Horror Film Review: X (dir by Ti West)


The year is 1979 and the easiest way to get rich and become a star is to appear in a porno film.  At least, that’s what Maxine (Mia Goth) and her older boyfriend, Wayne (Martin Henderson), think.  Wayne’s the producer.  Maxine is one of the stars.  The name of the movie is going to be The Farmer’s Daughter and it’s going to star Jackson Hole (Kid Cudi) as a man who stumbles across as a farm and gets to know the farmer’s daughters, played by Maxine and Bobby-Lynne (Brittany Snow).  Directing the film will be a film student-turned-director named RJ Nichols (Owen Campbell).  Holding the boom mic and otherwise helping out will be RJ’s girlfriend, Lorraine (Jenna Ortega).  Lorraine may say that she’s not impressed with the idea of working on a pornographic film but everyone an tell that’s a lie.  Everyone except for RJ, of course….

Wayne has even found a farm where they can shoot.  The farm belongs to Howard (Stephen Ure) and Pearl (Mia Goth, made up to look like she’s in her 80s).  Howard suspects that Wayne is making an adult film and he doesn’t exactly approve of it but it also appears that he and Pearl could use the money.  Howard warns Wayne not to bother Pearl while they’re filming.  However, it doesn’t take long for Pearl to wander out of the house and to discover what’s going on in the guest house.  That night, people start to die….

X caused quite a stir when it was released earlier this year, with critics declaring it be a horror classic.  I finally watched the film last week.  X is undeniably a well-made film and it deserves a huge amount of  credit, in this repressed era of trigger warnings, for not holding back on either the violence or the sex.  Mia Goth deserves all of the praise that she’s received for playing both Pearl and Maxine.  At first, it might seem like stunt casting to cast Goth in both roles but actually, it works well with the film’s subtext.  Pearl wants to kill Maxine (and her friends) because they represent the youth that she’s lost.  Maxine initially fears Pearl because she represents the inevitability of getting older.  Unless you die young, you’re going to get old and much of Maxine’s actions are all about doing whatever it takes not to get old.  If that means running straight into danger while fueled only on cocaine and fury, that’s what Maxine is going to do.  The cocaine that Maxine snorts is as important to the story as Pearl’s resentment, Wayne’s greed, and the preacher who continually appears on television.  Maxine probably couldn’t do half of what she does in the film if she wasn’t continually snorting coke and it’s significant that the other characters in the film remain relatively drug-free.  Cocaine is a drug for those who want to confident and free of the worries and the self-doubt that comes with age.  X becomes a film about the battle between the young and the old, a conflict that has defined much of recent history as the younger generation wonders when the older generation is finally going to surrender their power.

At the same time, it’s hard not to feel that the film itself was a bit overpraised by critics who were stunned to discover that a horror film could feature good acting, carefully composed shots, and clever editing.  Judging from some of the reviews, you would get the feeling that some of these critics have never seen a subversive horror film before.  X is a well-made slasher film that refuses to buy into the old trope that one has to be an innocent or a good person to survive a film like this.  Indeed, the biggest mistake that people make in X is to trying to do the right thing.  But it’s hardly the first film to comment on the rules of the genre by breaking them.

In the end, the most important thing about X is that it’s an effective and well-made horror movie.  Visually, the film does a great job of capturing the isolation of rural Texas and all the members of the cast do a good job bringing their characters to life, even if some of the country accents a bit overdone.  Martin Henderson is amusing playing a role that seems like it was written for Matthew McConaughey and Jenna Ortega does a good job playing a character who manages to be both annoying and sympathetic.  (She’s far better here than she was in The Fallout.)  The film ultimately belongs to Mia Goth, playing two different characters who both seem destined to meet the same fate.

As far as Ti West horror films go, X is never as energetic or as much fun as The House of the Devil.  But still, it’s a good rural slasher film.

Monday Live Tweet Alert: Join Us For Martial Outlaw and The Other Guys!


As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in hosting a few weekly live tweets on twitter.  I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie!  Every week, we get together.  We watch a movie.  We tweet our way through it.

 

Tonight, for #MondayActionMovie, the film will be 1993’s Martial Outlaw!  Selected and hosted by RevMagdalen, this movie stars Jeff Wincott as a martial outlaw, whatever that is.  Judging from the poster, he does not wear a shirt.  The movie starts at 8 pm et and can be found on YouTube!

