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Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine

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Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine is a 1965 American International Pictures (AIP) comedy film directed by Norman Taurog and starring Vincent PriceFrankie AvalonDwayne HickmanSusan Hart (The Slime People) and Jack Mullaney and featuring Fred Clark (Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb). It is a parody of the then-popular spy film trend, particularly the 1964 James Bond hit Goldfinger, utilizing actors from AIP’s beach party and Edgar Allan Poe films.

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There is a dungeon scene, complete with The Pit and Pendulum from Roger Corman’s 1961 movie, allowing Price to ham up his previous horror roles and the mad doctor’s assistant is named Igor.

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Despite its low production values, the film has achieved a certain cult status for the appearance of Price and other AIP Beach Party film alumni, its in-jokes and unabashed sexism, the claymation title sequence designed by Art Clokey, and a title song performed by The Supremes (which name drops Frankenstein’s Monster and Mr. Hyde). Vincent Price returned for the 1966 sequel, Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs, directed by iconic Italian horror maestro Mario Bava.

Plot:

Price plays the titular mad scientist who, with the questionable assistance of his resurrected flunky Mullaney, builds a gang of attractive female robots clad in shiny gold bikinis. The sexbots are then dispatched to seduce and rob wealthy men. (Goldfoot’s name reflects his and his robots’ choice in footwear.) Avalon and Hickman play the bumbling heroes who attempt to thwart Goldfoot’s scheme. The film’s climax is an extended chase through the streets of San Francisco.

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Wikipedia | IMDb



Brides of Blood

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Brides of Blood is a 1968 Filipino horror film directed by Eddie Romero and Gerardo de Leon, based on a screenplay by Cesar Amigo. It stars John Ashley (Frankenstein’s Daughter, The Eye Creatures), Kent Taylor (The Crawling Hand, The Mighty Gorga, Blood of Ghastly Horror), Beverly Powers [as Beverly Hills] (The Comedy of Terrors, Invasion of the Bee Girls, Jaws), Eva Darren (Vampira, 1994), Mario Montenegro, Oscar Kesse. 

It was the first movie actor John Ashley made in the Philippines, he soon returned for Mad Doctor of Blood Island, Beast of the Yellow NightBlood Devils, The Twilight People and others.

Plot:

Dr. Paul Henderson is a scientist who travels to a tropical island (known to locals as “Blood Island”) to investigate the possibility of radiation due to the testing of atomic bombs in the area. Accompanying him is his beautiful wife, Carla, who seems to suffer from an extreme case of sexual frustration. Jim Farrell, a Peace Corps representative is also traveling to the island to help the natives build facilities to better their lives.

The trio come upon a native funeral procession. They realize in horror that the two bodies being carried for burial at sea are completely dismembered; an arm falls out, causing Carla to scream in terror. After the ceremony, the Americans are greeted by Arcadio, the tribe’s elder, and his granddaughter Alma. Arcadio welcomes them to the island, but both he and Alma seem terrified of something, and he openly admits that he wishes he would have warned them to stay away before the boat left.

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Paul goes looking for specimens and is joined by Carla. Both of them notice a bizarre manifestation when the sun appears to set hours before it should do so. The darkening island becomes ominous, a feeling furthered when Paul discovers the carcass of an oversized crab. Then Jim notices a strange plant near the village…

Reviews:

“The whole film is very colorfully shot, with lots of bold lighting choices, such as blue and pink smoke for the sacrifice scenes. It also features some very good sets and props, as well as more gore and nudity than most horrors of its day. In short; it’s an awful movie that looks pretty good and thanks to the busy plot, exploitation elements and overall air of silliness, I can almost guarantee schlock fans are gonna enjoy this one.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

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Brides of Blood does have the occasional gripping and effective moment, including a couple of chase scenes through the man-eating jungle which combine surprisingly good day-for-night cinematography with some really ingenious matte effects, but mostly it’s just extremely silly. Some of the blame belongs to John Ashley. His boyish, matinee-idol looks seem woefully out of place, his acting is as miserable as it was when he was working for Larry Buchanan, and in general, the movie would have been much better off without him. A lot more of it has to do with the utterly ludicrous pseudo-science that threatens to gobble up every line of dialogue…” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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“With an outrageous silly/scary creature running around and making unearthly noises, Brides of Blood is a fun monster romp that’s reminiscent of a 50s B picture. There’s a lot of eerie nighttime photography, and some pre-ratings systems blood and nudity. Giant fleshy tree vines grabbing small children and clutch various extremities is pretty effective, as is the appeal of the feisty Hills, who aside from her luscious looks is not a bad actress either. George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

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” … it does offer mild amusement for those who like their horrors cheesy and silly; everyone else may find it a test of the patience.” Graeme Clark, The Spinning Image

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Wikipedia | IMDb | We are indebted to Wrong Side of the Art! for poster images

 

 


What a Carve Up

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What a Carve Up (publicity title: What a Carve Up!) is a 1961 British comedy horror film produced by Robert S. Baker and Monty Berman (Blood of the Vampire, Jack the Ripper, The Flesh and the Fiends) and directed by Pat Jackson. The film was loosely based on the novel The Ghoul by Frank King.

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The film was used extensively within Jonathan Coe‘s satirical 1994 novel What a Carve Up!. The book’s protagonist, Michael Owen, becomes obsessed with the film after first watching it as a young boy. Additionally, the last part of the book follows the plot of the film.

