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LE CINQUE CHIAVI DEL TERRORE

Dr. Terror's House of Horrors

1965 GB HMDB
febbraio 23, 1965

La storia narra di sei persone che viaggiano su un treno: Shock (Shrek nella versione originale), medico cartomante, e altri cinque passeggeri a cui leggerà il futuro:Un architetto dovrà affrontare un licantropo. L'uomo lupo (Werewolf);Un signore e la sua famiglia verranno attaccati da piante mostruose. La vite rampicante (Creeping wine);Un trombettista affronterà un rito voodoo. Vodoo (Vodoo);Un critico d'arte sarà inseguito dalla mano mozzata di un pittore a cui aveva rovinato la vita. La mano strisciante (Crawling hand);Un medico vedrà sua moglie trasformarsi in un vampiro. Vampiro (Vampire).Sapendo che solo la morte potrà salvarli, arrivano a destinazione; scendendo scoprono da un quotidiano di essere morti in un incidente ferroviario, mentre Shock assume le mostruose fattezze di un cadavere vivente.

Cast

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Troupe

Produzione: Max Rosenberg (Producer)
Sceneggiatura: Milton Subotsky (Screenplay)
Musica: Elisabeth Lutyens (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Alan Hume (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Sei uomini si ritrovano riuniti sul vagone di un treno. Uno di essi comincia a predire agli altri il futuro: il primo si imbatte in un lupo mannaro, il secondo in un orrendo vegetale, il terzo è preso di mira da alcune divinità esotiche, il quarto viene perseguitato da una mano mozzata ed infine il quinto è assalito da due vampiri. Sorpresa finale…. Uno scorrevolissimo e divertente horror-movie a episodi, interpretato da tre ottimi attori (Donald Suttherland, Peter Cushing, Cristopher Lee) diretti con mano salda da un esperto del genere. I limiti sono i soliti delle produzioni inglesi anni sessanta (scordatevi scene di sangue o di violenza troppo “esplicite”) ma questo è uno di quei rari casi in cui la pellicola non ne risente troppo. Godibile.
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John Chard

John Chard

8 /10

Five characters in search of a station.

Five strangers on board a train and are joined by the mysterious Dr Shreck, he's a fortune teller and offers to read their Tarot cards.

Five men, five stories, Werewolf, The Creeping Vine, Voodoo, Disembodied Hand & Vampire. Dr. Terror's House Of Horrors is one of those films that had a big impact on me as a child. When it was shown on British TV, the next day in the play ground would be kids talking about it, well those kids (un)lucky enough to have parents who would let them watch it that is! I finally got to see it one night in the 70s when my parents were out, I can even remember the time and channel it was shown on, in fact I can still remember now the feeling of dread that took over me as Christopher Lee is pursued by a severed hand, checking under my bed before turning the lights off.

Now that's the beauty of horror films isn't it? Sure enough this Amicus compendium looks a trifle clunky now, but really we shouldn't be judging it by a new age standard, we should be judging it by the 1965 time frame and embracing the totally creepy vibe that infiltrates this particular railway carriage. The Werewolf and Disembodied Hand segments are great pieces of horror, while the others make up for in style what they lack in genuine horror. Peter Cushing, Alan Freeman, Roy Castle, Donald Sutherland, Kenny Lynch, Bernard Lee and of course the irrepressible Christopher Lee, I thank you all for leaving an indelible mark on me as a youth, it's a mark that I proudly wear to this everlasting day! 8/10

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

6 /10

Peter Cushing is spookily menacing here as "Dr. Schreck" who joins a group of passengers on a late night train journey where he offers to read their tarot cards. Despite the sceptical objections of fellow traveller Christopher Lee ("Marsh") he proceeds to read to each fellow passenger a future full of, well, terror... The film acts out each scenario as depicted by the doctor's tales in graphic, gory - though, it has to be said not very scary, detail. The supporting cast deliver these well - especially Phoebe Nicholls and Bernard Lee; Roy Castle not so much. I can't help but think it would have been so much more effective in black and white, but it is still quite a fun watch with plenty to keep it interesting and it's nice to see Lee out of bandages!

Recensioni fornite da TMDB