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Hände voller Blut

Originaltitel: Hands of the Ripper
  • 1971
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 25 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
3235
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eric Porter and Angharad Rees in Hände voller Blut (1971)
As a young child Jack the Ripper's daughter witnesses him kill her mother. As a young woman she carries on the murderous reign of her father. A psychiatrist tries to cure her with tragic consequences.
trailer wiedergeben2:00
1 Video
77 Fotos
Horror

Als kleines Kind wird die Tochter von Jack the Ripper Zeuge, wie er ihre Mutter tötet. Als junge Frau setzt sie die mörderische Herrschaft ihres Vaters fort.Als kleines Kind wird die Tochter von Jack the Ripper Zeuge, wie er ihre Mutter tötet. Als junge Frau setzt sie die mörderische Herrschaft ihres Vaters fort.Als kleines Kind wird die Tochter von Jack the Ripper Zeuge, wie er ihre Mutter tötet. Als junge Frau setzt sie die mörderische Herrschaft ihres Vaters fort.

  • Regie
    • Peter Sasdy
  • Drehbuch
    • Lewis Davidson
    • Edward Spencer Shew
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Eric Porter
    • Angharad Rees
    • Jane Merrow
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    3235
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Peter Sasdy
    • Drehbuch
      • Lewis Davidson
      • Edward Spencer Shew
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Eric Porter
      • Angharad Rees
      • Jane Merrow
    • 74Benutzerrezensionen
    • 75Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Trailer

    Fotos77

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    Topbesetzung35

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    Eric Porter
    Eric Porter
    • Pritchard
    Angharad Rees
    Angharad Rees
    • Anna
    Jane Merrow
    Jane Merrow
    • Laura
    Keith Bell
    Keith Bell
    • Michael
    Derek Godfrey
    • Dysart
    Dora Bryan
    Dora Bryan
    • Mrs Golding
    Marjorie Rhodes
    Marjorie Rhodes
    • Mrs Bryant
    Lynda Baron
    Lynda Baron
    • Long Liz
    Marjie Lawrence
    Marjie Lawrence
    • Dolly
    Norman Bird
    Norman Bird
    • Police Inspector
    Margaret Rawlings
    Margaret Rawlings
    • Madame Bullard
    Elizabeth MacLennan
    • Mrs. Wilson
    Barry Lowe
    Barry Lowe
    • Mr Wilson
    A.J. Brown
    • Rev Anderson
    April Wilding
    • Catherine
    Anne Clune
    • 1st Cell Whore
    Vicki Woolf
    • 2nd Cell Whore
    Katya Wyeth
    • 1st Pub Whore
    • Regie
      • Peter Sasdy
    • Drehbuch
      • Lewis Davidson
      • Edward Spencer Shew
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen74

    6,23.2K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7The_Void

    Another excellent film from Hammer!

    I'm a big fan of Hammer Horror; their inventive camp styling puts their output above the majority of other horror studios. Adding to that is the fact that when you watch a Hammer film, you know that you're in for a good time. While Hands of the Ripper isn't the best film to come out of the studio, it still represents another success for the studio and it's a film that will no doubt delight their fans. The great plot line follows the daughter of the infamous murderer; Jack the Ripper. After witnessing her father kill her mother, the young girl is permanently scarred and now, years later, her past is beginning to surface. The film finds a space between a psychological thriller and the familiar 'slasher' sub-genre (and it's yet another film in this style that pre-dates Halloween), and it blends brilliantly. The first thing you will notice about this movie is the way that the murders are done - stylishly, brutally and extremely camp! They're extremely over the top and a great treat for the horror fanatic.

