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IMDbPro

La maison ensorcelée

Titre original : Curse of the Crimson Altar
  • 1968
  • R
  • 1h 29m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,5/10
3,3 k
MA NOTE
Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee, Mark Eden, and Barbara Steele in La maison ensorcelée (1968)
When his brother disappears, Robert Manning pays a visit to the remote country house he was last heard from. While his host is outwardly welcoming, and his niece more demonstrably so, Manning detects a feeling of menace in the air with the legend of Lavinia Morley, Black Witch of Greymarsh, hanging over everything.
Liretrailer2 min 35 s
1 vidéo
84 photos
Horreur

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueRobert Manning visits the remote country house where his brother Peter was last seen. While his host seems outwardly friendly and his niece more demonstrably so, Robert detects a feeling of ... Tout lireRobert Manning visits the remote country house where his brother Peter was last seen. While his host seems outwardly friendly and his niece more demonstrably so, Robert detects a feeling of menace in the air.Robert Manning visits the remote country house where his brother Peter was last seen. While his host seems outwardly friendly and his niece more demonstrably so, Robert detects a feeling of menace in the air.

  • Director
    • Vernon Sewell
  • Writers
    • Mervyn Haisman
    • Henry Lincoln
    • Jerry Sohl
  • Stars
    • Boris Karloff
    • Christopher Lee
    • Mark Eden
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    5,5/10
    3,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Vernon Sewell
    • Writers
      • Mervyn Haisman
      • Henry Lincoln
      • Jerry Sohl
    • Stars
      • Boris Karloff
      • Christopher Lee
      • Mark Eden
    • 73Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 65Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:35
    Trailer

    Photos83

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    Rôles principaux33

    Modifier
    Boris Karloff
    Boris Karloff
    • Professor John Marsh
    Christopher Lee
    Christopher Lee
    • Morley
    Mark Eden
    Mark Eden
    • Robert Manning
    Barbara Steele
    Barbara Steele
    • Lavinia Morley
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • Elder
    Virginia Wetherell
    • Eve Morley
    Rosemarie Reede
    • Esther
    Derek Tansley
    Derek Tansley
    • Judge
    Michael Warren
    Michael Warren
    • Chauffeur
    Ron Pember
    • Petrol Attendant
    Denys Peek
    • Peter Manning
    Nicholas Head
    • Blacksmith
    Nita Lorraine
    • Woman with whip
    Carol Anne
    • 1st Virgin
    Jenny Shaw
    • 2nd Virgin
    Vivienne Carlton
    Vivienne Carlton
    • Sacrifice Victim
    Roger Avon
    • Sergeant Tyson
    Paul McNeil
    • Party Guest
    • Director
      • Vernon Sewell
    • Writers
      • Mervyn Haisman
      • Henry Lincoln
      • Jerry Sohl
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs73

    5,53.3K
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    6gavin6942

    Surprisingly Dull For The Amazing Cast

    Robert Manning (Mark Eden) searches for his vanished brother in a rural English village, where he is entangled in the legend of Lavinia (Barbara Steele), a witch killed 300 years ago. Lavinia's heir, J. D. Morley (Christopher Lee), wants revenge on anyone related to her killers, such as Robert. Robert romances Morley's niece, Eve, and is aided by occult expert Prof. Marsh (Boris Karloff), but it is up to him to repel Morley's evil designs.

    Boris Karloff became ill with pneumonia while shooting this project in the freezing rain. It was his last British feature, begun January 22 1968, and he would recover enough to shoot four Mexican features in May 1968, his final screen work. Barbara Steele is always a treat, and she is especially interesting with green skin and a large, feathery hat (if you can call that a hat).

    Loosely based off of H. P. Lovecraft's "Dreams in the Witch House", how does it stack up to the Stuart Gordon version forty years later? Honestly, you cannot even compare them. If there is a connection, it is very limited. There is a witch, there are dreams, but the two films are worlds apart.

    Howard Maxford calls the film "dated and somewhat slow", having "a better cast than it deserves". How a film that runs only 87 minutes can be slow is a legitimate question. Ivan Butler also feels the film falls short, saying the "promise of a combination of Lee, Karloff and Barbara Steele is not fulfilled". These are fair assessments.

    I recommend the film for the cast and the awesome organ track that opens the film. Beyond that, it is hit and miss and you could skip it.
    6Witchfinder-General-666

    Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee AND Barbara Steele - Can One Ask For More?

    Three of all-time's greatest Horror icons in one movie - which true horror fan would not love a film like that? Vernon Sewell's "Curse Of The Crimson Altar" of 1968 may not be a particularly memorable example for British Gothic Horror from the late sixties. More precisely, it is often extremely cheesy, and far from being a masterpiece, but the brilliant casting of Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee and the wonderful Barbara Steele makes this a must-see for every lover of Gothic Horror.The story is apparently loosely based on H.P. Lovecraft's "Dreams in the Witch House". The film bears little resemblance to the short story by Lovecraft, however. It does, however, resemble several other Horror films from the 1960s in many aspects, especially the brilliant "City Of The Dead" of 1960s, which also starred Christopher Lee (even though it comes nowhere near its brilliance, of course).

