Dr. Terror's House of Horrors

Dr Terror's House of Horrors is a 1965 British anthology horror film from Amicus Productions, directed by veteran horror director Freddie Francis, written by Milton Subotsky, and starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee.[3][4]

Dr Terror's House of Horrors
Directed byFreddie Francis
Written byMilton Subotsky
Produced byMax Rosenberg
Milton Subotsky
StarringPeter Cushing
Christopher Lee
Max Adrian
Ann Bell
Peter Madden
Donald Sutherland
Roy Castle
CinematographyAlan Hume
Edited byThelma Connell
Music byElisabeth Lutyens
Production
company
Distributed byRegal Films International (UK)
Paramount Pictures (USA)
Release dates
  • 23 February 1965 (1965-02-23) (UK)
  • 28 February 1965 (1965-02-28) (USA)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£105,209[1][2]

It was the first in a series of anthology films from Amicus and was followed by Torture Garden (1967), The House That Dripped Blood (1970), Tales from the Crypt (1972), Asylum (1972), The Vault of Horror (1973) and From Beyond the Grave (1974).[5][6] It is also the first horror film from Amicus.

Plot (including cast list)

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Prologue

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Five men, one by one, enter a train compartment in a London station bound for the (fictional) town of Bradley, and are joined by a sixth, the mysterious Doctor Schreck whose name, he mentions, is German for "terror". During the journey, the doctor opens his pack of Tarot cards (which he calls his "House of Horrors") and proceeds to reveal the destinies of each of the travellers. This provides the framework to tell five horror stories.

1 Werewolf

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Architect Jim Dawson returns to his old family home on a Scottish isle to make renovations for the new owner, Mrs. Biddulph. Biddulph explains she bought the secluded house to help her recover from the death of her husband, to whose memory she would like to dedicate a newly enlarged room as a museum.

Dawson finds behind a fake wall in the cellar the coffin of Count Cosmo Valdemar. Valdemar, the original owner of the house, was killed in a conflict with the Dawson family centuries ago. Local legend states that Valdemar would reclaim his former home and take revenge on the current owner. Dawson discovers that Valdemar is rising at night as a werewolf, and has already killed a housemaid.

Believing Mrs. Biddulph to be in danger, he makes silver bullets out of an ancestral cross that was produced from the sword historically used to kill the monster. However, when the creature surges again from his tomb in the cellar, Dawson is baffled to find such bullets ineffective. He runs upstairs to protect Mrs. Biddulph within her room, but the lady reveals that she has replaced the ammunition with ordinary ones. She clarifies how the actual curse meant that Valdemar will take revenge on the last descendant of the Dawson clan, not on the current owner of the estate; and that his death and placement in Valdemar's coffin will fully restore the werewolf to life in human form. It was all a trap: Biddulph is Valdemar's wife, who has returned from the grave after 200 years and proceeds to attack and kill Dawson.

2 Creeping Vine

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Bill Rogers and his wife and daughter return from their holiday to discover a fast-growing vine in the garden. When the plant seems to respond violently to attempts to cut it down, Rogers goes to the Ministry of Defence, where he gets advice from a couple of scientists. The plant shows increasing signs of intelligence, murderous intent and self-preservation, first killing the family dog, then one of the scientists, and finally snapping the telephone line and then blocking all windows and doors to the house. Fire appears for a few moments to scare it away, until that too becomes ineffective as the vine learns to put out a flame.

3 Voodoo

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Biff Bailey is a happy-go-lucky jazz musician, who promptly accepts a gig in the West Indies with his band. Upon witnessing a local voodoo ceremony, he loves the exotic rhythm and tries to pitch on the natives the idea to use it as template for new commercial music. Despite warnings not to "steal" the sacred tunes from the god, Biff tries to use them for a jazz performance back in London, overtly mocking that religion. The show is suddenly halted by a violently stormy wind which makes the public flee, and leads Bailey as well to leave the stage and stumble in the streets until he comes across a garish poster for "Dr Terror's House of Horrors". He runs to the safety of his home, only to discover that there is more to come. This story may be [weasel words] based on the short story "Papa Benjamin" by Cornell Woolrich, which was also adapted by the television series Thriller and the radio series Suspense.[citation needed] The quintet of British jazz saxophonist Tubby Hayes appears as Bailey's backing band.

4 Disembodied Hand

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Pompous art critic Franklyn Marsh seems more concerned with his own devastating wit than art itself. Painter Eric Landor bears the brunt of one of Marsh's tirades, but gets even by humiliating the critic publicly. He shows that Marsh mistakes the work of a chimpanzee for modern art, and subsequently follows him at public speeches and social gatherings, silencing his contributions mid-way with shameful reminders of the error. Increasingly exasperated, finally Marsh retaliates by running over Landor with his car, causing Landor to lose the right hand. Unable to paint any more, Landor commits suicide. From this moment Marsh is tormented by the disembodied hand of the artist, which seems immune to fire and any other attempts to contain it. In a last attack while Marsh is driving, the car crashes and the broken window leads to Marsh's permanent blindness.