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Plot:

The relatives of Uncle Gabriel are summoned to an old country house on the Yorkshire Moors to hear the reading of his will. They all stay in the mansion overnight, and one by one the guests are murdered. The remaining guests must solve the mystery as to who is committing these murders before they too are killed…

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Buy on DVD from Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“At one point in No Place Like Homicide, a giggling maniac threatens to feed the rest of the cast to a pack of starving mongrels. ‘Oh, blimey’, smirks one of the victims, ‘we’re going to the dogs’. The rest of the humor in this ostensible British farce is on a similar level. The fact that a film of this degree of vulgarity and ineptitude should have managed a week’s booking at neighborhood theatres throughout Manhattan demonstrates just how acute the motion picture product shortage really is.” The New York Times, 13 September 1962.

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“Fluff and nonsense, of course, but competently acted and directed. With appeal for fans of Carry On Screaming! (and Jonathan Coe’s 1994 novel What a Carve Up!).” Time Out

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” … it’s amusing nonsense with more than a few nice touches — amidst a lot of very broad humor that will doubtless be a matter of taste. You wouldn’t want a steady diet of this sort of thing, but it’s fun on occasion.” Ken Hanke, Mountain Xpress

“The sequence with James and Connor in bed together (quite innocently) is very funny and makes one realise how much times have changed. A supporting cast of familiar faces, including a pre-Goldfinger Shirley Eaton, also make this worth a look. British pop singer Adam Faith makes a cameo appearance as Eaton’s boyfriend.” Gary A. Smith, Uneasy Dreams: The Golden Age of British Horror Films, 1956 – 1976 (McFarland, 2000)

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Buy Uneasy Dreams: The Golden Age of British Horror Films, 1956 – 1976 book from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

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Wikipedia | IMDb | We are most grateful to Island of Terror for some images above

 

 


Do-It-Yourself Vampire Kit (novelty)

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Do-It-Yourself Vampire Kit was a novelty sold from the advert pages of American comics in the 1960s by Victor Specialties of Connecticut. For just one dollar eager ghoulish kids could “Become a vampire … and join the ranks of the undead”. The contents of the bargain kit speak for themselves!

 


The Psychopath

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The Psychopath (working title: Schizo) is a 1965 (released 1966) British horror film directed by Freddie Francis and written by Robert Bloch (Psycho) for Amicus. It stars Patrick Wymark (Repulsion; The SkullThe Blood on Satan’s Claw), Margaret JohnstonJohn Standing (Torture Garden), Alexander Knox (The Damned), Judy Huxtable (Scream and Scream Again; Die Screaming Marianne), Thorley Walters (Dracula: Prince of Darkness; Twisted Nerve; Vampire Circus), Robert Crewdson (The Night Caller), Colin Gordon, Tim Barrett, Frank Forsyth, Olive Gregg, Harold Lang, Gina Gianelli (The Deadly Bees), Peter Diamond.

This murder mystery contains elements of Edgar Wallace and is, in effect, an American scripted and produced British giallo, made just a year after Mario Bava’s seminal Blood and Black Lace. The distinctive score is by Elisabeth Lutyens (Paranoiac; The Earth Dies Screaming; The Skull).

Plot synopsis:

A cynical police inspector (Wymark) investigates a string of murders where the victims have dolls attached to their bodies. The trail soon leads to one Mrs. Von Sturm (Johnston), who knows a set of dark secrets that may hold the key to the murders…

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Reviews:

“It is pretty obvious from the beginning who the psycho is, because she plays with dolls, and shuts out the world, though the movie has a rather simple twist that fends us off from solving the mystery until the end. But if you read the tea leaves of the art direction, however, it is clear from the very first moment when the inspector comes to the house of Von Sturm, that there is a problem. When he knocks on the door, it has a large Most Dangerous Game knocker on it, a sign that the head of the house is a manipulative killer…” rmarts

The Psychopath isn’t the best film from neither Francis or Bloch, but if you tend to enjoy moderately twisted sixties thrillers or just yet another production from Amicus, this might be something for you.” Ninja Dixon

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” … while it’s tempting to lump The Psychopath in with the suspense films being released throughout the 1960s in England, like those from Hammer … it’s difficult to deny that the film’s macabre, sensational palette stands out in garish contrast. Again the word to drum up is “pulpy”: The Psychopath feels vivid and hastily sketched in a way that the Italian gialli of the ’60s-’70s always do and that the polished British psychological thrillers never do. In many ways, I see The Psychopath anticipating in 1966 the tonal and stylistic path along which the giallo would develop in a few brief years when filmmakers like Lenzi, Argento, and Martino began solidifying the formula.” Nessun Timore

Choice dialogue:

Mrs. Von Sturm: “Years can be cruel… but not as cruel as men!”

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Wikipedia | IMDb

We are most grateful to Zombos’ Closet for posting the press book online (reproduced above). Visit Zombos’ site and enjoy other visual delights

 

 


Crescendo

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Crescendo is a 1969 (released 1970) British psychological thriller directed by Alan Gibson (Goodbye GeminiDracula A.D. 1972) from a screenplay by Alfred Shaughnessy (The Flesh and Blood Show) and Jimmy Sangster for Hammer Film Productions. It stars Stefanie Powers (Sweet, Sweet RachelThe Astral Factor)James Olson, Margaretta Scott. Jane Lapotaire, Joss Ackland, Kirsten Lindholm.

