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Frightmare

  • 1974
  • R
  • 1h 28min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Frightmare (1974)
After escaping a death sentence for her hideous crimes, a seemingly rehabilitated woman settles in an isolated farmhouse with her husband, only to ache, once more, for blood, and a crash-course in surgery.
Lire trailer1:12
1 Video
86 photos
Slasher HorrorHorror

Après avoir échappé à une condamnation à mort pour ses crimes, une femme apparemment réhabilitée s'installe dans une ferme isolée avec son mari, pour avoir à nouveau envie de sang et d'un co... Tout lireAprès avoir échappé à une condamnation à mort pour ses crimes, une femme apparemment réhabilitée s'installe dans une ferme isolée avec son mari, pour avoir à nouveau envie de sang et d'un cours accéléré de chirurgie.Après avoir échappé à une condamnation à mort pour ses crimes, une femme apparemment réhabilitée s'installe dans une ferme isolée avec son mari, pour avoir à nouveau envie de sang et d'un cours accéléré de chirurgie.

  • Réalisation
    • Pete Walker
  • Scénario
    • David McGillivray
    • Pete Walker
  • Casting principal
    • Rupert Davies
    • Sheila Keith
    • Deborah Fairfax
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    2,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Pete Walker
    • Scénario
      • David McGillivray
      • Pete Walker
    • Casting principal
      • Rupert Davies
      • Sheila Keith
      • Deborah Fairfax
    • 67avis d'utilisateurs
    • 71avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:12
    Trailer

    Photos86

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 78
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Rupert Davies
    Rupert Davies
    • Edmund Yates
    Sheila Keith
    Sheila Keith
    • Dorothy Yates
    Deborah Fairfax
    • Jackie Yates
    Paul Greenwood
    • Graham Heller
    Kim Butcher
    Kim Butcher
    • Debbie Yates
    Leo Genn
    Leo Genn
    • Dr. Lytell
    Gerald Flood
    Gerald Flood
    • Matthew Laurence
    Fiona Curzon
    Fiona Curzon
    • Merle
    John Yule
    • Robin
    • (as Jon Yule)
    Trisha Mortimer
    • Lillian
    • (as Tricia Mortimer)
    Victoria Fairbrother
    Victoria Fairbrother
    • Delia
    • (as Pamela Farbrother)
    Edward Kalinski
    • Alec Marini
    Victor Winding
    • Detective Inspector
    Anthony Hennessey
    • Detective Sergeant
    Noel Johnson
    Noel Johnson
    • The Judge
    Michael Sharvell-Martin
    • Barman
    Tommy Wright
    • Nightclub Manager
    Andrew Sachs
    Andrew Sachs
    • Barry Nichols
    • Réalisation
      • Pete Walker
    • Scénario
      • David McGillivray
      • Pete Walker
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs67

    6,22.8K
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    Avis à la une

    gregoodsell

    Bleak, grim and nasty

    Director Peter Walker's and screenwriter David McGillivray's shining hour, the British contribution to the "all families are bad" horror genre.

    Walker's technique, handled quite well, is that he knows the audience comes to a horror film for jolts and unpleasantness. The audience waits in rapt attention -- bang, wallop, and it really is jolting and unpleasant.

    Many things are addressed in this film: neglect of the old, the callousness of the young, and how in the end the acorn never, ever falls too far from the tree. This is the Pete Walker film to see.
    Sultan of Horror

    A dark and disturbing slice of classic British horror

    This film is typical of early Seventies British horror in its style and format, though this is much more dark, morbid and disturbing than the average example.

    The film features a psychotic woman with a penchant for cannibalism, and her equally disturbed family, hiding out as a recluse in a remote English farmhouse following her release from 15 years in an institution.

    A few items of gore are presented here (the UK version will be cut by three minutes), but the real beauty of this film is its dark and unnerving undertones, along with its shocking and feel-bad finalé.
    7tim-764-291856

    Murder and Gore in the English Home Counties

    Pete Walker's 'Frightmare' is a gloriously gory mix of psychopathic and cannibalistic killings and pretty English cottages, all topped with all those naff '70's fashions, haircuts and British cars.