    Eric Porter stars as a psychiatrist who takes our heroine in after she murdered the woman who was looking after. Porter gives a fine performance as the good doctor, and keeps in with the style of the older leading male that Hammer have created. The film is noteworthy for it's excellent creation of the period in which the film is set, and that too adds to the delight of the film. One thing that I have noticed about Hammer's product as they entered the seventies is that the films lost that colourful camp edge that epitomised the earlier films and it had been replaced by a more European style. Captain Kronos is the prime example of that change, but luckily Hands of the Ripper is more like the Hammer films of yore. Not as colourful, but it still has that Hammer charm that us fans love so much. As usual, the film isn't quite perfect; it's dogged by a less than perfect script, and at times the psychological elements of the film ground down to walking pace, which makes the film boring; but generally this is a lovely piece of kitsch and Hammer fans won't be disappointed!
    6samhill5215

    the things to notice

    TCM just aired this and like all the other Hammer films I enjoyed it a great deal. They're not cinematic achievements but they are fun and that's one of film's aspects I really appreciate. I also tend to look at technical aspects and the first thing that struck me is how fake the moustaches looked. The beards looked better but now I wonder. The second, I'm embarrassed to write, was Marjie Lawrence's cleavage which may not be how she would like to be remembered given her extensive body of work. Did they really dress like that in Victorian England? I'd also never seen Angharad Rees before nor had I even heard of her but then I found out this was her first co-starring and second film role and I was intrigued. And, incidentally, that's another thing I like about Hammer: they find and highlight young talent. Anyway lots of good talent here, a lot from TV, presumably because they come cheaper. Some goofs like when Rees begins to sit while her host invites her to do so. But I'm getting technical again. Eric Porter is great. He manages to save the day even skewered by a cavalry sabre. Which brings up another goof: the thing must be five feet long but you can't see the other end sticking out of Porter's body. Good final scene, good score, worth a viewing.
    8Witchfinder-General-666

    Underrated Hammer Gem

    I am an enthusiastic fan of the Hammer Studios, and my admiration for this brilliant Production Company gets greater with each film I see. The Hammer Studios are most famous for their films made in the late 50s and 60s, most prominently for the (awesome) "Dracula" and "Frankenstein" series. As far as I am considered, however, some of Hammer's films from the early 70s are just as brilliant as their older successes. One of their greatest and my personal favorite of their films, the brilliant "Vampire Circus" was made in 1972, for example, and the early 70s also brought a variety of other classics, such as "Dr Jekyll & Sister Hyde" or "Scars Of Dracula", which is easily the nastiest entry to Hammer's Dracula series. "Hands Of The Ripper" of 1971 is yet another great Hammer production that is immensely atmospheric, genuinely creepy, well-acted and stunningly suspenseful, and an absolute must-see for every Horror-fan.

    As a toddler, little Anna has to witness the murder of her mother by her own father - none other than the notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper himself. At the age of seventeen, Anna (Angharad Rees) lives at the house of an elderly lady, a phony medium who is perfectly willing to leave her 'granddaughter' to rich 'gentlemen' for money. After this 'grandmother' is brutally murdered, the rich doctor John Pritchard (Eric Porter), a humanist and follower of Siegmund Freud, decides to take custody of poor Anna, both out of sympathy and for research reasons...

    "Hands Of The Ripper" is a vastly underrated Hammer gem that is ingenious in many aspects. The film is immensely creepy and scary, with a suspense level that is higher than in most Hammer flicks, and the murders are brutal and very bloody. The atmosphere is eerie and tense and, as usual for Hammer, the film is shot in great Gothic locations. The performances are great. Eric Porter delivers an excellent performance as Dr. Pritchard, and Angharad Rees deserves special praise for her outstanding performance in the role of Anna. All said, this is a shamefully underrated film. Creepy, stylish, excellently acted and stunningly suspenseful from the beginning to the end "Hands Of The Ripper" is a great gem from Hammer that no lover of Horror can afford to miss!
    7Snake-666

    Underrated Hammer film.

    While just a young child, Anna (Angharad Rees) witnesses the brutal murder of her mother by father ‘Jack the Ripper'. Fifteen years later she begins to enter trances and appears to be possessed by the Ripper himself. A friendly psychiatrist, Dr. Pritchard (Eric Porter), unaware of her past and believing her problems to be purely in the mind takes Anna in while he attempts to cure her. However, he soon regrets his decision.

