I love the idea of vampiric objects and Death Bed: The Bed That Eats could be deemed to feature just such a thing – which is what we will explore, of course. It was a film that was directed by George Barry but didn’t get distribution in 1977 when completed. Yet it managed to gain a cult following through bootleg releases and eventually was formally released in 2003.
The film concerns a bed that eats people, indeed that is described as always hungry, with the film narrated by an artist (Dave Marsh, voiced by Patrick Spence-Thomas). The artist was not consumed by the bed – possibly because he had tuberculosis – but imprisoned behind his own painting, probably in a state of undeath and likely in a liminal space. The style of the art has led to an assumption that the artist was in fact Aubrey Beardsley.
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| the first couple |
Split into three parts – Lunch, Dinner and Just Desserts – in lunch we see a couple arrive on foot at the house. The bed, as well as hungry and sentient, displays its reach by closing and locking doors into the house except for one leading to the cellar where it sits. It eats the couple and the method of doing so includes a digestive fluid bubbling up around them, in a foam, and them being drawn into the bed and its digestive area – which is bigger than the spatial reality of our world. We also see that victims can be drawn up from under the bed into the same liminal stomach. Angered by the artist taunting it, it telekinetically destroys the house, leaving only the cellar.
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| flowers bloom |
Next three women, Dianne (Demene Hall), Suzan (Julie Ritter) and Sharon (Rosa Luxemburg) arrive. Dianne needs to get away from the city and a friend who is liquidating the estate the house belonged to has allowed her to use the house – though its destruction is clearly unknown. The bed seems to fear Sharon and her presence injures it, though it eventually devours the other two. Its reach is shown when it kills Suzan as it mysteriously removes her bones from its liminal stomach so they are buried in the grounds and red flowers appear at the spot.
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| demon's eyes |
The reason it fears Sharon is discovered when the artist explains how the bed came to be and to be alive. A demon resided in a tree and decided to float on the breeze until it saw a woman (Linda Bond). Invisibly it seduced her and then created the bed and took human form (bar his red eyes as a demon’s eyes are always filled with blood), calling the woman to him. They made love on the bed, but its unnatural nature killed her – more accurately put her in a state between life and death – and she was buried in the grounds. The demon was saddened by this, its eyes shattered and it cried tears of blood onto the bed.
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| the bed |
That blood brought the bed to life and gave it the hunger that defines it. Incidentally the events occurred in 1897 – the year Dracula was released. The demon fled to a tree again, though when it sleeps (every ten years) it finds the bed in its nightmares and the artist can briefly communicate with the living. For the bed to be destroyed the original woman needs to be resurrected and make love to destroy it; “a coupling began and a coupling will destroy”. It fears Sharon (and is injured by her presence) as her eyes remind it of the original woman whose death led to its birth.
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| a victim |
So, the death methodology for the bed doesn’t fit into vampire tropes – though the resurrected woman could be said to be undead. The creation of the bed, as a sentient thing, through a demon fits in with some folklore, whilst using blood as a catalyst, and its hunger is clearly a trope that fits in with vampirism. We see it devour food, wine and hear it eat a fly, but it clearly wants human flesh and blood. So, is it vamp? Obviously not in the conventional sense but its uniquely demonic origins and supernatural powers, the fact that its hunger (and means of filling that void) sits within a liminal space, the devouring of flesh (and absorption of blood spilt on its sheets) suggest that if you have a broad view of what it means to be vampiric then I think you could class it.
The imdb page is here.
On Blu-Ray @ Amazon US
On Blu-Ray @ Amazon UK
