Alfred Shaughnessy wrote the script in the mid-60s. In 1966 Michael Reeves (The Sorcerers, Witchfinder General) approached Hammer with the script. James Carreras tried to make it for two years with Joan Crawford but could not get the finance. In 1969 the project was reactivated, with Jimmy Sangster hired to rewrite the script and Alan Gibson to direct. 

Plot teaser:

Drawn to the spectacular south of France to research the late composer Henry Ryman, music student Susan Roberts (Stefanie Powers) encounters his son, drug-addicted Georges (James Olson) and his eccentric family. Investigating the haunting strains of an unfinished Ryman concerto leads Susan to discover an empty piano… and a brutally savaged mannequin! Georges tells her she’s the lookalike of his lost love. But Susan may not be the only one at the villa with an eerie doppelgänger

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Buy Crescendo on Warner Archive DVD from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

Reviews:

Crescendo is one of Hammer’s most forgotten efforts. As a film, it’s weak in that the story takes quite a while to grab significant attention, and its events are stagy, even though Scott MacGregor’s château set design is impressive (only some brief second unit stuff was actually shot in France). While the story tends to borrow a bit from some of Hammer’s earlier Psycho-inspired thrillers, it does pick up quite a bit somewhere before the climax, with the usual twists and turns and several murders tossed in along the way.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“Alan Gibson, who would go on to helm Hammer‘s modern-day Dracula films, over-directs with too many shots of people and objects placed in distinct foreground and background to compose a clever picture. The set pieces, however – albeit too few – are very effective indeed, and all the performances are understated when they could so easily have gone over-the-top. Viewed today, it could be a very good episode of the much later Hammer House of Horror. Should it ever turn up on satellite TV, it comes highly recommended.” David Hanks, The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Film and Television

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” … despite some genuine location filming in France, this has an artificial,  largely stage-bound feel with the setting restricted almost completely to the main house and the area around the pool Not a patch on Taste of Fear then but with some decent performances, a nice musical score, and taut direction, this is a fairly enjoyable suspenser that delivers some nice twists  and deserves at least one viewing.” Tipping My Fedora

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Buy Hammer Films’ Psychological Thrillers 1950 -1972 by David Huckvale from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

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Buy The Shrieking Sixtes: British Horror Films 1960 – 1969 book from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Choice dialogue:

Susan Roberts: “There’s more to life than just existing.”

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Wikipedia | IMDb | EOFFTV

 

 


Elisabeth Lutyens (composer)

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(Agnes) Elisabeth Lutyens (9 July 1906 – 14 April 1983) was an English composer of classical music but is best known for her contribution for scores to horror films throughout the 1960′s.

Born in London, one of five children of the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens and his wife Emily, Elisabeth studied composition at the École Normale de Musique de Paris, before accompanying her mother to India in 1923. On her return she studied with John Foulds and subsequently continued her musical education from 1926 to 1930 at the Royal College of Music in London as a pupil of Harold Darke. 

Lutyens is credited with bringing the Schoenbergian serial technique to the world of film scores, not always employing or limiting herself to 12-note series; some works use a self-created 14-note progression. Schoenberg’s exploration of tonal and atonal music was a huge influence on Hammer’s early sound, the gloomy expressionism first evident in Benjamin Frankel’s 1960 score for The Curse of the Werewolf (1960) though it was Luytens who is credited with fully exploiting these avenues. Her rejection of the traditional lush, romantic scores often used in film, lead to her being viewed as ‘difficult’ and sometimes even ‘un-British’.

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Perhaps it goes without saying that Lutyen’s ability to break into territory inhabited almost solely by men is little less than remarkable, paving the way for future female composers such as Nora Orlandi and Wendy Carlos (born Walter, of course). Lutyens was no shrinking violet though – striding through upper class London society amongst such company as Constant Lambert, Francis Bacon and Dylan Thomas (for a time, her lodger) but posturing as a radical left-winger, even joining the Communist Party, all the while living in something approaching squalor – a real paradox. This, combined with her often outrageous anti-Semitic outbursts and homophobic ranting (I may have forgotten to mention her alcoholism) did not make her an ideal dinner guest.

 

Lutyens once said, “film and radio music must be written not only quickly but with the presumption that it will be only heard once. Its impact must be immediate. One does not grow gradually to love or understand a film score like a string quartet”. She was the first female British composer to score a feature film, her first foray into the genre being Penny and the Pownall Case (1948) but her work on horror films, undertaken for financial reasons, are where she made her mark. Her work in the genre began in 1960 with Cyril Frankel’s Never Take Sweets From a Stranger for Hammer, an alarming film even now. Her distinctly anti-romantic treatment is wistful but still angular, leading you down, disturbingly apt strange paths.

This was followed in 1963 by a score for Freddie Francis and Jimmy Sangster’s Paranoiac, a marvellous work of grating textures – it sounds like a gnashing beast having a conversation with itself under the film. Lutyen’s score is mixed with diegetic music during some of the murder scenes, seagulls and running water mashing with her grim tones.

