Film Review
The success of
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965) and
Torture Garden
(1967) had helped to establish the small British film company Amicus as
a serious competitor to Hammer Films, and similar anthology horror
films allowed Amicus to thrive whilst Hammer endured its slow and
painful decline.
The House
That Dripped Blood is one of the more enjoyable of the films in
this series, a satisfying thrill fest consisting of three
blood-curdling little chillers and a humorous diversion which reveals
what Doctor Who gets up to in his spare time. The title is a
total misnomer as not a single drop of blood is spilt anywhere but let
that not put you off. There are plenty of good old fashioned
frights involving murderous intrigue, witchcraft and vampirism in this
monstrously entertaining compendium of horror.
Films of this kind stand and fall by the quality of the script.
Good direction and good acting are not enough to make a decent
anthology film. At the time, Amicus was fortunate to be able to
avail themselves of the services of a great horror writer, Robert Bloch,
who had written the novel on which Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) was based.
Bloch scripted five films for Amicus, including
The House That Dripped Blood, a
film where the author's flair for suspense, macabre incident and dead
pan humour are all very much in evidence. The four
stories that make up the film are all gripping, self-contained yarns, each offering
something very different from the others. The framing story is a
little tenuous, but everything is wrapped up satisfactorily in the
killingly funny final act. Anyone who buys a dusty old house from
someone calling himself A.J. Stoker deserves all he gets.
Amicus always knew how to assemble a great cast and
The House That Dripped Blood offers
one of the best. Not only do horror icons Peter Cushing and
Christopher Lee show up (both meeting the grisliest of ends), but TV
stars Nyree Dawn Porter and Jon Pertwee are drawn into the fray, along
with Hammer's queen of horror, Ingrid Pitt, and a host of distinguished
character actors (Denholm Elliott, John Bennett, Joss Ackland and
Geoffrey Bayldon). Despite the late 60s garb, Miss Porter still
looks as if she is playing Irene from
The Forsyte Saga, and Jon
Pertwee appears even more bound to the character he was most famous for
at the time. Any lack of similarity between the frilly-shirt
wearing eccentric ham actor we see in this film and Mr Perwee's
portrayal in a popular British TV sci-fi series of the 1970s is purely
coincidental. Despite stiff opposition from the incessantly
face-pulling Pertwee, the award for the campest performance goes to
Ingrid Pitt, who once again proves that a woman's bite is definitely
worse than her bark. Directed with verve by Peter Duffel and
performed with relish by a superb pool of acting talent,
The House That Dripped Blood is a
horror fan's delight - if we overlook the obvious lack of haemoglobin and the
unpardonably cruel jibe against Christopher Lee's Dracula.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Investigating the mysterious disappearance of a temperamental film star
named Paul Henderson, a Scotland Yard detective arrives at a house
which, according to the records at the local police station, has had a
troubled past. A few years previously, a horror fiction writer
rented the house with his wife and was driven insane when his latest
creation, a strangler named Dominic, took on a life of his own.
The next tenant, a retired stockbroker, met a similarly gruesome end
when he and a friend of his became fixated on a waxwork of the
temptress Salome at a nearby horror museum. The third victim of
the cursed house was a quiet businessman who brought about his demise
when he hired a private tutor to educate his young daughter, insisting
that the little girl be kept away from other children and toys.
The estate agent, a certain A.J. Stoker, is able to account for
Henderson's disappearance, a curious case of vampirism involving an
enchanted theatrical cloak...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.