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The Forgotten | |
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Directed by | S. F. Brownrigg |
Written by | Tim Pope |
Produced by | S. F. Brownrigg Walter L. Krusz (executive producer) |
Starring | Bill McGhee Rosie Holotik Anne MacAdams Gene Ross Hugh Feagin Camilla Carr |
Cinematography | Robert B. Alcott |
Edited by | Jerry Caraway |
Music by | Robert Farrar |
Production company | Hallmark Releasing Corp. |
Distributed by | AIP |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $100,000 USD |
The Forgotten (also known as Don't Look in the Basement and Death Ward #13) is a 1973 independent horror film directed by S. F. Brownrigg, written by Tim Pope and starring Bill McGhee, former Playboy model Rosie Holotik, and Annabelle Weenick (credited as Anne MacAdams) about homicidal patients at an insane asylum.
Stephens Sanitarium is a secluded rural mental health institute whose chief doctor, Dr. Stephens, believes that the best way to cure insanity is to allow the patients to act out their realities freely. After a patient threatens her life, an elderly nurse decides to retire. Meanwhile, in the process of therapy (chopping wood with an axe), Oliver W. Cameron, the crazed former magistrate known as Judge, lands the axe into Stephens's back, apparently killing him. The nurse finishes packing and is attacked by Harriett, a patient who accuses her of stealing her "baby" (a plastic doll). The patient kills her by crushing her head in the nurse's suitcase.
The only remaining doctor appears to be Geraldine Masters, who vows to continue Dr. Stephens's work. Later, she is greeted by Charlotte Beale, a young nurse who reveals that Dr. Stephens hired her a week before. Masters allows her to settle in. Charlotte meets the patients, including a lobotomized and child-like man named Sam, who enjoys popsicles and his toy boat, a schizophrenic nymphomaniac named Allyson, an emotionally dependent woman named Jennifer, an octogenarian named Mrs. Callingham who spouts poetry and mistakes flowers in the garden for her children, juvenile prankster Danny, a shellshocked Sergeant who lost his mind after accidentally killing his men in Vietnam, and the judge.
Later, a telephone man investigates the faulty phone system at the institution. Callingham's tongue is cut out of her mouth during her sleep. However, Masters tells Charlotte that Callingham did it to herself. After he disobeys her, Masters burns the Sergeant's hand and later murders Jennifer for stealing medicine. Sam discovers the telephone man dead in a closet and tells Allyson. Allyson is distraught, as she thought that the man would marry her. Allyson reveals Masters' secret to Charlotte: Masters is a patient at the institute whom Stephens allowed to pretend to be a doctor. Masters presumably murdered the telephone man to ensure that he would not report the institution. Callingham indicates to Charlotte that it was Masters who cut out her tongue, apparently to prevent the elderly woman from disclosing the secret. Later, the Judge revals that they all know Masters is a patient, but also think that Charlotte is one.
Allyson confronts Masters about the murder of the telephone man, saying that Charlotte now knows what is going on. During the confrontation, she implies that Masters used to be a real doctor, but was fired after killing a patient; this psychotic break led to her being institutionalized. Charlotte realizes that her life is in danger and tries to escape but finds that all the windows and doors have been boarded up by Masters. Allyson later convinces herself that the man is still alive and drags his body to her room to have sex with it. Masters commands the Judge to reveal Charlotte's location. The Judge instead says that he and the other patients have found Masters guilty and that she is no longer in charge.
Sam then leads Charlotte to the basement, where a man grabs her ankle, and she responds by beating him to death with a toy boat. She realizes that it is Stephens, but not before finishing him off. At the direction of Masters, Sam leads Charlotte upstairs. Sam thinks that Charlotte intentionally murdered Stephens and helps restrain her. However, he has a flashback from his lobotomy (with which Masters assisted) and rescues Charlotte by taking her out of the room. Masters cowers in a corner when Sam leaves, and the other patients enter with weapons and kill her. Sam leads Charlotte outside through a passage in the basement. Allyson pleads for Sam to escape with her, but he returns inside to the room with the other patients. Disturbed by the murder scene, Sam grabs the axe and kills all the other inmates except Callingham, who is not in the room. Charlotte listens to the massacre outside and then flees. Sam leaves the room to get a popsicle and begins to cry.
The original theatrical release of the film was in May 1973, when it played the Midwest and Southwest regions of the United States under the original title. Shortly thereafter, the film was acquired for theatrical distribution by Hallmark Releasing, a sub-distributor for American International Pictures located in the New England area. Hallmark had great success with The Last House on the Left , particularly with the tag line "To avoid fainting, keep repeating: it's only a movie...only a movie...only a movie". In July 1973, they test-marketed the film under a number of new titles, including The Snake Pit, Beyond Help, and Death Ward No. 13, before settling on Don't Look In The Basement. The movie received a nationwide release under this title in August 1973, and Hallmark continued to program the film throughout the remainder of the 1970s, often issuing it as part of double or triple bills with other titles such as The Last House on the Left, The House That Vanished, and Let Sleeping Corpses Lie, which Hallmark released in the US as Don't Open the Window.