The following year saw her working on The Earth Dies Screaming but perhaps her most famous work was to appear in 1965 in Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors, the well-regarded anthology for Amicus. The rather scattershot approach of instruments combating each other in random blasts is typical or her minimalist though very purposeful manner of phrasing. It’s almost rioutously unjoyous, about the most depressing, upsetting and jarring thing you could marry to images on a screen – of course, it works perfectly. It should be noted that the Roy Castle jazz section of ‘Voodoo’ is the work of the musician Tubby Hayes, not Lutyens.

Continuing her work for Amicus came her own particular favourite score, for 1965′s The Skull. Employing harsh, irregular percussion, it is one of the elements which differentiates Amicus from Hammer, despite the obvious similarities of theme and often cast. As if being one of the lone females composing for film, it says much about her deep-felt belief in the power of the structure of her works that she was confident enough to submit this for what essentially was a major work for the studio. Whereas Italian composers at a similar period were also willing to be challenging in their composition, this tended to veer far nearer to jazz than obtusely challenging avant garde classical music.

As time progressed her work became no less-challenging - The Psychopath and The Terrornauts were tonally slightly more fun but still deliberately exactly the opposite to any other British composer for film at the time. She concluded her forays into the world of horror in typically unexpected directions – 1967′s somewhat obscure Theatre of Death, the evocative of the era educational short, Never Go With Strangers and finally the as raunchy and absurd as it sounds Dutch effort, My Nights With Susan, Sandra, Olga and Julie.

Her mark on the world of composition for horror film cannot be overstated – her complex, though often sparse pieces are hugely atmospheric and challenging yet give every film they appear alongside that extra something that would be sorely missed in their absence.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Witches’ Tales (comic magazine)

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Witches’ Tales - not to be confused with the 1950s comics of the same name – was a black-and-white horror-anthology comics magazines published by Eerie Publications, a New York-based company run by comic-book artist and 1970s magazine entrepreneur Myron Fass, between July 1969 and February 1975. New material was mixed with reprints from 1950s pre-Comics Code horror comics. Writer and artist credits seldom appeared, but included Marvel Comics penciler/inkers Dick Ayers and Chic Stone, as well as Fass himself, with brother Irving Fass and Ezra Jackson serving as art directors.

As with other Eerie Publications, such as WeirdHorror TalesTerror TalesTales from the Tomb and Tales of Voodoo, Witches’ Tales featured grisly, lurid colour covers.

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Buy The Horror! The Horror! Comic Books the Government Didn’t Want You to Read! book from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

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Buy Witches’ Tales Volume 1 book from Amazon.com

We are eternally indebted to Monster Brains for posting these ghoulish cover images.



Barnabas Vampire Van (model kit)

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Barnabas Vampire Van was a scale kit model of a hot rod hearse originally issued in 1969 by MPC to tie-in with the hit Dark Shadows ABC TV show. The kit has since been reissued and is available from Amazon.com

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Oozing with enough parts to make any vampire sit up and take notice!
Blown werewolf engine, screaming hollow slicks, gravedigger shovel handle shifter, crushing wide ovals, eerie casket top rails, frightening lantern head lights, haunting lantern tail lights, death-like Barnabas figure, bloody globe side lamps, plated casket hand rails, mausoleum-styled hearse body, inviting opening rear doors, ghost-like grill work running boards and rear step, ugly trailer hitch, tomb-like trailer, sinister plated wheels.
It’s got curtained windows, side torch lights, an ornate roof rack and a coffin styled engine compartment, complete with chrome handles.
Being pulled behind is a creepy coffin trailer only a vampire could love!
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The Horror of It All

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The Horror of It All is a 1964 British comedy horror film executive produced by Robert L. Lippert (WitchcraftThe Earth Dies Screaming; The Curse of the Fly) and directed by Terence Fisher from a screenplay by Ray Russell. It stars American pop singer Pat BooneErica Rogers, Dennis PriceAndree Melly (The Brides of Dracula)Valentine Dyall, Jack Bligh (Night of the Big Heat), Archie Duncan (X: The Unknown), Erik Chitty (Lust for a Vampire; The Vault of Horror), Oswald Laurence.

In the USA, the film was released on a double-bill with another Lippert production, Witchcraft.

Review:

“At its best, The Horror of It All has an akilter kinkiness; mostly it is just silly freneticism. The film climaxes with a ridiculously contrived double twist ending. Pat Boone sings the title song in the middle of the film. The Horror of It All is usually an embarrassing black mark that is quickly passed over by those who raised Terence Fisher to cult status in the 1970s.” Moria

” … an ‘old dark house’ sort of horror/comedy that fails, in the main, because the comedy is lightweight at best and struggles to find a humorous pace (Uncle Percival (Jack Bligh) aside.” Taliesin Meets the Vampires

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Choice dialogue:

“Natalie drinks very little… except at night!”

Plot keywords:

60s horror | British film | comedy horror | London | marriage | old dark house | storm | coffin | sudden death | spider | tarantula | romance | Shakespeare | gin and tonic | inventions | Shepperton Studios | Playboy | wax dummy | Grand Guignol | tannis leaf

Wikipedia | IMDb

 


Tom Chantrell (illustrator and poster artist)

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Tom Chantrell (born Thomas William Chantrell in Manchester on December 20, 1916 – July 15, 2001) was a British illustrator and film poster artist.

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The son of a trapeze artist, Chantrell was the youngest of nine children. He left Manchester Art College and went into advertising, eventually starting in 1933 at Allardyce Palmer who had accounts with Warner Brothers and 20th Century Fox. In 1938 he designed his first film poster The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse. He eventually designed over 7,000 film posters.

