Luca è tormentato da un incubo: Una casa in campagna dove un'orribile strega gli bolle la testa in un calderone. La moglie decide di passare un po' di tempo con Luca per farlo riposare. La c... Leggi tuttoLuca è tormentato da un incubo: Una casa in campagna dove un'orribile strega gli bolle la testa in un calderone. La moglie decide di passare un po' di tempo con Luca per farlo riposare. La casa, però, è la stessa dell'incubo.Luca è tormentato da un incubo: Una casa in campagna dove un'orribile strega gli bolle la testa in un calderone. La moglie decide di passare un po' di tempo con Luca per farlo riposare. La casa, però, è la stessa dell'incubo.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Maria Cumani Quasimodo
- Witch
- (as Maria Clementina Cumani Qusaimodo)
Cesare Di Vito
- Policeman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Tom Felleghy
- Police Inspector
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
I like La casa del sortilegio aka The House Of Witchcraft, but it is for certain not one of Umberto Lenzi's best: Seven Blood Stained Orchids, Cannibal Ferox, Nightmare City and a few others are not challenged by this little flick. Anyway, if you like horror with the theme of black magic, an evil witch and some killings you may dare to watch this one - it will serve you with some nostalgic horror and outdated but still fun to watch gore effects (but only a very few, remember, the movie was produced for TV and not for cinema). The best part of The House Of Witchcraft is in my opinion that nice creepy soundtrack - synths supported by mysterious sounds and ghostly voices - a trademark of (Italian) horror movies of the 70s and 80s, and something everyone who want to become a serious maker, director or whatever of horror movies should study thoroughly. Only recommended for the true hardcore lover of Italian horror.
The House of Witchcraft (1989)
* (out of 4)
Luke (Andy J. Forest) is having nightmares of an old castle where some strange things are happening. His wife (Sonia Petrovna) decides to get him away from their home for a relaxing vacation but the spot she takes him is the same place from his dreams.
THE HOUSE OF WITCHCRAFT was part of a four film series that was made for Italian television. Two films were directed by Umberto Lenzi and the other two by Lucio Fulci but all four films have a pretty poor reputation and there's no question that this one here was much worse than either of Fulci's. There are all sorts of problems with this movie, which we will get to in a moment but it's clear that the Italian horror genre was in the middle of a very ugly death.
As I said, there are all sorts of problems with this film including the fact that the screenplay is incredibly bland and unoriginal. How many horror films have we seen where someone is haunted by dreams and then they end up at the place they're dreaming about? Lenzi certainly doesn't do anything fresh with the idea and we're left with a very boring story and even more boring characters. There's not a single scare to be had here and what's worse is that the film stays away from any graphic violence or gore.
Both Forest and Petronva are pretty bland in their roles and the only one who really brings anything is Paul Muller who appears in a few scenes. It was great getting to see the Jess Franco regular here but sadly he couldn't even save the picture. THE HOUSE OF WITCHCRAFT is one of the most unoriginal films that I've seen from Lenzi and it's really too bad that it turned out so poor.
* (out of 4)
Luke (Andy J. Forest) is having nightmares of an old castle where some strange things are happening. His wife (Sonia Petrovna) decides to get him away from their home for a relaxing vacation but the spot she takes him is the same place from his dreams.
THE HOUSE OF WITCHCRAFT was part of a four film series that was made for Italian television. Two films were directed by Umberto Lenzi and the other two by Lucio Fulci but all four films have a pretty poor reputation and there's no question that this one here was much worse than either of Fulci's. There are all sorts of problems with this movie, which we will get to in a moment but it's clear that the Italian horror genre was in the middle of a very ugly death.
As I said, there are all sorts of problems with this film including the fact that the screenplay is incredibly bland and unoriginal. How many horror films have we seen where someone is haunted by dreams and then they end up at the place they're dreaming about? Lenzi certainly doesn't do anything fresh with the idea and we're left with a very boring story and even more boring characters. There's not a single scare to be had here and what's worse is that the film stays away from any graphic violence or gore.
