Dr. Roy Anderson
Norman Kelley
Dr. Roy Anderson

“They planted the LIVING and harvested the DEAD!”
Somewhere in upstate New York, a young woman is terrorized by a group of rural farmers primarily interested in a harvest of blood.
Invasion of the Blood Farmers (trailer)
Dr. Roy Anderson
Norman Kelley
Dr. Roy Anderson
Jenny Anderson
Tanna Hunter
Jenny Anderson
Don Tucker
Bruce Detrick
Don Tucker
Creton
Paul Craig Jennings
Creton
Egon
Jack Neubeck
Egon
Sontag
Richard Erickson
Sontag
Queen Onhorrid
Cynthia Fleming
Queen Onhorrid
Mrs. Greenman
Lucy Grant
Mrs. Greenman
Police Chief Frank Spano
Frank Iovieno
Police Chief Frank Spano
Omar
Warren D'Oyly-Rhind
Omar
Victim in Shower / Narrator (uncredited)
Ed Adlum
Victim in Shower / Narrator (uncredited)
**_Dull micro-budget indie shot 41 miles north of Manhattan_** A sect of Druids, dressed like farmers, are loose in an upstate New York village and need the blood of locals to resurrect their queen. “Invasion of the Blood Farmers” (1972) cost somewhere between $24,000-$40,000, which would be equal to about $185,000-$200,000 today. That’s more than enough to make a competent and watchable indie, such as the quite good “Another Kind” (2013), which cost $169,000 (factoring inflation of the last dozen years). Whilst there are some highlights, like the locations and Lucy Grant as Mrs. Greenman (with a nod to Tanna Hunter as Jenny), the story just isn’t compelling enough, which isn’t helped by the dubious acting of friends of the writer/director, who were reportedly paid with a 6-pack of beer. With a bigger budget, an improved script and more highlights, this could’ve been a cult indie along the lines of “Night of the Living Dead,” but it’s not. It pales by comparison. A few years after the success of “Jaws,” the writer-director had an opportunity to meet Steven Spielberg at Universal Studios. Shaking his hand, he informed Spielberg that he used to be a director, so Steven naturally asked which films he had done. When he told him “Invasion of the Blood Farmers,” Spielberg turned around and walked away without saying a word. It runs 1 hour, 17 minutes, and was shot in northern Westchester County, New York, including Yorktown Heights in the north-central part of the county. GRADE: C-/D+
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