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IMDbPro

Burke & Hare

  • 1972
  • R
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
613
YOUR RATING
Burke & Hare (1972)
Trailer for Burk & Hare
Play trailer3:08
1 Video
19 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyCrimeHorror

Two men go into business supplying medical colleges with cadavers by robbing graves.Two men go into business supplying medical colleges with cadavers by robbing graves.Two men go into business supplying medical colleges with cadavers by robbing graves.

  • Director
    • Vernon Sewell
  • Writer
    • Ernle Bradford
  • Stars
    • Paul Luty
    • Roy Macready
    • Derren Nesbitt
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    613
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vernon Sewell
    • Writer
      • Ernle Bradford
    • Stars
      • Paul Luty
      • Roy Macready
      • Derren Nesbitt
    • 18User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Burke & Hare
    Trailer 3:08
    Burke & Hare

    Photos19

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    + 13
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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Paul Luty
    Paul Luty
    • Cruncher
    Roy Macready
    • Merrilees
    Derren Nesbitt
    Derren Nesbitt
    • Burke
    Susan Coates
    • Polly
    Françoise Pascal
    Françoise Pascal
    • Marie
    Christine Pilgrim
    • Rosie
    Joan Carol
    • Madame Thompson
    Robin Hawdon
    Robin Hawdon
    • Lord Angus McPhee
    Kenneth Thornett
    • Councillor Gordon
    Yutte Stensgaard
    Yutte Stensgaard
    • Janet
    Katya Wyeth
    • Natalie
    • (as Katya Wyath)
    Caroline Yates
    • Annie
    Glynn Edwards
    Glynn Edwards
    • Hare
    Yootha Joyce
    Yootha Joyce
    • Mrs. Hare
    Dee Shenderey
    Dee Shenderey
    • Mrs. Burke
    Frederick Piper
    • Lodger
    Paul Greaves
    • Ferguson
    Thomas Heathcote
    Thomas Heathcote
    • Paterson
    • Director
      • Vernon Sewell
    • Writer
      • Ernle Bradford
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.3613
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    Featured reviews

    4Stevieboy666

    Carry On Body Snatching

    Disappointing horror/comedy account of Irish body snatchers who were operating in Edinburgh in the 1820's. More comic than horrific, much of the focus is on sexual comedy with a lot of the film taking place in a brothel. Plenty of nudity, very popular in the early 1970's, horror specialists Hammer themselves were doing this. Pity Hammer didn't do a straight horror version of this, likewise the Carry On team could have undoubtably made a much funnier movie. Lucky Derren Nesbitt as Burke shares a topless threesome romp with beauties Francoise Pascal and Yutte Strensgaard, and at least his accent sounds Irish. Glynn Edwards was great as Cockney barman Dave in ITV's "Minder" but is sadly quite poor as Hare, he is among several characters who have very unconvincing accents. It has a few good moments but overall I found this movie rather dull, the 2010 version is far better.
    4booksultra

    Confused style and mediocre direction

    Briefly, this is not a patch on the Boris Karloff version.

    The introductory 70s music/soundtrack is pathetic and cheesy.

    Some elements are macabre (no surprise there), but, gratingly, these are mixed with some feeble quasi-comic elements and some cheap 'Confessions of a Window Cleaner' style sex scenes with prostitutes.

    This could have been 6.5 for a decent remake. Harry Andrews plays Dr. Knox and rises above the material and script. Derren Nesbitt Gestapo Officer in Where Eagles Dare) and Glynn Edwards (Dave from Minder) are also above average.

    Overall disappointing. Feel free to watch it as a curio, but make sure you have something else to do at the same time such as ironing, mending something or reading a newspaper.
    7gavin6942

    A Great Interpretation of the Classic Legend

    Two men go into business supplying medical colleges with cadavers by robbing graves.

    What you might recall about this film more than anything else is its theme song, which is certainly rather fun and moving. Bringing this tale to life is important and a great addition to horror cinema. Sure, it had been done before as "The Body Snatcher" and "The Flesh and the Fiends"... but it is my understanding that this was the first to be so explicit in the title.

    The film also asks another question, perhaps philosophical or ethical: do dead bodies have value? Certainly murder is a terrible crime, but what of people who died naturally? Certainly their owners do longer need them -- why not be taken for medical science? (We now have donor cards and the like, but indeed, how were surgeons to learn their craft without practice?)
    TheCapsuleCritic

    Two Very Different Movies Rolled Into One

    Like so many early 1970s British horror movies, I first saw BURKE & HARE at a drive-in as part of a double bill. I don't remember what else was showing that night but this was the movie that I came to see and it wasn't the first feature. I knew director Vernon Sewell from two earlier films, THE CRIMSON CULT and THE BLOOD BEAST TERROR and from being mentioned in David Pirie's landmark study of British horror cinema, A HERITAGE OF HORROR. Neither of those two movies were particularly good but they were entertaining, well made and boasted powerhouse horror casts (Peter Cushing, Robert Flemyng, Christopher Lee, Barbara Steele, Michael Gough, and Boris Karloff). This one didn't have the cast but it was about Burke & Hare.

    I am fascinated by the Burke & Hare saga. Though he was hanged in 1829, Burke's skeleton is still on display in Edinburgh. I am also a huge admirer of John Gilling's 1959 version of the story THE FLESH & THE FIENDS. I have seen all 5 of the major cinematic versions of the story and this one is the weakest of the set which is too bad because there was real potential here. The problem is that the producers wanted to have their cake and eat it too.

