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Le manoir de la terreur

Original title: Horror
  • 1963
  • 12
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
939
YOUR RATING
Le manoir de la terreur (1963)
DramaHorror

The beautiful young daughter of a crazed count fears that she will fall victim to the family curse - to be sacrificed to fulfill an ancient family legend.The beautiful young daughter of a crazed count fears that she will fall victim to the family curse - to be sacrificed to fulfill an ancient family legend.The beautiful young daughter of a crazed count fears that she will fall victim to the family curse - to be sacrificed to fulfill an ancient family legend.

  • Director
    • Alberto De Martino
  • Writers
    • Giovanni Grimaldi
    • Bruno Corbucci
    • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Stars
    • Gérard Tichy
    • Leo Anchóriz
    • Ombretta Colli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    939
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alberto De Martino
    • Writers
      • Giovanni Grimaldi
      • Bruno Corbucci
      • Edgar Allan Poe
    • Stars
      • Gérard Tichy
      • Leo Anchóriz
      • Ombretta Colli
    • 43User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos47

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    Top cast9

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    Gérard Tichy
    Gérard Tichy
    • Sir Roderick Blackford
    • (as Gerard Tichy)
    Leo Anchóriz
    Leo Anchóriz
    • Doctor Eggwell
    • (as Leo Anchoriz)
    Ombretta Colli
    Ombretta Colli
    • Emily Blackford
    • (as Joan Hills)
    Helga Liné
    Helga Liné
    • Miss Eleonore, the Housekeeper
    Irán Eory
    Irán Eory
    • Alice Taylor
    • (as Iran Eory)
    Vanni Materassi
    Vanni Materassi
    • John Taylor
    • (as Richard Davis)
    Paco Morán
    • Alastair, the Butler
    • (as Frank Moran)
    Emilia Wolkowicz
    • Cook
    • (as Emily Wolkowicz)
    Harry Winter
    • Gamekeeper
    • Director
      • Alberto De Martino
    • Writers
      • Giovanni Grimaldi
      • Bruno Corbucci
      • Edgar Allan Poe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    5.4939
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    Featured reviews

    6biggertuna

    Not a Bad Scary Film

    A list of the neat elements of the film a.k.a. " Horror ", a.k.a. "The Blanchville Monster,"...1. It's Italian, 2. black and white, 3. "Horror" sneakily appears as an occult film but really a psychological horror film, and 4. the ultra-creepy background music. I watched this movie when I was a 10-year old watching it on shock theater late Saturday night. There are a few boring parts and some parts that should never been put into the film, such as Rodrigues playing the keyboards. But I'm a little prejudiced on bragging on this movie because I've never seen an Italian horror film I didn't like ( Black Sunday, Black Sabbath, Suspiria, Inferno, etc. ).
    8Tera-Jones

    A Good Gothic Italian Horror - My Style of Horror Film

    A very atmospheric Gothic styled horror - it's right up my alleyway! This this is the kind of horror that sends shivers up and down my spine: madness, twisting plot, fog, big old castle, revenge, murder, coffins, cobwebs, creaking noises etc... it's subtle horror mixed with a bit of a mystery that kept me highly entertained! To me, the film had the feeling or look of a 60s B&W TV Show or made for TV movie rather than something that played on the large screen at the picture shows - yet that seemed to add to the film rather than take away from it. OH expect to hear things like "he's wanting to murder you" followed by the Da-dumb music like the old TV mystery or horror shows - it's not just the look & overall feel of the film but the music that adds to the TV show feeling when watching.

    Very good movie! I recommend to fans of Hammer, Amicus and other classic horror film studios and to those that like the older mysteries.

    8/10
    7Coventry

    Guide me to my tomb, daddy...

    The opening sequences show both titles ("Horror" and "The Blancheville Monster") neatly after each other, as if the distributors couldn't really decide which of the two was better and/or more appropriate. They should have just called it "The Blancheville Horror"... Problem solved! Anyway, that was totally irrelevant. I'm more and more becoming a fan of director Alberto De Martino! He's been making good horror movies consistently from the early 60's until the mid 80's, yet he never received the respect and appreciation that other Italian directors did. This stylish and severely underrated picture came out alongside loads of other Gothic horror movies and, although not as brilliant as, say, "Black Sunday" or "Kill Baby…Kill", it's a hugely atmospheric and powerfully compelling chill-tale with an overall decent script and convincing set pieces. Only a couple of days prior to her 21st birthday, a beautiful girl travels back to her wealthy father's castle, accompanied by her new lover and best friend. Upon arrival, her brother informs her about the tragic incident that supposedly killed her father and how he got madly obsessed with the legend of the Blancheville family curse. But the new arrivals notice that there are a lot more strange things going on. Why have all the servants been replaced? Why is the brother so nervous about the girl's upcoming birthday? And, most of all, who or what produces those creepy screams at night in the castle's darkest tower? "The Blancheville Monster" offers pretty much all the elements you're looking for in good Gothic horror, including eerie thunderstorms, scary black-caped monsters, ominous vaults and tight costumes that supply the female cast members with impressive cleavage. De Martino does a great directing job, spreading the suspense equally throughout the whole film and the finale – albeit not too hard to predict – is formidably tense. Unlike any of Mario Bava's Gothic horror movies, "The Blancheville Monster" will not haunt your nightmares, but for fans of classic horror it's definitely worth seeing.
    7BrentCarleton

