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La Terreur des morts-vivants

Original title: Terror
  • 1978
  • 12
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
La Terreur des morts-vivants (1978)
The descendants of a witch hunting family and their close friends are stalked and killed by a mysterious entity.
Play trailer1:33
1 Video
86 Photos
Slasher HorrorHorror

The descendants of a witch hunting family and their close friends are stalked and killed by a mysterious entity.The descendants of a witch hunting family and their close friends are stalked and killed by a mysterious entity.The descendants of a witch hunting family and their close friends are stalked and killed by a mysterious entity.

  • Director
    • Norman J. Warren
  • Writers
    • David McGillivray
    • Les Young
    • Moira Young
  • Stars
    • John Nolan
    • Carolyn Courage
    • James Aubrey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Norman J. Warren
    • Writers
      • David McGillivray
      • Les Young
      • Moira Young
    • Stars
      • John Nolan
      • Carolyn Courage
      • James Aubrey
    • 54User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Trailer

    Photos86

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    John Nolan
    John Nolan
    • James Garrick
    Carolyn Courage
    • Ann Garrick
    James Aubrey
    James Aubrey
    • Philip
    Sarah Keller
    • Suzy
    Tricia Walsh
    Tricia Walsh
    • Viv
    Glynis Barber
    Glynis Barber
    • Carol Tucker
    Michael Craze
    Michael Craze
    • Gary
    Rosie Collins
    • Diane
    Chuck Julian
    • Phil the Greek
    Elaine Ives-Cameron
    Elaine Ives-Cameron
    • Dolores Hamilton
    Patti Love
    Patti Love
    • Hannah
    Mary Maude
    • Lady Garrick
    William Russell
    William Russell
    • Lord Garrick
    Peter Craze
    • The Director
    Peter Attard
    Peter Attard
    • Curtis the Actor
    • (as Peter Atiard)
    Peter Sproule
    • Policeman
    Colin Howells
    • Detective
    Peter Mayhew
    Peter Mayhew
    • The Mechanic
    • Director
      • Norman J. Warren
    • Writers
      • David McGillivray
      • Les Young
      • Moira Young
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    5.21.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6deandraslater

    Nice Argento Homage

    A witch's curse causes bad things to happen to all the people involved in the production of a horror movie and the witch herself might have possessed one of its stars.

    Clearly inspired by the work of Dario Argento, Terror is one of those movies where it's best to leave logic at the door and enjoy the gory set pieces and colorful lighting. It starts off slow and even frustrating since there's not a lot of plot or character development to latch on to, but something happens midway through where, if you just turn off your brain and go along for the ride, you'll have a good time.
    joe_powell

    Absolute tosh

    I'm easily pleased, a late night horror film doesn't have to make a lot of sense to keep me watching but Terror(1979) was a film I genuinely struggled to watch to the end. It opens with a home made horror film being screened and its makers tittering over it. What follows is no better and certainly no more convincing. Excruciating acting abounds as an ancient curse returns..yawn. It sums up everything that is truly awful about 70s horror films. The women in it are 'naice' girls who have clearly had little experience acting and emote their every line and show uncertainty by starting to talk, pausing and then starting again. The awful bonhomie and hipness of the male characters is equally awful. It really does make little sense either. I especially liked the part where the girl returns home and is seen washing copious amounts of blood from her hands but her flatmate, who she barely knows, doesn't think to mention this to the police. There's clearly a rational explanation of course. Another outstanding part is when a woman is chased through the woods by a man with a knife. She takes refuge in a shed which he briefly attacks. Less than a minute later she decides it is probably safe to go outside (as you would of course) and is stabbed to death in perhaps the least enthusiastic attacking scene ever put to film. In short there isn't even any comedy value to be gained from this as a bad movie, it is just dire and is one of the least interesting films I have ever seen.
    world_of_weird

    Warren and McGillivray - a killer combination!

    When Norman J.Warren (auteur of such shrill, purposely gruesome films as Inseminoid) and exploitation stalwart David McGillivray got together in the late seventies to create this low-budget shocker, the end result could only be a solid winner, and TERROR delivers the goods. It's not for all tastes, but the effective atmosphere (Warren had obviously seen a few Dario Argento films, which helps) and the well-staged scenes of death and supernatural mayhem in the last half of the film are worth the price of admission alone. It's certainly head and shoulders above the 'typical' British horror films of the day - such as Alan Birkinshaw's atrocious KILLER'S MOON and THE LEGACY, a tedious schlock-fest in which Who vocalist Roger Daltrey dies during a trachaeotomy to remove a fishbone he never ate(!) - and the widescreen photography, coupled with appropriately garish colours courtesy of (one assumes) outmoded film stock, looks superb. There's also a neat cameo from Milton Reid, one of those "I know his face, but what's his name?" actors if ever there was one, and a decapitation set-piece that curiously plays like a low-budget homage to David Warner's grisly death in THE OMEN, whilst pointing the way forward to the lift-shaft carnage in that film's lackluster sequel. This is a solid-gold classic example of the kind of film that would never get made nowadays, anywhere, and will undoubtedly bring back fond memories of late-night horror double features down at the local fleapit for British viewers of a certain age.
    5FieCrier