    They combined a horror movie with a period sex romp in the vein of FANNY HILL. The bordello scenes look like a completely different movie. The lighting is different, the music is cheerful, and the editing between the two storylines is haphazard. This is a shame because the B & H scenes are well staged and well acted by Derren Nesbit & Glynn Edwards. Yootha Joyce and Dee Shenderey are also very good as the women behind the men. Harry Andrews looks the part of Dr. Knox but lacks the depth of Peter Cushing's characterization'

    I read that director Sewell envisioned a different film altogether as this lacks the tight editing of his other movies. What he thought of BURKE & HARE is probably best summarized by the fact that he quit the business after this one. Producer Kenneth Shipman, taking advantage of the new relaxed standards, made sure that there was plenty of female flesh on display (which Sewell had originally cut down quite a bit). Throw in some kinky behavior witnessed through peepholes and you have what looks like a spread for PLAYBOY magazine (or maybe it's PENTHOUSE since they're British).

    While I can't really recommend the film it's not without its good points. This Redemption DVD looks absolutely gorgeous and is the uncut version. There's even a Blu-Ray edition with bonus features. Director John Landis obviously borrowed the film's overall comic tone for his 2010 BURKE & HARE with Simon Pegg and Andy Serkis which is very similar...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
    6Bunuel1976

    BURKE & HARE (Vernon Sewell, 1972) **1/2

    Fairly maligned but, in retrospect, reasonably enjoyable version of the notorious body-snatching double act – played here by Derren Nesbitt (a regular in director Sewell's work) and Glynn Edwards (surprisingly, for a title role, played by a prolific character actor rather than a star or even a familiar face); both men are now married and their spouses get wind of their nefarious activities before long. The end is also closer to the truth, with Hare turning State's Evidence (eventually dying blind and destitute), leaving Burke to hang alone, and Dr. Knox (a typically full-blooded Harry Andrews, with an eye-patch over his right eye and given to cracking dirty jokes for his colleagues' amusement!) – the eminent surgeon they sold the bodies to – being expelled from his profession but subsequently setting up a traveling medicine show! Oddly enough, the rivalry between Knox and the other surgeon-lecturers is all but inexistent here!

    The style is agreeably redolent of Hammer Films (nicely book-ended by recreations of period illustrations dealing with the case), though like the brand-new John Landis rendition, the tone is bawdily comic rather than the sleazy seriousness adopted by two more British treatments of these events (unfolding in 1820s Edimburgh) by notable directors – John Gilling's THE FLESH AND THE FIENDS (1959) and Freddie Francis' THE DOCTOR AND THE DEVILS (1985), both of which I had reviewed soon after their first viewing. For the record, the screenplay is the handiwork of Ernle Bradford; his major claim to fame was penning the bestselling chronicle of The Great Siege of Malta of 1565 and, not only is a street in my hometown named after him, but he was to die on our shores in 1986!

    The brothel scenes (ostensibly demonstrating Knox's students' leisure time, as well as provide convenient victims for the titular duo, but all-too-obviously mandated by the new-fangled permissiveness) feel rather like padding – incidentally, former Hammer starlet Yutte Stensgaard appears briefly as one such prostitute (which she unconvincingly plays drunk much of the time!). One unexpected asset, however, is a rollicking folk-tune sung by The Scaffold during the film's opening and closing titles.

    I do not know if the copy I acquired is culled from the film's DVD edition (through Redemption) but it came accompanied by an interesting 12-minute 'lecture' featuring an unusual-looking (displaying tattoos and piercings galore!) female Professor who, amongst other things, parallels the real-life Dr. Knox's dabbling in body parts so that others may live with the literary figure of Baron Frankenstein attempting to re-animate composites of dead tissue (especially since both came by them illegally).

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Final feature film of Frederick Piper.
    • Goofs
      When Daft Jamie is being shown at the medical school, in the close-up of his foot, his toes move.
    • Quotes

      [telling an anecdote over dinner with Dr Selby]

      Dr. Knox: He was a great barrel-chest of a man - heart like a steam engine, lungs like a pair of bellows. "Slip your trews down, man," I say. So he lets his trews fall down round his feet. "And your under-drawers," I say. "How can I examine you with your drawers on?" "I'd rather not," he says. "I'm very sensitive - it's my person, it's very small". "Good heavens, man!" I say, "That's nothing to worry about. I see dozens of them every day - big ones, small ones. Come on, don't waste my time." So reluctantly he lowers his drawers. At first I cannot see a thing. Then I see it: a wee mushroom peeping through the heather, and him such a fine strapping man, too - you never can tell. "It certainly is very small indeed," I say. "Er, tell me. Do you ever get an erection?" With tears in his eyes he says "I've got one the noo, Doctor".

      [everyone laughs]

    • Alternate versions
      The UK cinema version was cut by the BBFC to remove a shot of Hare stabbing a man with a broken bottle during a fight and a scene where a prostitute 'corrects' her male client by beating him with a cane.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Francoise Pascal - Skool's Out! (2023)
    • Soundtracks
      Burke and Hare
      Music by Roger Webb

      Lyrics by Norman Newell

      Sung by The Scaffold

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 3, 1972 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Bodysnatchers
    • Filming locations
      • Twickenham Film Studios, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Armitage
      • Kenneth Shipman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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