    Walker regular Sheila Keith is the woman sent to an asylum fifteen years ago, along with her abetting husband. He's helpless when her cravings come back and assumed cured, she now reads tarot cards. Their daughter gets romantically involved with a young psychiatrist and when her younger, adopted sister starts going off the rails, the young doctor naturally wants to help.

    She's actually helping find feeding matter - and their brains - for her step mother. And step mother uses an array of everyday tools and appliances to get to her subjects' juicy bits. Electric drills, pitchforks, you name it. There's plenty of reasonable looking blood at the right times and some great make up effects of everyday folk with half their heads missing.

    Now, nearly forty years on it's more a chiller than a screamer but very effective nonetheless and certainly one of the better Brit horror flicks I've seen. I saw it on The Horror channel.
    8Libretio

    One of the greatest exploitation movies of the 1970's

    FRIGHTMARE

    Aspect ratio: 1.75:1

    Sound format: Mono

    After serving a lengthy prison sentence for acts of murder and cannibalism, a 'fragile' old lady (Sheila Keith) is released into the care of her husband (Rupert Davies) and they retire to a farmhouse deep in the English countryside. But old habits die hard...

    One of the great exploitation titles of all time, FRIGHTMARE (1974) has often been described as the UK's answer to "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" (1974) due to its bleak scenario and uncompromising violence, toplined by elderly murderess 'Dorothy Yates' (Keith), who lures unwary victims to her isolated farmhouse with promises of Tarot readings and stabs them to death with various household implements. Davies' daughter from a previous marriage (Deborah Fairfax) suspects Keith is still insane and enlists the aid of her psychiatrist boyfriend (Paul Greenwood). But Keith and Davies have another daughter (Kim Butcher), conceived just before their incarceration, and she's beginning to show disturbing signs of following in her mother's footsteps...

    Having infuriated tabloid hacks with his barely-disguised assault on the Christian Right in HOUSE OF WHIPCORD (1974), director Pete Walker conceived the notion of cannibalism in the Home Counties (!) and commissioned a screenplay from "Whipcord" scribe David McGillivray, a critic-turned-scriptwriter who later became an outspoken opponent of British film censorship (watch for his brief, wordless cameo as a white-coated doctor). The result is one of the best British horror movies of the 1970's. True, the fashions have dated badly and there are too many dialogue exchanges in drab apartments, but the film's antiquated charm is difficult to resist. Most of the film's Grand Guignol horrors unfold within Keith's crumbling farm, an Olde Worlde slaughterhouse far removed from the bright lights of the big city. Walker has described his approach as 'modern Gothique', an unsettling antidote to the safe, predictable (but still enjoyable) Hammer formula, and perfectly suited to an era defined by its social and political turmoil.

    Production-wise, the film is competent but unexceptional. The young leads are OK, nothing more, though Butcher is suitably unpleasant as the sociopathic daughter, and there are brief, throwaway cameos from British movie stalwarts Leo Genn (THE WOODEN HORSE) and Gerald Flood (PATTON), both cast purely for marquee value. Veteran character actor Davies is particularly impressive as the distraught husband who is incapable (and ultimately unwilling) to curtail his beloved wife's monstrous cravings. Immensely popular at the time due to his role on British TV as Inspector Maigret, he was singled out for special attention by outraged critics, appalled by his involvement in such 'lowbrow' material, though it wasn't the first time this 'respectable' actor had dabbled in exploitation (see also "Dracula Has Risen from the Grave", "Matthew Hopkins: Witchfinder General", "The Oblong Box", etc.). As it turned out, FRIGHTMARE was Davies' last film - he died in 1976.