Both Forest and Petronva are pretty bland in their roles and the only one who really brings anything is Paul Muller who appears in a few scenes. It was great getting to see the Jess Franco regular here but sadly he couldn't even save the picture. THE HOUSE OF WITCHCRAFT is one of the most unoriginal films that I've seen from Lenzi and it's really too bad that it turned out so poor.
This was my second House of Doom viewing, having previously enjoyed Lucio Fulci's House of Clocks. Witchcraft opens with a man having a reoccurring nightmare in which he enters a house only to find an old hag/witch boiling his decapitated head in a cauldron! This plays a significant and fairly predicable part of the plot. We get bad dubbing, some laughable script, good looking woman and reasonably gory deaths, though this made for TV movie is very tame compared to director Umberto Lenzi's other films, eg the notorious Cannibal Ferox. I'm a big fan of Italian horror and I got my fix, it's just far from being a classic.
This was the second to last of a quartet of films, unofficially known as the 'House Quartet', that were made in Italy in 1989. Having seen Lucio Fulci's two efforts - the good House of Clocks and the pretty terrible Sweet House of Horrors - I wasn't going into this one with much hope. It would seem that Lenzi's two efforts in this series aren't as well watched as Fulci's, and based on the strength of this film - it's not hard to see why. Umberto Lenzi definitely had the ability to make good films - his crime flicks are second to none, and most of his Giallo output was pretty good, but towards the end of his career he didn't seem to care much, and this is one of his careless efforts. The film was made for TV, and this is made obvious through the plot, which is entirely mundane and basically follows a man who travels to a house after suffering loads of nightmares. The film doesn't have much going for it; the cinematography is bland, the acting is nothing to write home about and the story didn't deserve a film to be based on it. Here in the UK, this film has a release by the cheapo DVD label 'Vipco' - and it completely fits into their little series as it's such a 'bare bones' film. Overall - not recommended!
The director Umberto Lenzi sure was fixated about severed heads and used them over and over again in his two TV-movies "The house of lost souls" and "The house of witchcraft". Doing the same thing doesn't do any favors for this film, it's just a fun turkey to watch with clumsy dialogue.
In these two Lenzi films they have people running around and about way too much but there's less of it in this film.
In all its cookiness this film isn't too bad either. It's more like a slasher with a touch of giallo genre but even for a giallo it's executed in a too straightforward way making the plot rather obvious and leaving very little mystery. In a way it's very American kind of film and that's not a good thing at all in my opinion.
Lenzi has done so many better films upon his career than his later works but still this film has got lots of positive things. Visuals, sets and cinematography are all very good for a TV-movie and upon all it didn't seem like the makers had taken it too seriously. They knew exactly what they were doing.
All in all this is better than "House of lost souls" and way better than "Sweet house of horrors". Fulci's "House of Clocks" however is the best of all these four TV-movies.
In these two Lenzi films they have people running around and about way too much but there's less of it in this film.
In all its cookiness this film isn't too bad either. It's more like a slasher with a touch of giallo genre but even for a giallo it's executed in a too straightforward way making the plot rather obvious and leaving very little mystery. In a way it's very American kind of film and that's not a good thing at all in my opinion.
Lenzi has done so many better films upon his career than his later works but still this film has got lots of positive things. Visuals, sets and cinematography are all very good for a TV-movie and upon all it didn't seem like the makers had taken it too seriously. They knew exactly what they were doing.
All in all this is better than "House of lost souls" and way better than "Sweet house of horrors". Fulci's "House of Clocks" however is the best of all these four TV-movies.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThird part of the series "Le case maledette" (Doomed Houses) also including La dolce casa degli orrori (1989), La casa nel tempo (1989) and La casa delle anime erranti (1989).
- ConnessioniFollowed by La casa delle anime erranti (1989)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- La casa dei sortilegi
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Rufina, Firenze, Italia(location)
- Aziende produttrici
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