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House of the Damned

Original title: La villa delle anime maledette
  • 1982
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
3.5/10
225
YOUR RATING
House of the Damned (1982)
HorrorMystery

A couple inherits a mansion, but when they move in they discover that it is haunted by the murderous spirits of people who have died there.A couple inherits a mansion, but when they move in they discover that it is haunted by the murderous spirits of people who have died there.A couple inherits a mansion, but when they move in they discover that it is haunted by the murderous spirits of people who have died there.

  • Director
    • Carlo Ausino
  • Writer
    • Carlo Ausino
  • Stars
    • Beba Loncar
    • Jean-Pierre Aumont
    • Annarita Grapputo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.5/10
    225
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carlo Ausino
    • Writer
      • Carlo Ausino
    • Stars
      • Beba Loncar
      • Jean-Pierre Aumont
      • Annarita Grapputo
    • 11User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Beba Loncar
    Beba Loncar
    • Martha
    Jean-Pierre Aumont
    Jean-Pierre Aumont
    • Ugo Ressia
    Annarita Grapputo
    • Elisa
    George Ardisson
    George Ardisson
    • Casati
    • (as Giorgio Ardisson)
    Paul Teitcheid
    • Housekeeper
    • (as Paul Theisheid)
    Antonio Campa
    • Tony
    • (as Tony Campa)
    Fausto Lombardi
    Fausto Lombardi
    • Bruno
    Ileana Fraia
    • Sonia
    • (as Ileana Fraja)
    Remo Vercellin
    Benedetto Mocellin
    Victor Bally
    Mimmo Morleo
    Attilio Cagnoni
    Sandro Zambito
    Mario De Gregorio
    Michele Malla
    Amelia Vercellino
    Enrico Slataper
    • Director
      • Carlo Ausino
    • Writer
      • Carlo Ausino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    3.5225
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    10

    Featured reviews

    2Coventry

    Good advice! In fact, just don't look at all.

    I usually have a high level of tolerance for inept and cheaply made horror movies from the early 80s, especially if they come out of Italy, but I honestly had to drag myself towards the end of "Don't Look in the Attic", and constantly had to battle the urge not to press the fast-forward button. What an incredible dud of a film!

    The plot is senseless, incomprehensible, and - worst of all - utterly boring. Three people that are related but don't know each other inherit a mansion in which their parents died in 1955. The mansion is supposedly in Turin, but I'm guessing it's in the middle of the zoo of Turin judging by the exotic animal sounds coming from outside. The mansion also comes with an ageing butler that pops up out of nowhere. There's a whole lot of whining about ancient family curses and conversations with tombstones, but zero action. The body count is low, and the couple of death sequences are ruined by miserable editing and lousy effects (like the woman who gets run over by a car). Terrible.

    Writer/director Carlo Ausino previously made "Torino Violenta", which is one of the worst Poliziotesschi flicks from the 70s but still vastly superior over this nonsense.
    2S1rr34l

    This Film Entertained Me For The Wrong Reasons. 1-2-Miss.

    Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Don't Look In The Attic; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

    Story - 0.25 Direction - 0.50 Pace - 0.25 Acting - 0.75 Enjoyment - 0.75

    TOTAL - 2.50 out of 10

    Oh my God, this movie is so bad that I kinda loved it. Though, I was irked by the story's possibility. There is enough scope within to scribe a classic horror tale.

    I once read in a review that writer/director films are better as they allow for their vision of the story to reach the screen. That only works if the writer/director is talented. Unfortunately, with Don't Look In The Attic, they're not. There are so many holes in the story, be it structural or narrative, that I wouldn't be able to start to critique them - so I won't.

    As for the direction side, I can easily comment on that. For one, the pace meanders along slower than the story. And, I will say this for the director; he must have known because he did try to alleviate the monotony in pre-production. There's a particularly lovely ginger pussy that appears during a bout of exposition. There's a conversation between three people, and it's shot at a dreadful angle and too-close a range. It feels and looks awkward. Enter the inserted shots of the pussycat reclining on the leather cushion of an armchair. There's no need for them, apart from breaking up the nastiness, and they're filmed on a different stock. If anything, the cat shots are crisper than the rest of the movie. But I can't knock it too much I'm a pussy lover, not a dog man. Though, the mishap that had me smiling the most was the soundtrack. The mansion they are staying in is in Turin and miles from anywhere. Imagine my surprise hearing the sounds of the jungle in the background, complete with screeching monkeys. Not satisfied with using it once they use the same sound segment throughout the film. It always brought a smile, and I expected to see Tarzan, Cheeta, and Jane swing in on a vine. It would have made for a better picture - he meant to get the most for his budget! There are more, many more, but they were my faves.

