House of the Damned | |
---|---|
Directed by | Maury Dexter |
Written by | Harry Spalding |
Produced by | Maury Dexter |
Starring | Ron Foster Merry Anders Richard Crane Erika Peters |
Cinematography | John M. Nickolaus, Jr. |
Edited by | Jodie Copelan |
Music by | Henryk Wars (as Henry Vars) |
Production company | Associated Producers (API) |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century-Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 63 minutes |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
House of the Damned is a 1963 horror thriller film, shot in CinemaScope. It was produced and directed by Maury Dexter, and stars Ron Foster, Merry Anders, Richard Crane, Erika Peters and Richard Kiel. [1]
Architect Scott Campbell (Ron Foster) and his wife (Merry Anders) survey an old mansion where the previous tenant disappeared. Strange noises, eerie sights and vanishing keys ruin their attempt at a wedding anniversary. Things get worse after Scott's employer (Richard Crane) and his wife arrive, and his employer's wife is kidnapped.
Harry Spalding said he was inspired to write the film by the movie Freaks and wondering what happened to the sort of characters who used to work in freak shows in circuses. [2]
Exteriors are filmed at the former Bugsy Siegel Mansion (later owned by Madonna) in the Hollywood Hills overlooking Lake Hollywood reservoir.
The movie was shot over seven days. [2]
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The film was released on DVD by 20th Century Fox on September 5, 2006. The company would release the film again in 2010 as a part of its 4-disc 75th Anniversary Studio Classics collection. It was later released by Fox on June 27, 2017. [3]
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House of the Damned has received mixed reviews from critics. Author and film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film two out of four stars, calling it "Modestly suspenseful" but criticized the film's ending as being "surprisingly wistful". [4] Brett Gallman from Oh, the Horror! gave the film a mixed review, commending the film's moody cinematography, atmosphere, and occasional chills generated by the title house's tenants, but criticized the film's underwhelming revelation, and "failure to deliver on its intrigue". [5] Craig Butler from AllMovie called the film "dull", criticizing the film's cheapness, script and cardboard characters, while also complimenting Nickolaus' cinematography as "above-average" [6]
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Maury Dexter was an American producer and director of film and TV. He worked several times for Robert Lippert and American International Pictures.
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