Following #MondayActionMovie, Brad and Sierra will be hosting the #MondayMuggers live tweet.  We will be watching 2010’s The Other Guys!  This hilarious comedy can be found on Netflix!

It should make for a night of fun viewing and I invite all of you to join in.  If you want to join the live tweets, just hop onto twitter, start Martial Outlaw at 8 pm et, and use the #MondayActionMovie hashtag!  Then, at 10 pm et, start The Other Guys, and use the #MondayMuggers hashtag!  The live tweet community is a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy.  And reviews of these films will probably end up on this site at some point over the next few weeks. 

 

 

Horror on the Lens: Plan 9 From Outer Space (dir by Edward D. Wood, Jr.)


Viewing Plan 9 From Outer Space during October is a bit of a tradition around these parts and here at the Shattered Lens, we’re all about tradition.  And since today is the 97th anniversary of the birth of Ed Wood, Jr., it just seems appropriate to watch his best-known film.

Speaking of tradition, this 1959 sci-fi/horror flick is traditionally cited as the worst film ever made but I don’t quite agree.  For one thing, the film is way too low-budget to be fairly judged against other big budget fiascoes.  If I have to watch a bad movie, I’ll always go for the low budget, independent feature as opposed to the big studio production.  To attack Ed Wood for making a bad film is to let every other bad filmmaker off the hook.  Ed Wood had his problems but he also had a lot of ambition and a lot of determination and, eventually, a lot of addictions.  One thing that is often forgotten by those who mock Ed Wood is that he drank himself to death and died living in squalor.  The least we can do is cut the tragic figure some slack.

Plan 9 From Outer Space is a ludicrous film but it’s also a surprisingly ambitious one and it’s got an anti-war, anti-military message so all of you folks who have hopped down the progressive rabbit hole over the past few years should have a new appreciation for this film.  I mean, do you want the government to blow up a Solarnite bomb?  DO YOU!?

Also, Gregory Walcott actually did a pretty good job in the lead role.  He was one of the few members of the cast to have a mainstream film career after Plan 9.

Finally, Plan 9 is a tribute to one man’s determination to bring his vision to life.  Ed Wood tried and refused to surrender and made a film with a message that he believed in and, for that, he deserves to be remembered.

Now, sit back, and enjoy a little Halloween tradition.  Take it away, Criswell!

Can you prove it didn’t happen?

WELL, CAN YOU!?

October Positivity: Crime of the Age (dir by Dave Christiano)


“Do you like carrots?”

The question gets asked a lot over the course of the 1988 film, Crime of the AgeCrime of the Age deals with the theft of a book.  The director of the local Christian summer camp discovers that someone broke into his office and stole a book called How To Be A Christian.  The only clue is a carrot, which was left behind by the thief.

When the Detective (played by Keith Salter, who has previously played the world’s most obnoxious atheist in The Daylight Zone) shows up, he takes a look at the carrot.  He realizes that the carrot is the only clue that he and the Director have towards solving a very serious crime.  As the Detective explains it, only someone on staff could have stolen the book.  And that means that one of the staff members is …. wait for it …. NOT A CHRISTIAN!

*Cue the Dramatic Music*

No, seriously, I’m not kidding.  There are a lot of dramatic music cues in this film.

The Detective proceeds to interview the rest of the staff.  He asks them all if they saw anything suspicious.  He asks them what they were doing the previous night.  He asks them all if they like carrots.  Every member of the staff says that they saw someone else going into the director’s office.  Every member says that they like carrots.  Every member reveals something that leads the Detective to doubt their faith.

“That’s odd,” the detective says to himself, after one interview, “A Christian who only listens to music.”

“That’s odd,” the detective says after another interview, “A Christian who doesn’t like to go to church.”

After talking to the Groundskeeper, the detective says to himself, “That’s odd.  A Christian who doesn’t care about sin.”

You may be getting the feeling that this is a bit of repetitive movie and indeed, the dialogue is made up of about five or six lines that are continually repeated from scene to scene.  On the one hand, the structure mirrors any number of Biblical parables.  On the other hand, it doesn’t make the conversations sound any less awkward.  Of the suspects, the Groundskeeper is the only one who manages to project any sort of individual personality and that’s because he seems to be so genuinely annoyed with the whole thing.  While everyone else is very polite about being asked if they like carrots, the Groundskeeper replies, “Yeah, I like carrots!” with a tone that suggests that he’s prepared to throw a punch over it.