5 Vampire

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Dr Bob Carroll returns to his home in the United States with his new French bride, Nicolle. Soon there is evidence that a vampire is on the loose, and Carroll seeks the aid of his colleague, Dr Blake. They find proof that Nicolle is the vampire, and she at one point stalks Blake, until being scared off when he raises his arms protectively and accidentally casts the shadow of a cross. All the evidence clearly shows that she is responsible, and, following Blake's advice, Carroll tearfully stakes his beloved Nicolle. When the police come to arrest Carroll for his wife's murder, Blake denies giving any such advice. As the police take Carroll away, Blake says to himself that the town isn't big enough for two doctors, or two vampires, and he turns into a bat.

Epilogue

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After showing sympathy to all his fellow passengers and attempting not to show them the prediction of death that all received from the tarots' deck, Dr. Schreck informs the men that this would be the only way that they could escape the forecast of an even more horrible destiny. He then vanishes during a moment of darkness. Puzzled and fearful, the men have a moment of relief when the train stops and they assume this to mean they have reached the intended destination. At the station however they are alone in a dark, silent and spooky atmosphere. The wind then carries a newspaper, with the report of an accident in which they all died. Schreck reappears in a black mantel and is revealed to be Death himself. The men begin to slowly follow him in the darkness.

Production

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Development

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Dr. Terror's House of Horrors was a conscious attempt by Milton Subotsky to repeat the success of Dead of Night (1945). Subotsky considered that movie to be "the greatest horror film ever,"[7] and used it as a blueprint for Dr. Terror and the rest of Amicus's portmanteau films. The script began as an unmade television series in 1948 during the time when Dead of Night was a recent release. Subotsky wrote the original stories in 1948 when he was employed as a scriptwriter for NBC's Lights Out series.[2]

Filming

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Filming began on Dr. Terror's House of Horrors at Shepperton Studios on 25 May 1964 with a budget of £105,000 and was completed on 3 July 1964.

Production notes

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  • Donald Sutherland was paid £1,000 (equivalent to £24,456 in 2023) for his performance.[2]
  • It was filmed using the cinematic process known as Techniscope.[8]

Critical reception

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The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Except perhaps in the fourth story, which borrows freely from The Beast with Five Fingers, this horror anthology is filmically near-negligible compared to the best of Riccardo Freda. Moreover it lapses into crudity in the weakest, Voodoo story, with too many brash comedy asides from Roy Castle and others. Yet four of the stories are undeniably compulsive, thanks to ironic variations played on familiar routines, and to several strong performances. Max Adrian delivers a memorably sardonic afterthought to his betrayal of the newly-wed doctor forced to destroy his vampire spouse: "There isn't room for two doctors and two vampires in a small town." The revelation that that most demure, rational and attractive of actresses, Ursula Howells, is a werewolf is also pleasing; as is the foresight of the killer-vine ('Just as I thought: a brain' muses a botanist, examining one of its leaves through a microscope) when it severs the telephone wires with a tendril. Peter Cushing's unshaven, mittened Death ties the stories neatly together; and the dénouement has an adequately apocalyptic flavour."[9]

Variety noted "a usefully chilly package deal which will offer audiences several mild shudders and quite a lot of amusement. Even though occasional giggles set in, the cast, headed by experienced horror practitioners such as Peter Cushing, Michael Gough, Christopher Lee and Max Adrian, sensibly play it straight."[10]

Chris Coffel from Bloody Disgusting called the film "an Underrated Horror Anthology", and commended the film's cinematography.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chapman, James (2022). The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945-1985. Edinburgh University Press p 360
  2. ^ a b c Ed. Allan Bryce, Amicus: The Studio That Dripped Blood, Stray Cat Publishing, 2000 p 17-23
  3. ^ "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  4. ^ "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors (1965) - Freddie Francis - Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related - AllMovie". AllMovie.
  5. ^ Hodgkinson, Will (13 February 2009). "Blood and gutsiness: the extraordinary story of Amicus studios maker of cheap horror films". The Guardian.
  6. ^ "Amicus Productions". Archived from the original on 27 June 2018.
  7. ^ Brosnan, John. The Horror People. London, 1976.
  8. ^ Fryer, Ian (7 November 2017). "The British Horror Film: From the Silent to the Multiplex". Fonthill Media – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 32 (372): 39. 1 January 1965. ProQuest 1305825358 – via ProQuest.
  10. ^ Variety Staff (1 January 1965). "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors".
  11. ^ Coffel, Chris (5 January 2016). "[Blu-ray Review] 'Dr. Terror's House of Horrors' is an Underrated Horror Anthology - Bloody Disgusting". Bloody Disgusting.com. Chris Coffel. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
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