    The cast isn't too bad. Though, what can you expect(?) It must have been evident reading the script how bad the film would be, so why put too much effort into it? Just turn up, have fun, get paid - I hope they got paid.

    If you love bad movies, check out Don't Look In The Attic. Otherwise, stay the hell away. I don't want to be responsible for upsetting somebody; life's too short - Especially to watch this flick.

    Please feel free to visit my Absolute Horror and Killer Thriller Chiller lists to see where I ranked Don't Look In The Attic. Better yet, you can search for better viewing.

    Take Care & Stay Well.
    2brennan79

    week-old spaghetti sauce

    Now, I LOVE Italian horror films. The cheesier they are, the better. However, this is not cheesy Italian. This is week-old spaghetti sauce with rotting meatballs. It is amateur hour on every level. There is no suspense, no horror, with just a few drops of blood scattered around to remind you that you are in fact watching a horror film. The "special effects" consist of the lights changing to red whenever the ghost (or whatever it was supposed to be) is around, and a string pulling bed sheets up and down. Oooh, can you feel the chills? The DVD quality is that of a VHS transfer (which actually helps the film more than hurts it). The dubbing is below even the lowest "bad Italian movie" standards and I gave it one star just because the dialogue is so hilarious! And what do we discover when she finally DOES look in the attic (in a scene that is daytime one minute and night the next)...well, I won't spoil it for anyone who really wants to see, but let's just say that it isn't very "novel"!
    2FieCrier

    boring movie about a cursed family and a haunted house

    I saw the Mogul Video VHS of this. That's another one of those old 1980s distributors whose catalog I wish I had!

    This movie was pretty poor. Though retitled "Don't Look in the Attic," the main admonition that is repeated in this is "Don't go to the villa." Just getting on the grounds of the villa is a bad idea. A character doesn't go into the attic until an hour into the movie, and actually should have done it earlier because of what is learned there.

    The movie starts in Turin, Italy in the 1950s. Two men are fighting, and a woman is telling them the villa is making them do it. One man kills the other, then regrets it, and the woman pulls out the knife and stabs him with it. She flees the villa, and after she's left a chair moves by itself (what's the point of that?), but when in the garden a hand comes up through the ground and drags he into the earth.

    From there, it's the present day, thirty years later. There's a séance that appears suddenly and doesn't appear to have anything to do with the movie. The children of the woman from the prologue are inheriting the house. The main daughter is played by the same actress who played her mother. At least one of the two men from the prologue seems to reoccur as another character too. She's haunted by some warnings not to go to the villa, but they all do, since if they do not use it, they forfeit it. People die. A lawyer who has won all his cases tries to investigate a little. The ending is pretty poor. Why was the family cursed? An unfortunately boring movie.

    There's an amusing small-print disclaimer on the back of the video box that reads "The scenes depicted on this packaging may be an artist's impression and may not necessarily represent actual scenes from the film." In this case, the cover of the box is an illustration that does more or less accurately depict the aforementioned woman dragged underground scene, although there are two hands, and the woman is different. It's true, sometimes the cover art has nothing to do with the movie. I also recall seeing a reviewer who had a bad movie predictor scale, in which movies with illustrations on the cover instead of photos got at least one point for that.
    3andybob-3

    Another snooze-fest with an ironic "DON'T" in the title (3 - 10)

    A group of heirs to a mysterious old mansion find out that they have to live in it as part of a clause in the will or be disinherited, but they soon find out of its history of everybody whom had lived there before them having either died in weird accidents or having had killed each other.

    You've seen it all before, and this one is too low-budget and slow paced to be scary, and doesn't have any real surprises in the climax. No special effects or gore to speak of, in fact the only really amusing thing about the whole film is the quality of the English dubbing, which at times is as bad as a cheap martial arts movie.

    3 out of 10, pretty low in the pecking order of 80's haunted house movies.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Carlo Ausino is credited as "Charles Austin" on English prints but under his real name on Italian ones.
    • Goofs
      When praising Francois to Elissa, Lucy seems to have gotten out half the sentence with her lips before the audio kicks in, and her mouth continues to move after the sound stops.
    • Quotes

      Elisa: [to Tony] No, no! Look, stop it now! Don't you understand? Can't you see? It's this house. This is a cursed house. Stop! Stop! No!

      [kills him]

    • Connections
      Referenced in Wacko (1982)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 15, 1982 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Don't Look in the Attic
    • Filming locations
      • Piemonte, Italy
    • Production company
      • Antonelliana Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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