    ‘Hands of the Ripper' is a rather underrated and enjoyable Hammer film. The film is slow, methodical and story based which may not appeal to those who like lots of `action' in their flicks, but anyone who likes classic horror wonderfully entwined with a near-gripping thriller should find something enjoyable in ‘Hands of the Ripper'. Director Peter Sasdy does well in building the tension and ensuring that the audience remains enthralled throughout the slower paced thriller aspects. Peter Sasdy does his best in making the most of the screenplay and adds some wonderful touches to the visuals of the film which really stand out and help to make the movie what it is. The sporadic flashback sequences may not be entirely original in horror but few are quite as effective. Some beautiful and often despairingly solemn musical arrangements accompany the film and induce the necessary mood in the viewer in order to fully appreciate this interesting piece of cinema.

    The film is made all that better by some great performances from Eric Porter, Angharad Rees and Derek Godfrey in the short role of Dysart. Unfortunately, while one expects a certain degree of camp from a hammer movie, there did seem to be a slight overabundance of camp or hammy performances from some of the cast. However, one can take solace in knowing that the majority of these moments were towards the beginning of the film. Sadly, the poor performances were not the only thing that damaged this movie. There was an occasional lack in useful dialogue which lead to some of the scenes seeming distracted or unbelievable. This was accompanied by a couple of scenes which seemed bizarre and incoherent in their reasoning of the characters actions.

    Nevertheless, the film manages to entertain and should hold the interest of fans of other Hammer films. Compared to modern day horror movies, ‘Hands of the Ripper' is a slow moving film that probably has little appeal for the `nu-horror' fans but fans of classic horror should find the film to worthy of at least one watch. The death scenes may be a little of an anti-climax and there are some storyline problems, but ‘Hands of the Ripper' is an entertaining movie that seems to be rather underrated. A bizarre yet enjoyable mixture of horror, thriller, period drama and the work of Sigmund Freud. My rating for ‘Hands of the Ripper' – 7/10.
    6BaronBl00d

    The Hands That Rock the Cradle

    Not your typical Hammer vehicle starring Eric Porter as a doctor, influenced by the work of Sigmund Freud, who wants to study a young 17 year-old girl he knows to be a murderer. Porter thinks by analyzing her past he can find out why people murder and maybe prevent the act of murder in the human race in the process. The film is interesting in its objectives yet is a bit uneven in its execution. Directed by Peter Sasdy, who has obvious talent and directed Taste the Blood of Dracula nd Countess Dracula, the film works very hard at focussing on the relationship of childhood memories with adult behaviour, but at the same time wants to incorporate typical Hammer stuff such as big bosoms busting through stretched corsets and lots of blood and bizarre deaths. Angharad Rees plays the murderous daughter of the Whitechapel killer who as a child saw her mother brutally killed and then was orphaned. She does a good job as do all the actors. My biggest problem is with Porter, not his performance, but his character's motivation. I find it a little difficult to believe that a man supposedly intelligent would be so amoral, for he definitely seems to think that he is doing nothing wrong. The film is not all talk. There are several murders, all fairly brutal in their execution(no pun intended). The most ridiculous of these has to be a woman killed by her pince-nez glasses...but I'll let you decide if murder by pince-nez is realistic or not. There are some wonderful scenes too and the climatic one in St. Pauls is extremely powerful.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      For the film's final scenes in St. Paul's Cathedral, permission was requested, and turned down, to film on location. A replica of it was built instead.
    • Patzer
      A wounded Dr. Pritchard (Eric Porter) is in a hansom cab with Michael (Keith Bell) on their way to St. Paul's Cathedral. In every one of the shots of the scene, Pritchard is sitting on the right side of the cab and Michael on the left side, until the last one, when their positions have been somehow reversed.
    • Zitate

      Dysart: Damn it, Pritchard, you've got a possessed being in your home, as savage as any wild beast!

    • Alternative Versionen
      For an R rating in the US, the murders of Long Liz and the housemaid were trimmed, notably the second stab wound on the latter.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Cinemacabre TV Trailers (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      Agnus Dei (from 'Requiem')
      (uncredited)

      Written by Giuseppe Verdi

      [heard during the climactic 'Whispering Gallery' scene]

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 30. September 1971 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Las manos del destripador
    • Drehorte
      • St. Anne's Church, Boveney Wood Ln, Slough SL1 8PF, Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • The Rank Organisation
      • Hammer Films
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 25 Minuten
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.66 : 1

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