    A revelation!

    Though it has somehow or other managed to escape all the standard reference books, this film is a real and unheralded discovery--a visually distinguished and absorbing Gothic thriller, halfway between Bava country and the Mexican gothics like "The Witch's Mirror".

    "Blancheville Monster" where have you been hiding? Right off the bat, we are treated to a deliciously evocative visual opening--a wintry, bare tree ridden country road, awash with an icy looking rain, beyond which stands the distant castle on the mountain.

    Ann Radcliffe would be well pleased! And the film keeps on delivering: two attractive female leads, a mysterious and scarred man locked in a tower room, frequent thunder and lightning, and all the necessary accoutrements of remote castle Gothic, from flickering torches to doleful turns on the family harpsichord.

    The countryside in which the film is shot has the desolate beauty of a November day, and strongly suggests the Brittany in which the film is set, (though not shot). In this sense, some of the landscapes resemble those in Bresson's "Diary of a Country Priest." Devotees of the genre are herewith advised to seek this out. It's far more deserving than some of its over-hyped relatives.
    5BaronBl00d

    Mesmer-izing Italian Horror Film

    A young, beautiful blonde, her best friend from college with her brother and an admirer of her blonde beauty reach "home," the stately residence of the famed and fabled Blachevilles. Upon arriving there, we meet the brother Roderick, a scary looking housekeeper that seems to possess a station way above her ranks, and a doctor that oozes something not closely related to charm. It seems that all the old servants have been let go and that the patriarch - the father- has recently died - or not? I liked this film for several reasons. If nothing else it has atmosphere. The castle used is an impressive set. The black and white cinematography accentuates the rooms of the castle, a huge family tomb, grounds swirling with fog, and a lot more. We have a huge organ being grinded out in a few scenes in classic horror classic fashion(say that fast five times). The story and the "monster" are nothing fantastic at all, but the film works because the artful direction is able to build suspense. Now, if you are the type of viewer that needs a lot of action, then you really must stay away as this film is more talking and all red herrings(in what turns out to be a not all that clever mystery of who is the Blancheville monster). There is some rather preposterous story about an ancient curse on the family that will die off when the last female(?) descendant turns 21 - utter rubbish. But it is incidental when one looks at the way the film was filmed, and the pace slowly creeps up from slower to slow and then finally fast at the end in the revelation of what has lain cloaked the whole time. This was an Italian production with lots of Spanish influence(much of the cast is Spanish). The actors are all decent and able to make you believe in them at times. This is by no means a great horror film, but it, as other reviewers have noted, is in the same vein as a Roger Corman movie of the same period or a black and white Hammer film. This is the Euro version with no big stars but a decent story and lots of mood.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film is in public domain in the United States.
    • Goofs
      When John is carried into the castle, wounded, Alice calls his name but her lips are not moving.
    • Quotes

      Rodrigue De Blancheville: What is it? Do you need something?

      Alice Taylor: No. But, it... up in the tower... I saw... oh, my God.

      Rodrigue De Blancheville: Will you tell me what you're talking about.

      Alice Taylor: I tell you... there was a man, I saw him. He was a monster and his hands were all covered with blood. He was shouting. I tell you, I saw...

      Rodrigue De Blancheville: There's no one in the tower. Are you sure that it wasn't just your imagination?

      Alice Taylor: No, it couldn't have been. I tell you, I really saw him. And he was together with your housekeeper, Miss Eleonore.

      Rodrigue De Blancheville: Elenore? We can go up together. Are you afraid?

      Alice Taylor: No. I'll go.

    • Alternate versions
      The original U.K. Theatrical release prologue ended with a shock view of the count's disfigured face at the barred window, rather than the hands only. While this weakened the revelation scene in the tower room later on, it made sense as a climax to the opening prologue.
    • Connections
      Featured in Saturday Fright Special: The Blancheville Monster (2008)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The Blancheville Monster?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 20, 1966 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Démoniac
    • Filming locations
      • San Martín de Valdeiglesias, Madrid, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Film Columbus
      • Llama Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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