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Chantrell did not see the films he drew for; he would receive a plot line and a handful of stills and use friends and family for poses. Examples of this were taking photographs of himself trying to look like a vampire for Dracula Has Risen from the Grave. Chantrell’s posters were often produced prior to the film being made in order to raise money from investors.

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Chantrell designed many posters for Hammer Films and the Carry On films. In the 1960s Chantrell was often drawing artwork for 5 different films or double bills at one time. With the move away from illustrated artwork for movies in the 1980s, Chantrell designed covers for videos.

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Among the more famous films he designed the artwork for were The King and IVon Ryan’s ExpressOne Million Years B.C.The Anniversary and Star Wars.

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Wikipedia | Official site | The Guardian obituary

All images are copyright Tom Chantrell and are reproduced here in the spirit of publicity for his Official site


Love Goddesses of Blood Island

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‘Was it a dream or reality… for one man on an island of terror?’

Love Goddesses of Blood Island (also known as Six She’s and a He and Kiss Me Bloody is a 1963 cheesecake gore horror film executive produced and directed by Richard S. Flink [as Gordon H. Heaver]. Flink’s only other known credit is as the producer of half-man, half-jellyfish monster movie Sting of Death (1965). The film was scripted by William Kerwin (actor in Blood Feast; Playgirl Killer; Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things and co-writer of Sting of Death). It stars Launa Hodges, Bill Rogers (A Taste of Blood; Flesh Feast), Carol Wintress, Dawn Meredith, Liz Burton, Laura Wood, Ingrid Albert.

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Something Weird Video chanced upon a 28 minute, condensed version of Love Goddesses of Blood Island when they acquired the rights to William Grefe’s Sting Of Death. They released this as a supplement on their Sting of Death/Death Curse of Tartu DVD in 2002. They have since managed to compile a 47 minute version which is available on DVD-R. 

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Something Weird Plot Synopsis:

“Mister Rogers’ new neighborhood is rather odd: six crazy ladies, dressed in Roman-like togas with names like Aphrodite, Pandora, Valkarie, and… uh, Rebecca, are the only inhabitants of the island where previous male guests have been reduced to severed heads on poles. Fred is promptly taken to their “palace” (little more than a glorified swimming pool), forced to do hard labor during the day, and sexually satisfy them at night.

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The girls also like to strip to bikinis and dance around as a lounge singer belts out the title tune on the soundtrack: “Loooooooooove goddess! When our hearts meet the way they do, I’m helpless and breathless with passion! I must have your love though the danger’s there, for when I’m in your arms I no longer care!”

Exploitation highlight: Miss Rebecca zealously kills a screaming Nazi soldier in flashback by stabbing him in the stomach and removing his guts, before cutting out his heart and severing his head with her bare hands. What a gal.

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Nearing the same fate, Fred is eventually tied to a pole and jabbed bloody by spears: “The girls were wild with an ungodly kind of exaltation. Every scream and groan that issued from my mouth seemed to excite them more!” While they’re in a trance, he rather casually escapes with a blonde named Desiree (Dawn Meredith) who bashes Aphrodite’s head with a bloody sponge before Fred spears Rebecca, forcing her to fall face first onto her machete….”

Love Goddesses is a tiny treasure of unknown, sun-baked trash. It’s a quick blast of buoyant scenery, hidden sex, z-rate Exotica, tongue in cheek nonsense, and stop-ya-in-yer-tracks gore. It’s also a surreal refuge from every day stresses, an island artifact of nickel and dime proportions that aims to shock, humor, and constantly baffle.” Joseph A. Ziemba, Bleeding Skull!

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“Hey, bikini-clad glamazons, godawful lounge music, lumpy choreography, and gore. What’s not to love?” Frank Henenlotter, Something Weird Video

“There’s no way around it: you simply must see this film. Yes, it’s terrible, nonsensical and mostly tedious, but it’s also completely and utterly insane. From the loony clarinet-driven space-age bachelor-pad ditties blaring away on the soundtrack, to the seriously awkward bikini dances and the actually-sorta-shocking lashes of proto-splatter, at times Love Goddesses seems like it was somehow beamed in from another planet or an alternate dimension, or something.” MAGpedia

six shes and a he aka love goddesses of blood island

kiss me bloody aka love goddesses of blood island

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blood feast + 2000 maniacs + kiss me bloody + color me blood red

IMDb | We are very grateful to Temple of Schlock for unearthing info on the film’s Kiss Me Bloody alternate title and the ad mats above.

 


Monster I-Scream Spoons (toys and novelties)

The Devil’s Hand

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‘This is the hand of terror!’

The Devil’s Hand is a 1959 (released 1961) American film directed by William J. Hole Jr. (Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow; U.S. footage for Face of Terror) from a screenplay by Jo Heims (Play Misty for Me; You’ll Like My Mother). It was produced by Rex Carlton (The Brain That Wouldn’t Die; Nightmare in Wax; Blood of Dracula’s Castle). The film stars Linda Christian, Robert Alda, Ariadne Welter (The Vampire; The Vampire’s Coffin; The Brainiac), Neil Hamilton, Jeanne Carmen (The Monster of Piedras Blancas; The Naked Monster), Bruno VeSota (The Undead; A Bucket of Blood; Attack of the Giant Leeches).

