An architect and his wife encounter bizarre occurrences as they survey a mansion built by an eccentric heiress.An architect and his wife encounter bizarre occurrences as they survey a mansion built by an eccentric heiress.An architect and his wife encounter bizarre occurrences as they survey a mansion built by an eccentric heiress.
Felix Locher
- Corpse
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRochester Castle, built by the "crazy" heiress Priscilla Rochester, is a clear reference to the Winchester House in San Jose, CA. Sarah Winchester was the main heir to the Winchester Repeating Arms fortune. She continuously built onto her house until her death, rumor had it to pacify the spirits of people killed by Winchester guns.
- GoofsWhen Ron Foster and Merry Anders set out on their journey to the House they are in a Chrysler, but arrive in a Plymouth. When they go to the estate agent to collect the keys the Chrysler is parked outside, but they return to the house in the Plymouth.
- Quotes
Scott Campbell: I'd feel better if we had a gun.
Joseph Schiller: Lawyers don't carry guns, their clients do.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Win Win (2011)
Featured review
Ron Foster ("Private Lessons") and Merry Anders ("Women of the Prehistoric Planet") play Scott and Nancy Campbell, a married couple hired by their friend, a lawyer named Joe Schiller (Richard Crane, "The Alligator People"), to do an architectural survey on a country estate. Soon after they arrive, they experience some strange, moderately disconcerting experiences. Knowing full well that the old crone (Georgia Schmidt) who owned the place (who's now confined to an institution) would have loathed police interference, they attempt to do their own sleuthing.
This fairly lightweight, routine "old dark house" type horror film ultimately doesn't deliver much in the way of actual horror. It's certainly well made, with some excellent black & white cinematography and camera work. (The Cinema Scope aspect ratio of 2.35:1 does help a lot.) The performances are all quite engaging and the script by Harry Spalding ("Chosen Survivors") features some mildly amusing lines. The "castle" itself is an appropriate setting, adding to the atmosphere that producer & director Maury Dexter ("The Mini-Skirt Mob", "Hell's Belles") is able to create.
Foster and Anders make for a personable main couple, with fine support from Crane, Erika Peters ("The Atomic Brain", "Mr. Sardonicus") and the prolific Dal McKennon ('Daniel Boone', "Lady and the Tramp"). A very young Richard Kiel ("Eegah", "The Spy Who Loved Me") makes an appearance as a mute giant.
"House of the Damned" is watchable enough, but it never does live up to that title.
Six out of 10.
This fairly lightweight, routine "old dark house" type horror film ultimately doesn't deliver much in the way of actual horror. It's certainly well made, with some excellent black & white cinematography and camera work. (The Cinema Scope aspect ratio of 2.35:1 does help a lot.) The performances are all quite engaging and the script by Harry Spalding ("Chosen Survivors") features some mildly amusing lines. The "castle" itself is an appropriate setting, adding to the atmosphere that producer & director Maury Dexter ("The Mini-Skirt Mob", "Hell's Belles") is able to create.
Foster and Anders make for a personable main couple, with fine support from Crane, Erika Peters ("The Atomic Brain", "Mr. Sardonicus") and the prolific Dal McKennon ('Daniel Boone', "Lady and the Tramp"). A very young Richard Kiel ("Eegah", "The Spy Who Loved Me") makes an appearance as a mute giant.
"House of the Damned" is watchable enough, but it never does live up to that title.
Six out of 10.
- Hey_Sweden
- Oct 25, 2016
- Permalink
- How long is House of the Damned?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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