    After his brother has gone missing, Antiques dealer Robert Manning (Mark Eden), travels to the village of Greymarsh, where his brother was last seen in a huge mansion. Manning is kindly welcomed by the mansion's owner Mr. Morley (Christopher Lee), a descendant of Lavinia Morley (Barbara Steele), a 17th century witch, who, before being burned at the stake, put a curse on the people of Greymarsh. Manning, who has no clue of where his brother is yet, gets along very well with his guest-keeper's beautiful niece Eve (Virginia Wetherell). Somehow, however, the area still seems to be under the menacing spell of Lavina...

    The film is, of course, particularly worth watching for its three stars. Christopher Lee is, as always, great and the incomparable Boris Karloff shines in one of his last roles as an eccentric old witchcraft expert who collects 'instruments of torture'. The greatest treat is the wonderful Barbara Steele (one of my favorite actresses and the greatest female Horror-icon ever) in the role of the green-faced witch Lavina wearing a bizarre horned crown. The supporting cast includes two other memorable British actors, Michael Gough ("Horror Of Dracula"), who plays a butler, and Rupert Davies ("Witchfinder General"). Beautiful Viriginia Wetherell fits well in her role as Eve, and also grants a peak at her lovely backside. The film is practically blood-less, but it is partly quite atmospheric, and occasionally quite weird, as several scenes seem quite bizarre and feature weird S&M style costumes. All things considered, the film is great fun to watch. It is certainly not highly memorable in any aspect except for the cast, but what a cast that is! No true lover of Horror can afford to miss a film starring Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee and Barbara Steele. Steele alone makes this a must for Horror fans in her green make-up! Recommended.
    5ma-cortes

    So-so terror movie with three great horror myths : Christopher Lee , Barbara Steele and Boris Karloff

    When his brother dísappears Robert Manning: Mark Eden, pays a visit to the far country house where his brother stayed . While his host : Christopher Lee is outwardly welcoming, his niece is very agreeable with him . But Manning feels a sinister threat across the weird house due to a creepy legend of Lavinia Morley , Black Witch of Greymarsh, she is the high priestess of Evil, a monstruos fiend with an overpowering lust for blood . Terror fills the night as she stalks her prey !. The World's Masters of Terror in a New Blood-Curdler ! What obscene prayer or human sacrifice can satisfy the Devil-God ?

    The Crimson Altar or Curse of the Crimson Altar is a creepy and mysterious film in which a guest at a luxurious house comes face to face with naked fear on the altar of evil . Stars three greatest terror actors : Christopher Lee , Barbara Steele , and , of course , Boris Karloff , the Master of Evil in his last and most shocking role, though he was 80 and confined to a wheelchair . Despite ads claiming this as his last film, he made four more in Mexico. Adding other prestigious actors as Rupert Davies and Michael Gough who also starred a lot of terror movies .Highlights of the movie include the scantily clad Barbara Steele in sado-masochistic sequences and a psychodelic party with body painters and strippers , in addition, the eerie and supernatural final.

    The motion picture was regularly directed by Vernon Sewell, packing some flaws and gaps . He was one of the mainstays in the B niche of the British film industry and in his almost 40 years shooting made all kinds of genres as Noir , action , terror , sexploitation , spy thrillers . Filming a number of movies such as : Stricly for the Birds , Urge to Kill, Master of Choice , The Man in the Back Seat, Battle of the V-1 , Wind of Change , Rogue's Yarn, Dangerous Voyage , Soho Incident , Johnny You're Wanted , and being his last one Burke and Hare. Adding his ordinary TV works as The Human Jungle , Kraft Mystery Theater , Sailor of Fortune , Edgar Wallace TV series and The Avengers .
    Gothick

    Welcome to Our World of Darkness!

    An underrated slice of late Sixties horror/psychedelia. It was filmed in 1968 and reminded me somewhat of The Dunwich Horror which was made around the same time and similarly attempted to update Lovecraft with setpieces inspired by the drug culture and the Summer of Love. The difference with the Crimson Cult is that it was filmed in England with a stellar cast who can actually act, unlike poor fish-out-of-water Miss Sandra Dee in Dunwich. It is a treat to see Boris Karloff and Christopher Lee trading pleasantries in their scenes. Michael Gough extracts the maximum from his small role as a pitifully unhinged factotum. Barbara Steele exudes a grandly Gothic malevolence in her scenes as Lavinia. She is probably the single most memorable presence in the film and whatever power it possesses is largely thanks to her. (Great costume, too!) The dungeon sequences are probably the best though my favorite moment in the film occurs when the innocent young man asks Karloff's sinister professor "What do you collect?" and with a friendly grin Karloff replies, "Instruments of torture!" Marvelous moment.