The film features a delightfully cheesy surf guitar-saxophone-piano theme by Baker Knight. In the U.S., the film was distributed by Crown International Pictures.

Plot teaser:

Rick Turner is engaged to Donna Trent but is having nightmares involving a beautiful blonde woman who appears to be dancing in the sky. One night, he is mysteriously driven to enter a doll shop, and in the next morning he returns to the place with Donna. He finds a doll that resembles his fiancé, but the owner Francis Lamont delivers another doll to him, with the face of the woman of his dreams, Bianca Milan. Rick looks for Bianca and is seduced and convinced by her to join a sect that worships the diabolic “Devil-god of Evil” Gamba, while the health of Donna is threatened by Francis and Bianca. Francis Lamont, the “High Executioner” of the sect, threatens various members of the cult via his voodoo powers, which are also used upon a journalist who infiltrates the sect…

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Reviews:

The Devil’s Hand is talky and has extremely cheap-looking sets but the cast is pretty good (particularly Hamilton and the luscious Christian) and the plot is well-paced and engaging enough to maintain interest.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

“Jo Heims (who would later pen the Clint Eastwood vehicles Play Misty for Me and Dirty Harry) laced the film with some unexpected turns and neat surprises (who’s that cult member with the hidden camera?), and supplied a wrap-up that was quite fiery and frenetic, and which seemed to leave things open for a sequel. Give this a try on a slow night…you may be surprised.” Cinema Monolith

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” … hilariously loopy in an endearing innocent kind of way, but with more than a touch of sleaze to the whole thing. There’s a ton of implied sex, which is kind of surprising for the time … The whole movie is pretty much about a dude cheating on his fiancee, who’s in the hospital for most of the running time with a voodoo induced chest injury. I won’t even get into the misogyny that lurks behind of all this either.” The Dollar Horror Blog

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Buy The Devil’s Hand as part of the Gorehouse Greats 12 film DVD Collection from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Some images thanks to Collector’s WeeklyThe Bloody Pit of Horror

 

 


Diary of a Madman

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‘The most diabolical pages ever written become the most terrifying motion picture ever created!’

Diary of a Madman is a 1963 horror film directed by Reginald Le Borg (The Mummy’s Ghost; Weird Woman; The Black Sleep). It stars Vincent PriceNancy Kovack, and Chris Warfield.

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The screenplay, written by producer Robert Kent, is an adaptation of Guy de Maupassant‘s short story “Le Horla” (“The Horla“), written in 1887. Kent’s rendition is notably divergent from the source material, especially in relation to the religious and moral themes of the film, which contradict not only those of the short story, but Maupassant’s as well.

Plot teaser:

Following the funeral of Simon Cordier (Price), a French magistrate and amateur sculptor, his secret diary is read out by Simon’s pastor friend to a group of people gathered around the table, Simon’s servants, and a police captain. The diary transpires that Simon has come into contact with a malevolent entity. The invisible yet corporeal being, called a horla is capable of limited psychokinesis and complete mind control.

Cordier first interacts with the horla when he meets a prisoner whom the horla drove to commit murder. The horla possesses the inmate and attempts to kill Cordier, who in self-defense accidentally kills the man. The magistrate inherits the prisoner’s troubles as the horla and turns its hauntings toward him…

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Reviews:

“Although Diary isn’t considered one of actor’s better 1960s efforts, it’s a tour-de-force performance, with Price given a lot of screen time, a well-developed character and the chance to play good and evil at the same time. Price is given some tender moments, which include a scene where, possessed, he crushes his beloved pet canary, only to come out of his spell to find the poor thing dead. When he’s in possession mode, he’s his usual menacing self, with the evil presence of the Horla represented as a nuclear-green visor-like aura which hovers in front of his eyes.” DVD Drive-In

“The horror elements are very cool but the scenes with supporting cast drag lifelessly. The melodrama between Kovack and Warfield is worthy of the sewer but not the big screen and everyone except for Price (and Harvey Stephens) seems bent on delivering below the watermark. Luckily, Maupassant’s storyline rises above the poor execution to capture the viewer’s attention and hold it through the final act.” Doomed Moviethon

Diary of a Madman’s most serious shortcoming is that it manages to seem extremely preachy without having any particular sermon in mind to preach. Moments like the scene in which Cordier attempts to kill Jeanne, but is snapped out of his trance by the sight of a cross reflected in the blade of his knife, or like any of the outwardly purposeless arguments between Cordier and Captain Rennedon over the value of criminal psychology, make it seem pretty clear that either writer Robert E. Kent or director Reginald Le Borg had some kind of axe to grind, but it’s hard to imagine what that might be.” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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Choice dialogue:

“Death is a truth, magistrate. Prove it!”

“Oh, love. A man says the word so easily.”

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Cast and characters:

  • Vincent Price as Simon Cordier
  • Nancy Kovack as Odette Mallotte DuClasse
  • Chris Warfield as Paul DuClasse
  • Elaine Devry as Jeanne D’Arville
  • Ian Wolfe as Pierre, Cordier’s Butler
  • Stephen Roberts as Captain Robert Rennedon
  • Lewis Martin as Fr. Raymonde
  • Mary Adams as Louise, Cordier’s Cook
  • Joseph Ruskin as The Horla (voice)

Wikipedia | IMDb



The Dead One (aka Blood of the Zombie)

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‘See the horrors of a voodoo curse!’