This is another early Christian film from the Christiano Brothers.  Like almost all of their films, the film is disguised as a genre film but the main message is that everyone is one misstep away from going to Hell.  If you’re not excited about going to Church, you’re going to Hell.  If you don’t talk about your faith with everyone you meet, you’re going to Hell.  If you only listen to music, you’re going to Hell.  And I presume that if you steal a book, you’ll be going there as well.  Despite the film’s attempts at comedy, it’s a bit of a harsh message.  For the most part, the cast looks like they had fun shooting the film and that’s always a plus.  But I have to confess that I’ve never liked carrots.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 10/3/22 — 10/9/22


As the first full week of Horrorthon comes to a close, here’s what I watched, read, and listened to over the past 7 days!

Films I Watched:

  1. Black Eagle (1988)
  2. Conquest (1983)
  3. Chopping Mall (1986)
  4. Dr. Orloff’s Monster (1964)
  5. House on Haunted Hill (1958)
  6. Let’s Get Harry (1986)
  7. Massacre at Dinosaur Valley (1985)
  8. Orloff Against The Invisible Man (1970)
  9. Robot Monster (1953)
  10. The Shootist (1976)
  11. Snowbeast (1977)
  12. Studio 666 (2022)
  13. Ted Bundy: American Boogeyman (2021)
  14. Terrifier (2016)
  15. X (2022)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Abbott Elementary
  2. The Amazing Race
  3. Atlanta
  4. Bachelor in Paradise
  5. Full House
  6. Ghosts
  7. Hell’s Kitchen
  8. Inspector Lewis
  9. Interview with a Vampire
  10. Law & Order
  11. Law & Order: Organized Crime
  12. Law & Order: SVU
  13. Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head
  14. Night Flight
  15. The Real Love Boat
  16. Survivor
  17. Talking Dead
  18. The Walking Dead

Books I Read:

  1. The Adult Version of Dracula (1970) by Hal Kantor  (and NOT Ed Wood, as some claim)
  2. The Family (2002) by Ed Sanders
  3. Heat 2 (2022) by Michael Mann and Meg Gardiner
  4. One Evil Summer (1994) by R.L. Stine
  5. The Secret Bedroom (1991) by R.L. Stine

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Annie Lennox
  3. Barry Adamson
  4. Britney Spears
  5. The Chemical Brothers
  6. Creedence Clearwater Revival
  7. David Bowie
  8. Depeche Mode
  9. Goblin
  10. Hans Zimmer
  11. Jakalope
  12. Jake Bugg
  13. John Carpenter
  14. John Williams
  15. Katy Perry
  16. Kedr Livanskiy
  17. Kid Rock
  18. Lynard Skynard
  19. Muse
  20. Nine Inch Nails
  21. Public Service Broadcasting
  22. Saint Motel
  23. Screamin’ Jay Hawkins

Live Tweets:

  1. Black Eagle
  2. The Shootist
  3. Let’s Get Harry
  4. Snowbeast

Trailers:

  1. 6 Horrific Trailers For October 9th, 2022
  2. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
  3. Violent Night

Horror On The Lens:

  1. Robot Monster
  2. A Cold Night’s Death
  3. The Naked Witch
  4. Manos: The Hands of Fate
  5. Night Stalker
  6. Night Strangler
  7. The Cloning of Clifford Swimmer

Horror on TV:

  1. Ghost Story 1.3 “At The Cradle Foot”
  2. Ghost Story 1.4 “Bad Connection”
  3. Ghost Story 1.5 “The Summer House”
  4. Ghost Story 1.6 “Alter Ego”
  5. Ghost Story 1.7 “Half A Death”
  6. Ghost Story 1.8 “House of Evil”
  7. Ghost Story 1.9 “Cry of the Cat”

4 Shots From Horror History

  1. Early 50s
  2. Mid 50s
  3. Late 50s
  4. Early 60s
  5. Mid 60s
  6. Late 60s
  7. Early 70s

Horror Scenes That I Love:

  1. The War of the Worlds
  2. Creature From The Black Lagoon
  3. The House on Haunted Hill
  4. The Awful Dr. Orlof
  5. The Birds
  6. Night of the Living Dead
  7. Dracula A.D. 1972

News From Last Week:

  1. Pulitzer Prize Winning Playwright Charles Fuller Dead at 83
  2. Feisty First Lady of Country Music Lorretta Lynn Dies At 90
  3. Love Goddess comedian Judy Tenuta dies at 72
  4. Radio host Bernie McGuirk dead at 64
  5. Box Office: ‘Smile’ Outpacing ‘Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile’ for No. 1 as ‘Amsterdam’ Bombs
  6. Late-night comedy flounders in ratings as Colbert, Kimmel, others openly root for Democrats, shred Republicans

