Terror-Creatures from the Grave | |
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Directed by | Domenico Massimo Pupillo |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Carlo Di Palma [1] |
Edited by | Mariano Arditi [1] |
Music by | Aldo Piga [1] |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
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Box office | ₤89 million |
Terror-Creatures from the Grave (Italian : 5 tombe per un medium) is a 1965 horror film directed by Domenico Massimo Pupillo. The film was an international co-production between Italy and the United States through M.B.S. Cinematografica, G.I.A. Cinematografica and International Entertainment Corp. [1]
An attorney arrives at a castle to settle the estate of its recently deceased owner. The owner's widow and daughter claim that the late lord could summon the souls of ancient plague victims and that his spirit roams the castle. Soon, townspeople begin to die in gruesome, violent ways when the dead lord and plague victims return to exact revenge.
Before 2015, Ralph Zucker was credited as an alias of Massimo Pupillo, because it was typical for Italian filmmakers to credit themselves under Anglicized names. [2] Producer Ralph Zucker was an American child actor in the early 1950s. In 1958, Zucker moved to Italy to work as an editor and producer. [1] In an issue of Video Watchdog in 1991, Alan Upchurch credited the direction of the film solely to Zucker based on an interview with Walter Brandi, who claimed that Zucker shot the film. [2] A few years later, Lucas Balbo interviewed Pupillo who said he let Zucker be credited as the director as he "didn't care about the film", [2] and that he did not want his name on both this film and Bloody Pit of Horror . [2] Screenwriter Roberto Natale also confirmed Pupillo as the director. [2]
Pupillo stated that he did not get along with actress Barbara Steele on set describing her attitude as "really disgusting". On the fourth day of shooting, Pupillo said he faced her in front of the whole crew and that the two got along after this encounter. [3]
Zucker did direct a few extra scenes that were in the American cut of the film. [3] These included the prologue scenes and the suicide of the character Stinel (Ennio Balbo). [2] [3] Other scenes included in the American cut involved a scene of a horse kicking a man to death. [2]
Terror-Creatures from the Grave was released in Italy on June 23, 1965, where it was distributed by Selecta. [1] It grossed a total of 89 million Italian lire. [1] The film was released on May 16, 1967 in the United States where it was distributed by Pacemaker Pictures [1] as a double feature with Bloody Pit of Horror . On the film's release abroad, Roberto Curti, author of Italian Gothic Horror Films, 1957-1969, stated that Terror-Creatures from the Grave was "perhaps one of the most popular Italian horror films of the decade abroad." [4]
Several home video releases have many different versions of the film. [5] The DVD from Something Weird Video has a running time of 77 minutes and 30 seconds, and includes a nude scene with Mirella Maravidi. [5] This scene is not included in Sinister Cinema's video release, which is four minutes longer due to an extra dialogue scene. [5] Severin Films has announced a planned Blu-ray release of the film. [6]
In a contemporary review, the Monthly Film Bulletin was disappointed that the "creatures" of the film's title are "confined to the occasional intrusion of a plague-ridden hand or arm", and that the film was "a rather routine and stilted exercise in horror." [7]
Barbara Steele is an English film actress known for starring in Italian gothic horror films of the 1960s. She has been referred to as the "Queen of All Scream Queens" and "Britain's first lady of horror". She played the dual role of Asa and Katia Vajda in Mario Bava's landmark film Black Sunday (1960), and starred in The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), The Horrible Dr. Hichcock (1962), The Long Hair of Death (1964), and Castle of Blood (1964).
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Domenico Massimo Pupillo born 1922 possibly died 1999, is an Italian film director.
Ennio Balbo was an Italian film, television and voice actor.
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