The Dead One, also known as Blood of the Zombie, is a 1961 independent American horror film written, directed and co-produced by ‘nudie cutie’ specialist Barry Mahon (The Beast That Killed Women; The Sex Killer; Fanny Hill Meets Dr. Erotico). It stars John McKay, Linda Ormond, Monica Davis, Clyde Kelly, Darlene Myrick, Lacey Kelly, Paula Maurice.

Plot teaser:

New Orleans, Louisiana: A young woman’s cousin has recently been married and being the sole surviving male, sets to claim the family’s plantation. Unwilling to give up what she believes to be hers, she uses voodoo to resurrect her dead brother (referred to as “The Dead One“) to kill her enemies…

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Reviews:

“For 68 minutes, Blood presents a living, breathing time capsule of New Orleans circa 1961, capped off with an Alice-Cooper-on-valium zombie in a dinner tux. We get extended nightclub jazz performances, even longer burlesque dance routines, nifty over-acting, and colorful locales that you can reach out and hug. Since this is an early Barry Mahon work, the typical “point and shoot from ten feet away” method of anti-kinetic filmmaking is in full effect.” Bleeding Skull

“Even though there is only one zombie throughout the film, and he doesn’t even do anything particularly interesting or memorable, he still looks kick ass. The zombie in Blood of the Zombie is a precursor of the Romero rotting corpses. He is a voodoo zombie, under the command of a voodoo spell, but he visually looks a lot like the putrefied fleshy zombies of the Romero era, complete with burial tuxedo.” Analog Medium

blood of the zombie dvd

 

Buy Blood of the Zombie + Voodoo Swamp on Shriek Show DVD from Amazon.com

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“If you’re a mainstream film fan who enjoys Hollywood movies that have competent acting and a story, then this movie gets 0 stars out of 5. You will hate every second of it. If you’re the kind of person who seeks out schlocky old low-budget horror films, then this movie gets 4 out of 5. It’s not the bottom of the barrel (that’s coming next), but it’s pretty bad. The bare-bones production values and the use of real New Orleans entertainers give the movie a certain charm and you’ll love the voodoo ritual.” DVD Talk

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the dead one british dvd

Buy The Dead One on DVD from Amazon.co.uk

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Trailer on Daily Motion | Images thanks: Wrong Side of the Art | Zombo’s Closet

 


Le Macabre Coffee House (location)

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Le Macabre was a coffee house on Meard Street in London’s Soho area in the 1960s. Coffee houses had been popular places for Britain’s youth to hang out in since the mid-fifties but Le Macabre had the distinction of being the only horror-themed cafe. Located just off Wardour Street – home to the Hammer house of horrors – was a bonus too. It had coffins as tables and bakelite skulls for ashtrays, plus a ghoulish jukebox selection of deathly records. Regulars included legendary local characters such as Iron Foot Jack, who had a genuine iron foot…

George Skeggs, cousin of Hammer’s Roy Skeggs, recalls the 60s Soho scene on this blog

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Fred West (serial killer)

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Frederick Walter Stephen West (29 September 1941 – 1 January 1995) was a serial killer in England. Between 1967 and 1987, West – alone and later with his second wife, serial killer Rosemary West – tortured and raped numerous young women and girls, murdering at least eleven of them, including their own children. The crimes often occurred in the couple’s homes in the city of Gloucester, at 25 Midland Road and later 25 Cromwell Street, with many bodies buried at or near these homes.

Fred killed at least two people before collaborating with Rose, while Rose murdered Fred’s stepdaughter (his first wife’s biological daughter) when he was in prison for theft. The majority of the murders occurred between May 1973 and August 1979, in their home at 25 Cromwell Street.

The pair were finally apprehended and charged in 1994. Fred West committed suicide before going to trial, while Rose West was jailed for life, in November 1995, after having been found guilty on 10 counts of murder. Their house at Cromwell Street was demolished in 1996 and the space converted into a landscaped footpath, connecting Cromwell Street to St. Michael’s Square…

Wikipedia


House of Mystery (1961)

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House of Mystery is a 1961 British film, directed by Vernon Sewell. It is a classic ‘quota quickie’ – made to fulfill the British film quota imposed on cinemas. This rule ensured that a number of ‘full supporting features’ were cranked out to play alongside more popular American films, and while this system eventually degenerated into the release of tedious travelogues and plodding information films, for a while, it ensured that some interesting – and now, unfortunately, all too rarely seen – productions were made.

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House of Mystery is one such film. It opens with pair of newlyweds arriving at country cottage that is for sale, where they meet a mysterious woman whom they assume to be a housekeeper (even though the house clearly hasn’t been occupied or cleaned in many years). The woman shows them around and then mentions a ghost as one possible reason why the house is unsold despite being ridiculously cheap. She then tells stories about the former occupants, which are effectively a collection of tales interwoven into one. The previous owners (including Nanette Newman) start to experience supernatural events, and find that the ghostly figure haunting their home is a vengeful scientist, who was obsessed with electricity, and held his unfaithful wife and her lover hostage in an electrified room after they had tried to murder him – a moment of Saw-like ingenious sadism!

