheads truck is not a Chevrolet, as noted before, but a GMC as can be seen by the GMC emblem on the grille.
The dual-sport motorcycle is a Honda XL600R. It features the renowned
600cc RFVC engine with four valves in a radial configuration. It also
has an unusual setup with dual carburators, which some say is the reason
why the bike is a pig to start lukewarm. The motorcycle in the film has
its characteristic single-cylinder thumper note dubbed with an
electronic high-revving warble.
Dedicated to the memory of Bruce Ingram, who worked on the film as an assistant cameraman. He was the single person killed when the camera car overturned.
Johnny Depp, who was then dating Sherilyn Fenn, was present during filming and was living in the film crew's hotel with Fenn. Johnny Depp was considered for the roles of Jake Kesey and Oggie.
Bears a lot of similarity in plot to a TV movie Charlie's father made in 1974 The California Kid. Sherilyn Fenn, Charlie Sheen and his future ex-wife Denise Richards all went on to play in different episodes of Friends (1994). A 16 year old Brooke Burke Charvet has a small part in the film as a waitress.
The beginning of the chase scene where Skank & Gutterboy chase Keri
Johnson & Jake on Jake's motorcycle was 500 feet (150 meters) south
of a Lindy's burgers which was showcased in Man v. Food: Tucson, AZ (2009).
Shot in 27 days. The movie was filmed during the American winter of January 1986. When police are chasing Packard Walsh and The Wraith at the end of the
movie, at background can be seen a rainbow. It was purely incidental.
The place where The Wraith arrives to Earth is a desert crossroad. In
several beliefs and superstitions a desert crossroad is considered a
place to meet supernatural beings, in addition to deal treats with The
Devil.
In 1987 the film was released to VHS video by Lightning Video, then on LaserDisc by Image Entertainment; it was then released in 2003 on DVD by Platinum Disc Corporation (now Echo Bridge Home Entertainment). In spite of having no special features and only being available in the pan-and-scan format, there is missing footage on the original VHS and LaserDisc releases. LionsGate released a widescreen Special Edition DVD on March 2, 2010, which included this previously missing footage.