The relatives of a recently dead man meet at his creepy castle for the reading of his will. They also meet a sinister piano player who turns out to also be a toy-maker, and his toys seem to ... Read allThe relatives of a recently dead man meet at his creepy castle for the reading of his will. They also meet a sinister piano player who turns out to also be a toy-maker, and his toys seem to have murderous intentions of their own.The relatives of a recently dead man meet at his creepy castle for the reading of his will. They also meet a sinister piano player who turns out to also be a toy-maker, and his toys seem to have murderous intentions of their own.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Charles Beasler
- (as Andres Garcia)
- Ivor Morteval
- (as Ángel Espinoza 'Ferrusquilla')
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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* 1/2 (out of 4)
One of the four Mexican films Boris Karloff made at the end of his career, this one here being the first to get released. In the film Karloff plays an rich, if eccentric man who calls his family together for a will reading. He ends up dying and his fears of a maniac stalking the house taking out eyeballs appears to be coming true as the family members start dropping dead one by one. Okay, there's certainly a bit of sadness seeing Karloff go out with these Mexican films but at the same time you have to respect his wishes to continue working. From what I've read, he didn't need money so apparently these movies were made simply so he could continue to act. I hadn't seen this film, also known as DANCE OF DEATH, since I was very young and I remember it being quite bad but this repeat viewing shows that it is bad but certainly not as horrible as THE FEAR CHAMBER or SNAKE PEOPLE. I think Karloff turns in a pretty good performance here, which also includes him not being forced to use a wheelchair throughout the production. I think he manages to be quite believable as the mean old man who certainly doesn't have any love for his greedy family. The supporting players are all fairly forgettable as they add nothing to the film although sex pot Julissa, who appeared in three of the four Karloff films, comes off mildly entertaining and apparently is still working today. One thing that does benefit this film is that it actually makes sense. The other three films in the series all have plots that make no sense and the scenes with Karloff appear to have been shot without too much thought going into them as they really don't mix too well with the "other" footage. That's not the case here as everything flows pretty smoothly together. The death scenes are all silly looking but that's to be expected I guess. Karloff fans might want to check this notorious films out but others should certainly stay clear.
Boris does his best and give him credit for trying to hold this mess together. The strident background music doesn't help and distracts from any lucid moment. Apart from Boris, the rest of the Mexican cast are dubbed into some strange, clipped, English monotone that is reminiscent of the type used in porn films of the late seventies.
At a guess I think it's Edgar Allen Poe's 'House of Usher' that this is taken from but you'd be hard pressed to find a great deal of Poe in the finished article.
Still, there are far better films out there with Boris Karloff at his best, search them out and give this a wide berth, unless you want the curse of the 'shrinking brain' too!
This was one of four Mexican-American horror films headlined by Karloff that represented the legendary genre actors' last work in movies. It's obviously very low budget, and as a result is very crude. It's also seriously under-lit. It's talky and slowly paced, but its plot is apparently more coherent than those in the other three films in this series. There's mild use of gore, some sexy ladies (Beatriz Baz plays Cordelia, another of those potential heirs), a certain seedy atmosphere, and so-so music composed by Enrico C. Cabiati and Alicia Urreta.
The cast is nondescript performance-wise (that includes the people doing the dubbed-in American voices), although it must be said that Quintin Bulnes (as the dubious Dr. Horvath) and Manuel Alvarado (as the portly Morgenstern Morteval) have great character faces that wouldn't have been out of place in a Universal horror feature of the 30s and 40s.
The real saving grace is Karloff, who's wonderful as always. While it will be dispiriting to his fans to see him reduced to appearing in such schlock, he makes this more entertaining than it has any right to be.
While ultimately underwhelming, "House of Evil" / "Dance of Death" does have that irresistible "late show" quality that always appeals to this viewer.
Five out of 10.
Karloff plays Matthias Morteval, who summons his relatives to his 'old, dark' home to reveal the contents of his will. After Morteval finally dies, his guests are killed one by one by the old man's mechanical toys. Police inspector Charles Beasler (Andrés García), boyfriend of heiress Lucy Durant (Julissa), comes to suspect that his current case is somehow connected to Morteval and his family.
What a total mess of a movie. Karloff is fine, but the script and direction are all over the place, while the mechanical toys are ridiculous. To make matters worse, much of the action is accompanied by horribly intrusive discordant organ music that really grates on the nerves.
After lots of dull nonsense, very little of which makes sense, it is revealed that Morteval is still alive and has been orchestrating the murders.
2/10. For Karloff completists only.
His health and the high altitude kept Karloff from going to Mexico City to shoot the films and so his scenes were all shot in Hollywood with an American director (Jack Hill) and an American script. Once his scenes were in the can, the Mexican portions using Mexican actors were filmed and then Boris' scenes were edited in. Director Hill, who had made the cult favorite SPIDER BABY with Lon Chaney Jr, was an old hand at creating composite films. Usually foreign films were purchased and then American scenes were shot and fitted into them. For these Mexican movies the process was reversed. Once back in Mexico, the producers rewrote the original scripts and did pretty much what they wanted including the addition of unsavory and rather violent material.
Fortunately Boris died before he had a chance to see these hybrid curiosities and so it is left for fans of BK to make of them what they will. Unquestionably the best of the lot was the first screenplay, HOUSE OF EVIL, which recycles the story of the dying patriarch and the greedy relatives gathered for the reading of his will. The twist here is that they are bumped off by his collection of mechanical toys. Next came ISLE OF THE SNAKE PEOPLE, a tale of zombies with Karloff as the head of a voodoo cult. The third to be filmed was THE INCREDIBLE INVASION which borrows from Karloff's THE INVISIBLE RAY (1936) and adds outer space aliens. Finally there was THE FEAR CHAMBER which is the weakest so you could say that each movie got progressively worse.
The first two were released a year after being completed. The last two had to wait until 1971 which was two years after Karloff died. All four played the drive-in circuit as double features and were quickly forgotten. In 1987, twenty years after the films were made, a company called Parasol Group Ltd released them on VHS in an edited form and gave them new titles. They became, in order, DANCE OF DEATH, CULT OF THE DEAD, ALIEN TERROR, and TORTURE ZONE. All four are characterized by cheap sets, unimaginative photography, and are badly dubbed. CULT and ZONE have brief nudity and some graphic violence. It is these rather flat looking VHS copies that VCI has issued on DVD as part of their Sprocket Vault series. For BK completists only...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
Did you know
- TriviaBoris Karloff was paid $100,000 to appear in this film.
- Quotes
Matthias Morteval: [speaking to a portrait of his father] Somewhere in our garden, Father, the evil weed has sprung up again. If God will give me strength in the twilight of my life, I promise you that I will find that weed and tear it from our soil with all its evil seed...
[an extremely long pause]
Matthias Morteval: ... once and for all.
- Alternate versionsThe original Mexican version of this film is a few minutes longer than the U.S. version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Morella Presents Graveyard Theater: Blood Flood (2007)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Dance of Death
- Filming locations
- Estudios América - Canal de Miramontes 2437, Coyoacán, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico(now TV Azteca Estudios)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Sound mix