Links From Last Week:

  1. In Memoriam: Antonio Inoki (1943-2022)
  2. Do The “Monster Mash” With Vincent Price For “Shocktober 2022” – Here’s The Hilarious Video!
  3. Favorite Campy Horror Films
  4. The World’s Common Tater’s Week in Books, Movies, and TV 10/8/22

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard shared trailers for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever and Violent Night!
  2. Case reviewed Thirsty, Missing, Selfie From Hell, Witch Hunt, The Sky, and FWD!
  3. Erin shared Ghosts Are Coming, Frankenstein’s Monster, Trashcan Man, Boogeyman, Kingdom of Spiders, At Night, and Trees In The Night!
  4. Erin took a look at The Spectacular Covers of Startling Stories!
  5. Erin had some thoughts on baseball: Congratulations to the Phillies, Aaron Judge Gets 62, Another Rangers Season Comes To An End, Go Mariners, Congratulations the Seattle Mariners On The Best Comeback of The Postseason, and As The Wild Card Ends The Padres Advance!
  6. Jeff shared music videos from Alice Cooper, Lulabox, Danzig, King Kobra, Vinnie Vincent Invasion, Grim Reaper, and Ramones!
  7. Jeff played Under the Bridge, The Pool, Use Your Psychic Powers at Applebee’s, Ghost Town, Ink, Nose Bleed, and Thanatophobia!
  8. Jeff reviewed Attack of the 50 Foot Camgirl, Biohazard, Ed and his Dead Mother, Creepozoids, The Zero Boys, Vampire in Vegas, and Invasion of the Pod People!
  9. Jeff shared a great moment from comic book history and a great moment from television history!
  10. I reviewed some horror films: Night of the Ghouls, Scream of the Wolf, The City of the Dead, Audrey Rose, House of the Dead, Death Ship, The Amityville Horror, Dolls, The Wasp Woman, Food of the Gods, Orloff Against The Invisible Man, The Caller, H.P. Lovecraft’s Monster Portal, Conquest, Children of the Corn, Ted Bundy: American Boogeyman, Dr. Orloff’s Monster, The Four Troublesome Heads, Child’s Play, The Bunker Game, Massacre in Dinosaur Valley, and Dark Was The Night!
  11. I read The Secret Bedroom, Bad Dreams, and The I-5 Killer!
  12. I shared some October Positivity: The Pretender, The Crossing, Nite Song, The Daylight Zone, The Appointment, Early Warning, and End of the Harvest!
  13. I also reviewed Black Eagle and A Jazzman’s Blues!
  14. I took a look at Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, One World, and California Dreams!
  15. I shared my week in television and an AMV of the Day!

More From Us:

  1. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared Lucretia My Reflection!
  2. I had many interesting dreams this week: Last Night’s Letter Dream, Last Night’s Golf Dream, Last Night’s Britney Spears Dream, Last Night’s Apartment Dream, Last Night’s Theatrical Dream, Last Night’s Restaurant and Train Station Dream, and Last Night’s Shopping For Candy Dream!
  3. At Reality TV Chat Blog, I wrote about the latest episodes of The Amazing Race and Survivor!
  4. At my music site, I shared songs from Annie Lennox, John Carpenter, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Screamin Jay Hawkins, Nine Inch Nails, Goblin, and John Williams!
  5. At her photography site, Erin shared Crying, Sunset, The Burning Sky, Birds, Birds 2, Birds 3, and Birds 4!
  6. At Pop Politics, Jeff wrote about the Berlin Wall, Let’s Go Brandon, the funniest political commercial of the midterms, Ben Sasse, Dwayne Johnson, Armageddon, and Kanye West!
  7. For SyFyDesigns, I shared: Happy Mean Girls Day, Hi Elon, Get Ready To Party, I Am Exhausted, A Little Poetry, That’s What I Get For Being Hopeful, and Tomorrow!
  8. For Horror Critic, I reviewed Chopping Mall, Llamageddon, We Summon the Darkness, Kung Fu Zombie, Kung Fu From Beyond The Grave, Goke Body Snatcher From Hell, and Plague of the Zombies!

Want to check out last week?  Click here!

