Film Review
The first and arguably the best of the horror anthologies to be made by
the British film company Amicus,
Dr.
Terror's House of Horrors offers few genuine thrills but is
great entertainment in spite of that. Producer Milton Subotsky
was a great fan of the earlier horror anthology
Dead
of Night (1945), which he regarded as one of the greatest
horror films of all time. Subotsky employed the same device here
and in several subsequent films - including
Torture Garden (1967),
The House That Dripped Blood (1970)
and
Tales from the Crypt
(1972) - a formula that proved to be immensely popular with cinema
audiences.
Dr.
Terror's House of Horrors was directed (in much the same tongue-in-cheek
manner in which Subotsky wrote the script) by Freddie Francis, a stalwart of the horror genre,
best known for his work for Amcius' nearest rival, Hammer.
Whilst the special effects and modest production values date the
film somewhat, the bravura performances from a great cast make this one
of Amicus' more enjoyable horror offerings. Particularly
memorable is Christopher Lee playing a nasty art critic who ends up
being harassed by a severed hand, although Roy Castle's laugh-a-minute
encounter with voodooism comes a close second. Ultimately,
it is left to Peter Cushing to deliver the chills, which he does with
his inimitable flair, and a very dodgy German accent.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Freddie Francis film:
Hysteria (1965)
Film Synopsis
During a rail journey, five men who have never met before share a
railway compartment with a strange mystic who introduces himself as Dr
Schreck (which, as luck would have it, is the German word for
Terror). The latter proceeds to tell the five men their fortunes
with his tarot cards, his house of horrors. The first man, an
architect, is on his way to Scotland, to make alterations to an old
ancestral seat. In the cellar, he will find the coffin of a
werewolf who is far from dead. The second man will be the victim
of a plant that has made an evolutionary leap and has learned how to
kill human beings. The third will come to a nasty end when he
attempts to steal the sacred music of a voodoo ceremony. The
fourth man, an art critic, will be pursued to his doom by the severed
hand of an artist whom he drove to suicide. The fifth will
discover that his wife is a vampire who must be destroyed to stop her
preying on young boys. Dr Schreck tells the five men that they
can all avoid these terrible destinies if they each draw one more
card. The card they draw represents Death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.