    witch film, that looks like a slasher film at times, with very good death scenes

    Many of the movies included in Rhino's Horrible Horrors Vol. 1 box set are just that. This one was fairly good though, certainly comparatively.

    The deaths scenes in this movies are definitely stand-outs, and if people are looking for good scenes like that, here's a movie that's been overlooked. There's some decent suspense at times too, and fair special effects in poltergeist-type witch activity.

    The movie starts with a title sequence of black and white still frames tinted red of people's faces, sometimes a succession of them giving the appearance of movement, then freezing. The title appears, cracks, and bleeds. Not bad. There's then a segment that is a movie-in- the-movie, a witch film in which a witch gets caught and burned at the stake, but gets her revenge on the people responsible.

    This film is projected in the home of the producer, and the film was based on his family history, and his home and other items were used in the film. After a game of hypnosis seems to go wrong, resulting in the producer getting sliced with a sword, a woman runs off into the woods and gets attacked seemingly by a slasher. Other people get attacked by blades, while others die in more bizarre ways. At one point, a car floats up into tree branches!

    The acting is pretty good, but somehow there was something lacking that kept me from getting terribly involved in the movie.
    7lost-in-limbo

    "You Don't sense it"?

    British exploitation filmmaker Norman J. Warren sure knew how to lay on the gratuitous shocks -- thick and fast. On "TERROR" he doesn't disappoint. In what is definitely the most fun, I've had with a Warren film. With that in mind, his previous 1977 "PREY" would still be my favorite. It's hard not to think Warren was influenced by Dario Argento's "SUSPIRIA", in what clearly looks a crude, downbeat and cheap knockoff.

    Anyhow, Warren does the best, with what's in front of him. Working with such a stringy plot where clichés form the basis. It's easy to see what we get are set-pieces looking to shock and thrill. As the build-up of those highly-charged moments (with an ominously dynamic electronic score) are far more enticing, than that of the thinly detailed dramas in between. Well, outside of a few amusing moments caught on a film-set. The actual central story involving a witch cursing the family descendents of those who burned her at the stake remains an afterthought --- almost becoming a shadow to the mean-spirited violence and nightmarish absurdity. I must say best not to delve too deep into the narrative, as making sense is the furthest thing on mind. Even the lead performances of John Nolan and Carolyn Courage are fairly po-faced, but, I guess, it's only natural when there's no escaping your foretold doom. At least there are colourful minor supports, like Glynis Barber and Elaine Ives-Cameron. Another bright inclusion was the posters of "THRILLER: A CRUEL PICTURE" (1973) and Warren's "SATAN'S SLAVE" (1976) making their way into a few shots. Sure the former poster would bring a smile to cult-fans.

    Like most of Warren's presentations, pacing can be bumpy, yet his nonchalant handling, atmospheric lighting and use of authentic locations pays off. What starts slow and conventional by playing out like a slasher / giallo --- gradually begins to go off the rails when the supernatural fury of our string-pulling entity comes to the forefront, where each death madly outdoes the last. It's well worth-the-wait, as during the creative third act when the action returns to the cottage, there are some crazy stunts, like the evaluating car and maniac light-show climax.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the scene in the deserted film studio, where Philip is attacked by movie paraphernalia, the film stock is actually nine damaged prints of La Fièvre du samedi soir (1977), obtained from Rank Laboratories.
    • Goofs
      When a sword pierces Ann, its blade protrudes from her back vertical to her body, but from her front the blade is horizontal to her body.
    • Crazy credits
      L.E. Mack ... Mad Dolly is after the Dolly Grip that pushes James Aubrey down the stairs
    • Alternate versions
      The Finnish video version of Terror is cut. British version by Satanica is uncut.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Just You and Me, Kid/The Frisco Kid/Goldengirl/The Villain/Breaking Away (1979)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Terror?Powered by Alexa
    • What are the differences between the old British VHS and the Uncut version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 1, 1981 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Terror
    • Filming locations
      • Pirbright, Surrey, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Bowergange Productions
      • Crystal Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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