Horror On TV: Ghost Story 1.9 “Cry of the Cat” (dir by Arnold Laven)


On tonight’s episode of Ghost Story, a rodeo is terrorized by a series of cougar attacks.  Could it have anything to do with the cat-like wife of rodeo star Doug McClure?

This episode originally aired on November 24th, 1972 and it is kind of silly but …. hey, it’s Doug McClure.  It doesn’t get more early 70s than Doug McClure.

Enjoy!

The TSL’s Horror Grindhouse: Night of the Ghouls (dir by Edward D. Wood, Jr.)


Night of the Ghouls (1958, dir by Edward D. Wood, Jr)

From the one and only Edward D. Wood, Jr. …. it’s Night of the Ghouls!

Night of the Ghouls begins with Criswell, the “psychic” who also provided the introduction for Wood’s best known film, Plan 9 From Outer Space, sitting up in a coffin and telling us that we’re about to see a film about the dead and the problems of everyday Americans. This is followed by one of Wood’s trademark stock footage montages. Cars crash. Teenagers fight. Drunken bums stare at the camera. It’s a scary world out there!

And it’s about to get scarier. The police have received reports that a deserted old mansion that was previously destroyed by lightning has been rebuilt! Lt. Dan Bradford (Duke Moore) is assigned to investigate the case with the help of cowardly Patrolman Kelton (Paul Marco). Bradford was called away from the opera so he wanders through the entire film in a tuxedo. Apparently, this case is so important that he couldn’t even change clothes before investigating.

Anyway, it turns out that the house has been rebuilt by Dr. Acula (Kenne Duncan), who wears a turban and claims that he can speak to the dead. Acula lives in the house with his silent and scarred assistant, Lobo (Tor Johnson). A typical Dr. Acula seance involves a floating trumpet playing off-key, several skeletons sitting at a table, and a mysterious woman in white. Acula says that the house is full of spirits but it turn out that Acula is juts a guy named Karl and that even the woman in white is just an actress that he hired. ACULA’S A FRUAD!

Well, fraud or not, it turns out that Acula is right about one thing. There are actual ghosts in the house and it turns out that they’re not happy about the house’s new inhabitant!

Night of the Ghouls (1960, dir by Ed Wood)

Night of the Ghouls was filmed in 1959 but it went largely unreleased, largely because Wood didn’t have the money to pay off the lab fees. The film was erroneously thought to be lost until 1984, seven years after Wood’s passing. That was when a fan named Wade Williams discovered that a copy of the film was still being held by the post-production house. Williams paid the overdue lab fees and the film was finally released.

Night of the Ghouls is a typical Ed Wood film, which is to say that it’s in black-and-white, it’s extremely low budget, and it’s a lot of fun even though it’s not very good. The film’s plot has a make-it-up-as-you-go feel to it and, with a running time of only 70 minutes, it’s over before you can get too bored. While the cast may be largely inept, they’re also rather enthusiastic and it’s hard not to enjoy watching them try their best to sell Wood’s uniquely overbaked dialogue. The film also features not one but two appearances from Ed Wood himself! Not only is his picture hanging on the wall of the police station but Wood himself appears as a female ghoul.

Finally, fans of Ed Wood will also be happy to know that Night of the Ghouls contains references to both Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 From Outer Space, establishing that the Ed Wood cinematic universe existed long before Marvel made their first movie.

Retro Television Review: Scream of the Wolf (dir by Dan Curtis)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1974’s Scream of the Wolf.  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

A small town in California is shocked when a series of brutal murders occur within the city limits.  Someone or something is killing people whenever the moon is full.  The only clue are the footprints that the killer leaves behind at every scene.  Strangely, there are time when the kill seems to walking on all fours, suggesting that it’s a wild animal.  But then, suddenly, there are only two footprints, indicating that the killer is a man.  Is the killer a beast or a human?

Maybe it’s both.

That’s the question that John Weatherby (Peter Graves) attempts to answer in Scream of the Wolf.  John is a former hunter who is now working on a book about his life.  He looks at the footprints and the savagery of the attacks and he says that the killer is obviously a wolf because no human could be capable of doing such a thing.  However, many people in town are convinced that the killer is a werewolf.  That includes John’s girlfriend, Sandy (Jo Ann Pflug).

In fact, Sandy thinks that she knows exactly who the werewolf is.  She thinks that Bryon Douglas (Clint Walker) is responsible for the murders.  Byron is an old friend of John’s.  They used to hunt together.  John eventually turned his back on hunting but Byron continues to insist that people are never more alive than when they are hunting another creature.  In fact, Byron claims that the murders are actually a good thing.  According to Byron, the murders have woken up the survival instinct in the spoiled inhabitants of the town.  And indeed, the citizens of the town do appear to be getting progressively more and more paranoid.