    This movie is ridiculously difficult to find. After years of searching I located a bootlegged videotape which is in terrible condition--grainy and the colors which should be vividly over-the-top are quite washed out. Also the print lacks the original score which was quite nifty as I recall from seeing it on American television in the early 70s. There is supposed to be a laser disc version from the early 90s. It would be great if a patron who owns this would do a review of that.
    5Bunuel1976

    CURSE OF THE CRIMSON ALTAR (Vernon Sewell, 1968) **

    This routine horror film has something of a maligned reputation (Christopher Lee himself refers to it as being "dreadful" in the accompanying interview), but the remarkable credits involved - stars Boris Karloff, Lee, Barbara Steele, Michael Gough and Rupert Davies, director Sewell and cameraman John Coquillon - and the familiar plot elements involving witchcraft make the concoction quite irresistible.

    The stars are generally well cast: Karloff is given a great entrance and his character is amusingly acerbic, particularly with regards to bland leading man Mark Eden; Lee basically repeats his role - though here is given greater screen-time - from the superior black-and-white classic THE CITY OF THE DEAD (1960); Steele (in another of her long line of witches!) only appears in various characters' hallucinations - but this, and the fact that she's painted green all over and saddled with a silly horned head-dress, in no way undermines her peculiar beauty and commanding presence; Gough, however, is wasted as a vaguely sinister yet dim-witted manservant; Davies, too, is underused in an all-too-typical vicar role (though his belated involvement does bring about Lee's come-uppance); Virginia Wetherell isn't bad as Lee's niece, who's unaware of his secret lifestyle (despite herself having a predilection for throwing wild parties in their mansion, giving rise to some hilariously dated grooviness!), endangers her own life by falling for Eden practically at first sight (thus incurring Lee's wrath) and even appears briefly in the nude (this was her film debut!). There's nothing remotely memorable about the film (except, maybe, some of its imagery in the scenes where Steele shows up or, rather, is manifested) and can only be seen as a major disappointment given the enormous talent on hand - though the main culprit has to be its lazy scripting, since all the stars have treaded this path too many times before!

    Lee's interview about Karloff is one of his most interesting and affectionate: I was surprised to learn that he considered SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939) the best of Karloff's three stabs at the role of The Creature (though I adore the film myself), but he also erroneously mentioned that Karloff and Bela Lugosi had made a film called "Pit And The Pendulum" (which the interviewer - who I assume to be Marcus Hearn - didn't correct...but, then, nor could he help Lee when the latter asked whether the Karloff vehicle in which the actor played twins was called THE BLACK ROOM [1935]!; in this regard, I have to say that I'm irked no end every time an interviewer shows up without having done any preparation about his subject!!). It's also disappointing, to us genre fans, that the great horror stars never discussed their work amongst themselves (at least, according to Lee), as it would have been awesome to know just what they felt about it - and themselves for doing such films!

    The DVD quality is on a par with the two recent DD Video releases I watched - ISLAND OF TERROR (1966) and NIGHT OF THE BIG HEAT (1967) - and, like the former, has been trimmed slightly for this edition! Having watched all of them now, I'm almost sorry that I didn't pick up DD Video's THE BLOOD-BEAST TERROR (1967) and THE DEVIL'S MEN (1975) as well...and even more that I didn't order their SE of THE CREEPING FLESH (1972) earlier, since I've never watched it and is now practically impossible to find in this guise - having unceremoniously gone out-of-print!!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Christopher Lee regarded this film as one of the worst in his entire career.
    • Gaffes
      (at 1:03:10 into the film) A boom mic is visible during the conversation in the police station.
    • Citations

      Robert Manning: You know, this is a very interesting old house.

      Eve Morley: I don't know, it gets a bit creepy sometimes. It's a bit like one of those houses in horror films.

      Robert Manning: Yeah, I know what you mean. You say Boris Karloff's gonna pop up at any moment.

    • Autres versions
      Before the film's theatrical release in the U.S. in 1970 by American International Pictures, it contained additional scenes featuring both nudity and mild sadism and masochism. This unedited version, under its original UK title, now appears on MGM-HD and other U.S. cable TV networks.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Chiller Theatre: The Crimson Cult (1975)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • décembre 1968 (United Kingdom)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United Kingdom
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Crimson Cult
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Grim's Dyke House, Old Redding, Harrow Weald, Middlesex, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Craxted Lodge-exterior and interior)
    • société de production
      • Tigon British Film Productions
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 29 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee, Mark Eden, and Barbara Steele in La maison ensorcelée (1968)
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