    But the true star of the show is Sheila Keith, an unpretentious, supremely gifted actress who came late to the film business and stayed just long enough to leave an indelible impression on cult movie fans worldwide. As portrayed here, Dorothy Yates' pathetic frailty conceals a ruthless psychopath, capable of the most horrendous atrocities, and the demonic expression which transforms Keith's face as she stalks her helpless victims is as blood-freezing as anything in the genre. Nowhere is this more evident than in an extraordinary sequence - completely unexpected in a British horror movie at the time - when Keith uses an electric drill to mutilate the head of a corpse which she's hidden in the barn...

    NB. The original UK trailer is an exploitation gem which refuses to show more than a few brief moments of footage from the film, claiming the rest of it is too shocking for public exhibition!!
    lazarillo

    Unique British Horror Classic

    This is one those horror movies that is totally unique. It is a cannibal movie, but it humanizes the cannibals more than any other movie I've seen. They're not rampaging monsters like in "Texas Chainsaw" or stereotypical Third World savages like in the later Italian gut munchers--they're the ordinary people living right next door--and this makes them all the more frightening.

    The director is Pete Walker, who found an interesting niche in 1970's British horror/exploitation movies between the hedonistic youth of "Swinging London" and the repressive, reactionary forces that were moving in to stop the party. Walker managed to appeal to both audiences with his "House of the Whipcord", a film both startlingly reactionary and irredeemably sleazy. This film, however, is instead a pox on both houses. There are two cannibals here--one is a seemingly kind old matron (Sheila Keith) who lures victims to her isolated country estate with tarot card readings. She is unwittingly accommodated by her weak-willed husband and well-intentioned step-daughter. She represents a truly twisted version of what American conservatives would later call "family values". The other cannibal is equally frightening--an innocent looking adolescent girl (Kim Butcher) flouncing around in a miniskirt or knickers, coyly manipulating both rough motorcycle-riding youths and respectable older men. She represents the free-spirited and cheerfully amoral youth of the era. It is Walkers genius to ultimately put these two monsters in cahoots. The relationship between them turns out to be very twisted and very close indeed.

    The movie is very creepy and truly frightening. Its ultimate message is quite bleak. Apparently, Walker was heavily influenced by American film noir when he made this, and this influence is evident in the dark, eerie visuals and bleak, fatalistic tone where the shadow of the past is always casting a pall over the present. This is a genuinely disturbing film, but one I would recommended highly.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The film that the hero and heroine go to see on their date is La grande bouffe (1973), which deals with characters who set out to eat themselves to death - a touch of ironic humor in view of the plot of "Frightmare." However, the dialogue we hear is not from The Big Feast (aka: "La Grande Bouffe") but from Pete Walker's previous film, Flagellations (1974).
    • Gaffes
      When Jackie drives to her father and stepmother's house, she sits on the right-hand side of the car (as is normal in the UK). But when she drives back, the footage is the exact mirror of the drive there, with her sitting on the left.
    • Citations

      Edmund Yates: They said she was well again! They said she was well...

    • Versions alternatives
      There have been many discrepancies involving the recent DVD release of this title by Image Entertainment:
      • The version has an 84-minute running time. The original running time is 87 minutes. There appears to be no footage missing. The print used was no doubt time compressed during the film-to-tape transfer. The version on the DVD release is in fact the uncut R-rated version.
      • The R-rated U.S. theatrical cut is uncut despite the rumors. The "Frightmare 2" video release is slightly edited, removing a brief gore spot. The DVD displays the uncut R-rated version.
      • The transfer on the DVD is presented full-frame at 1.33:1. Director Pete Walker shot the film in 1.33:1 full frame with the intention of matting the film at 1.85:1. The image on the DVD represents the full 1.33:1 frame as Walker shot it. As a result, there is excess picture information at the top and bottom of the frame. The 1.85:1 matting would have created a more compositionally correct image but the transfer represents the film as it was shot.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Courting Controversy (2005)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Frightmare?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 6 novembre 1974 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Brainsuckers
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Dawes Farm, Henley Common, Fernhurst, West Sussex, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(exterior and interior of the Yates' farmhouse)
    • Société de production
      • Peter Walker (Heritage) Ltd.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 28 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono

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