Okay, so Byron obviously has some issues.  But does that make him a werewolf?  John insists that there are no werewolves and that Byron is just a somewhat eccentric blowhard.  John better hope that he’s right because Byron has announced that he’s going to hunt down the werewolf and he’s invited John to join him on the hunt.

Running a brisk 78 minutes and not wasting a single one of them, Scream of the Wolf is an enjoyable and atmospheric werewolf film.  I don’t think I actually heard a wolf scream over the course of the film but I did hear plenty of people scream.  For a made for TV movie, Scream of the Wolf doesn’t shy away from showing the horror of being stalked by an unseen creature in the middle of the night.  Needless to say, any film featuring Peter Graves as a former big game hunter is going to have a bit of camp appeal but, in the end, Graves’s somewhat stolid acting style works well for the character that he is playing.  Clint Walker, who towers over everyone else in the film, gives an intimidating and creepy performance as Byron.  The film’s central mystery isn’t particularly complex but the story is told well.  Scream of the Wolf is a simple but entertaining film, one that’s ideal for October viewing.

Horror Scenes That I Love: Van Helsing and Dracula Meet in Dracula A.D. 1972


Even in the year 1972, Count Dracula (Christopher Lee) could not escape Prof. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing).  Of course, the Van Helsing here was a descendant of the Van Helsing who gave Dracula such a hard time in the 19th century but still, Dracula was not thrilled to see him.

This scene is from Hammer’s Dracula A.D. 1972.  It’s not generally considered to be one of the better Dracula films but I enjoy any chance to see Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee (who were the closest of friends off-screen) acting opposite each other.

International Horror Review: The City of the Dead (dir by John Llewellyn Moxey)


The City of the Dead, a 1960 British horror film that is also known as Horror Hotel, takes place in the town of Whitewood, Massachusetts.  (Though it takes place in America, this is a very British film, from the cast to the sensibility.)

Like most small New England towns (or, at the very least, the type of small New England towns that show up in movies like this), Whitewood has been around forever. And it apparently has quite a history, especially where witches and devil worshipers are concerned! In the 17th century, a witch was burned at the stake. Rumor has it that, before she died, she sold her soul to the devil. As long as she arranges for two virgin sacrifices a year, the spirit of the witch can torment Whitewood for as long as she likes.

Fortunately, a virgin has just arrived in town! Nan Barlow (Venetia Stevenson) is doing a term paper on the history of witchcraft and her very helpful professor, Alan Driscoll (played by the man himself, Christopher Lee), suggested that maybe Nan should visit town and stay at the Raven’s Inn.

As soon as Nan arrives, it becomes obvious to her that there’s something strange about Whitewood. All of the people are so strange and secretive and the streets always seem to be covered in fog. As Nan starts to do her research, she discovers that it will soon be time for the first annual sacrifice. The sacrifice is meant to happen at “The Hour of 13.” What does that mean? Why not go into the basement of the inn and search for some clues….

When Nan never returns from Whitewood, her brother, Dick (Denis Lotis), teams up with her fiance, Bill (Tom Naylor), and they head up to town to investigate. Once Dick arrives in town, he meets Whitewood’s only seemingly normal inhabitant, Pat (Bella St. John). Pat, who had previously befriended Nan and is the daughter of the local (and apparently quite ineffectual) reverend, agrees to help them in their search. Of course, Pat is also apparently the only virgin left in Massachusetts and the time for the second sacrifice is approaching….

Though set in America, The City of the Dead was produced in the UK and features British actors, all of whom do a fairly good job of sounding like natives of New England.  (Much like would happen later with the Italian zombie and cannibal films, this very British film was still made with the a focus on appealing to an American audience.) This deliberately paced film is a masterpiece of mood and menace. Director John Llewellyn Moxey emphasizes atmosphere over jump-scares and the black-and-white cinematography gives the entire film a gothic, dream-like feel. Though he’s not in the film as much as you might expect, Christopher Lee still makes the most of his scenes as Prof. Driscoll and the film’s fiery finale definitely makes an impression.

The City of the Dead is one of those films that, because it has fallen into the public domain, is very easy to find. (It seems to get included in every “50-DVD” box set released by Mill Creek.) It also plays frequently on TCM so keep an eye out for it!