Le chateau des morts vivants backdrop
Le chateau des morts vivants poster

LE CHATEAU DES MORTS VIVANTS

Il castello dei morti vivi

1964 FR HMDB
août 5, 1964

A l'époque des guerres napoléoniennes, une troupe de comédiens ambulant fait halte au château du Comte Drago. Ce dernier vit entouré d'animaux embaumés inquiétants de vie. Les artistes vont progressivement se rendre compte que la passion du Comte ne se réduit pas aux animaux...

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Equipe

Production: Paul Maslansky (Producer)
Scenario: Warren Kiefer (Writer)Michael Reeves (Writer)
Musique: Angelo Francesco Lavagnino (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Aldo Tonti (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
Un groupe d'acteurs itinérants arrive au château d'un comte et est invité à passer la nuit dans sa demeure. Après avoir découvert une série de statues mystérieuses à l'intérieur du château, si réalistes qu'elles semblent vivantes, les invités comprennent que l'artiste qui a façonné ces œuvres est le même comte fou qui transforme les gens en statues de pierre grâce à une potion. Bonne coproduction anglo-italienne avec la participation au casting de deux monstres sacrés comme Christopher Lee et le débutant Donald Sutherland. Adapté surtout aux amateurs du genre gothique des années soixante.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (2)

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

6 /10

At first sight, this looks remarkably humdrum, but it's a bit better than that. Christopher Lee's outwardly benign "Count Drago" invites a travelling troupe of performers to stay and perform at his castle. Before long, things start going drastically wrong for them. All humankind is reflected in this film - we have a witch, a dwarf, a deaf mute and lots of creatures that look like the product of the taxidermist's art - but are they really? It's eerily told, very much in the Hammer mould, this story - with quite a bit of suspense as we gradually get to the truth. Keep an eye out for Donald Sutherland as the policeman with a little added extra.

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Beware if a creepy man says, “Stay with Daddy forever”

In areas north of Rome, 1815, a traveling troupe is offered a lucrative gig at the colossal castle of the strange Count Drago (Christopher Lee). Horror ensues.

An Italian/French production, “The Castle of the Living Dead” (1964) is similar to Roger Corman’s Poe-inspired flicks, such as “The Terror” from the previous year and the contemporaneous “The Tomb of Ligeia,” not to mention Lee’s work with Hammer. Although unfortunately shot in B&W, the first half is great whereas the second half tends to bog down at the castle. Nevertheless, if you have a penchant for those other movies, you’ll appreciate this one. Underneath the mayhem is a welcome warm heart.

This was Donald Sutherland’s first credited performance in cinema (not counting TV movies). Interestingly, he plays multiple roles (one is obvious, but I’ll leave it to you to figure out the other two).

Michael Reeves is credited as assistant director, but it’s rumored he directed all the sequences at the Gardens of Bomarzo (the place with the statues), and possibly more. He also contributed to the script, which was finished when he signed on, specifically the addition of the dwarf. If you’re not familiar with Reeves, he went on to helm “Witchfinder General,” aka “The Conqueror Worm,” four years later, just before his accidental death at the age of 25 from a barbiturate overdose.

It runs 1 hours, 30 minutes, and was shot at Odescalchi Castle, which is an hour’s drive northwest of Rome, as well as the Gardens of Bomarzo, which is a 70 minutes drive north of the castle.

GRADE: B

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