The Forgotten was released for the first time on DVD by Vci Video on January 25, 2000. It was later released by BCI on January 22, 2002, as a part of its two-disk "Evil Places" movie pack. BCI would later re-release the film in 2004 and in 2005 in various multi-movie packs. The film was released five separate times in 2003 by Diamond Entertainment, Platinum Disc, Pop Flix, and Alpha Video respectively. In 2004, it was released twice by St. Clair Entertainment on February 24, and March 2. On October 25, and November 29 that same year, it was released by Elstree Hill Entertainment and HHO respectively. In 2005, Platinum Disk re-released the film three separate times as a part of various multi-film packs. That same year, it would also be released by Stax, Mill Creek Entertainment, Black Horse, and re-released by Diamond Entertainment. The following year saw the film's re-release by both Mill Creek and Vci, as a part of several multi-movie collections. Mill Creek would once again re-release the film in 2007, as a double-feature alongside Don't Open the Door! (1975). It was released both as a single feature by Video International in 2008 and as a part of a five-disk movie pack by Echo Bridge Home Entertainment in 2010. Echo Bridge would include the film the following year along with Madacy Home Video in several multi-film collections. In 2012, the film was released by Film Chest and re-released by Pop Flix on January 24, and April 10, respectively. Mill Creek re-released the film one more time in 2013, for their three-disk "American Horror Stories: 12 Movie Collection". [1] In 2014 Film Chest re-released a digitally restored version of the film in November. [2] Film Chest then released the film on December 16, the following month. In 2015, the film was released as a single feature by VFN and by Films Around The World Inc. On October 25, 2016, it was released by VCI and the following month by Film Detective. It was released for the first time on Blu-ray by Brink in a double-feature, alongside its sequel Don't Look in the Basement 2 (2015). 2018 saw the film's releases on both Blu-ray and DVD by Code Red and VCI. [1]
Under the title Don't Look In The Basement, the film was released to UK cinemas in 1977. It was passed with an 'X' certificate after 35s of cuts (possibly made by the distributor prior to submission to the BBFC). In February 1983, the film was released on video by Dudley-based distributors Derann, under their Crystal sub-label. The running time was truncated to less than 80 minutes; still, it was branded as a Video Nasty, and though it escaped prosecution, was effectively a 'banned' title. The film was passed uncut with a '15' certificate for DVD release in 2005.
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Critical reception for The Forgotten has been mixed to negative. Dave Sindelar on his film review website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings gave the film a mixed review. In his review on the film Sindelar criticized the film's premise, calling it "hard to swallow" and the unnecessary nastiness of film's climax. However, Sindelar also wrote, "Nonetheless, the characters are quite interesting, and the acting from the cast of unknowns is excellent for such a low-budget movie, and there are enough moments sprinkled throughout the movie that show a sense of real sadness and a sense of humanity that give a greater texture to the proceedings. Ultimately, the strong points make the movie work, and I can appreciate it well enough, even if it does remain in that realm of movies that are simply not much fun for me." [3] Rob Gonsalves from ‘’eFilmCritic.com’’ awarded the film one out of five stars, calling it “a grade-Z horror flick”. [4]
Cavett Binion of AllMovie gave it a generally favorable review, writing, "somehow the intrinsic sleaziness generated by the threadbare production manages to lend it a remarkably suitable ambience." [5] TV Guide gave the film a positive review, writing, “Despite the overall cheapness of the production, director S.F. Brownrigg does manage to convey a sense of seedy claustrophobia during the depraved proceedings.” [6] Almar Haflidason from BBC gave the film three out of five stars. [7] While it was omitted from Phil Hardy's The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror, replaced with a review for Don't Look Now , the earlier edition, The Encyclopedia of Horror Movies (Harper & Row, 1986) provided a favorable review: "What lifts the film out of the usual run of asylum movies is its creation of a claustrophobic, hermetically sealed world and a powerfully unremitting ambience of craziness. Added to this are the inmates themselves, each hopelessly enmeshed in with their own obsessions and unable to communicate with the outside world but each also representing distinctly recognizable, identifiable, facets of humanity, though seen through a frighteningly distorting prism -- the judge consumed with guilt, the man who believes he is an army sergeant, a girl whose maternal feelings become fixated on a doll and so on." [8]
In May 2008, a remake of the film was being planned by directors Alan Rowe Kelly and Anthony G. Sumner. Filming was scheduled for October 2008 in Indiana with a planned 2009 release, [9] but this version never came to fruition.
In March 2017, former horror punk guitarist from the Misfits, Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein, [10] was put to star in Death Ward 13, a remake and continuation of Don't Look in the Basement, to be directed by Todd Nunes ( All Through the House ) and produced by The Readmond Company. [11] The second planned remake has not yet come to fruition.
In December 2013, a sequel titled Id: Don't Look in the Basement 2 was announced with Anthony Brownrigg, son of S.F. Brownrigg, directing. The film was shot in Texas in March/April 2014 and used several of the same locations from the original film. [12] The sequel was eventually released in 2015. [13]
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