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Running just 55 minutes, the film is clearly low budget stuff, but unusually entertaining with its oddly involved story that has flashbacks within flashbacks. Sewell directs with efficiency – there’s no room for anything fancy in a quickie production like this. Most of the action takes place in a single location with a minimal cast. Yet there’s a genuine eerie feeling within the story and the movie is a great deal better than you would expect, and mixes chills with pseudo-scientific gobbledegook from psychic investigator Colin Gordon. Things are helped by a suitably spooky score by Stanley Black.

The film is based on the play L’Angoisse by Celia de Vilyars and Pierre Mills, and it’s safe to say that Sewell was rather fond of the story – he’d already filmed it three times, as The Medium (1934), Latin Quarter (1945) and Ghost Ship (1952). In America, the film was shown on TV as part of the Kraft Mystery Theatre series, and it would subsequently be packaged as part of the Edgar Wallace series of films that Anglo-Amalgamated were producing at the same time (and which were also B-movies under an hour long). It’s now available on DVD in the UK as part of the Edgar Wallace Mysteries box set.

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Sewell had a four decade career. His other films include supernatural comedy The Ghosts of Berkeley Square and a trio of horror films that came at the end of his career – The Blood Beast Terror, Curse of the Crimson Altar and Burke and Hare.

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Buy House of Mystery as part of The Edgar Wallace Anthology on DVD from Amazon.co.uk

David Flint, Horrorpedia

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Prehistoric Women (aka Slave Girls)

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Slave Girls (US title: Prehistoric Women) is a 1967 British prehistoric fantasy film written and directed in Cinemascope by Hammer’s Michael Carreras. The film stars Martine Beswick as the main antagonist and stage actor Michael LatimerSteven Berkoff features in a small role at the end. In the UK, the film was released on a double-bill with The Devil Rides Out.

Plot teaser: 

David Marchant, a British explorer, along with Colonel Hammond and a guide are pursuing a leopard on an African safari. The Colonel takes aim but misses and only wounds the animal. With nightfall warned by the guide, David decides to follow the party back to camp whilst he puts the beast out of its misery.

He passes various trees with a picture of a white rhino but ignores them. Finally, he shoots the leopard, just as the weakened animal attacks him. No sooner is the creature dead, David is ambushed and captured by a primitive tribe. They accuse him of disturbing the spirit of the white rhinoceros, and take him to their leader’s temple. Just as he is about to be killed for his trespassing and disturbing the spirits, David touches a white rhino statue and there is flash of lightning that opens a giant crack in the cave wall.

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Marchant makes his escape and finds himself in a lush paradise jungle within a large valley. Hearing a noise, a terrified fair-haired young woman (Edina Ronay) tumbles out of the bush-growth. David tries to help her but the woman bites him and runs off where she entered. Following her, David tackles her to the ground. But they are both attacked by dark-haired women. David is escorted with them to their village whilst the fair woman is bound and taken with them. Entering into the settlement, David finds the fair-haired woman serve the dark haired woman, who they themselves are ruled over the beautiful Queen Kari (Beswick), who immediately takes interest in David an chooses him as her mate, but he is appalled by her cruelty and spurns her advances…

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Prehistoric Women Hammer Collection Studio Canal DVD

Buy Prehistoric Women on DVD from Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“…[Beswick] was cast as Queen Kari in the film Prehistoric Women, a sort of follow up to the successful One Million Years BC. As the seductive and deadly leader of a tribe of lost amazons, Beswick had one of the great roles of a lifetime. Unfortunately, the production was plagued by indifferent direction, a low budget, and the fact that it was following up a gargantuan worldwide box office hit …” Film Fatales: Women in Espionage Films and Television, 1962-1973

“Idiotic Hammer Film in which the Great White Hunter stumbles into a lost Amazon civilization where blondes have been enslaved by brunettes. Honest! Nevertheless it has developed a cult following due to Beswick’s commanding, sensual performance as the tribe’s leader.” Leonard Maltin’s 2010 Movie Guide

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” … came along about three years too early than the point when Hammer jumped aboard the Swinging Sixties permissiveness and allowed a much more frank degree of sexuality in their films – it seems to be all but wanting to get its various slave girls naked. As in all of Hammer’s exotica films, there is a slim to fairly silly plot. However, Martine Beswick takes the opportunity to camp the role up to the hilt and gives it her all, be it draped seductively across her bed, commanding cruelties and heatedly debating the idea of equality. It makes what would otherwise be a rather silly film into something rather entertaining.” Moria

“Hammer was often old-fashioned, but what makes its better films so well-loved is that they would find ways to bring them up to date: make them bloody, sexy, exciting, classy, and intelligent.  (Slave Girls was released on a double bill with The Devil Rides Out, which is all of those things.)  Carreras’ film throws everything into the mix except for what it really needs to spark everything to life, and as a result, it tumbles over into unintentional hilarity.  Which might not be such a bad thing.” Midnight Only

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“The cheerful silliness of Slave Girls is rather endearing in a way that an over-budgeted, over-long and over-produced behemoth like Avatar could never be. It might have a reputation as one of the worst Hammer films ever made but it is never less than entertaining.” Bruce G Hallenbeck, Hammer Fantasy & Sci-Fi: British Cult Cinema (Hemlock Books)

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Buy Hammer Fantasy & Sci-Fi book from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

the devil rides out + slave girls british quad poster

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The Hammer Story book by Marcus Hearn, Alan Barnes – Buy from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Cast:

Wikipedia | IMDb


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