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The Haunted Strangler (also known as Grip of the Strangler and originally titled The Judas Hole) is a 1958 British horror film directed by Robert Day. It was adapted from "Stranglehold", a story which screenwriter Jan Read had written specially for Boris Karloff, and was shot back to back with producer Richard Gordon's Fiend Without a Face, with both later being released as a double feature by MGM.[3]

The Haunted Strangler
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Day
Written byJohn Croydon (as "John C. Cooper")
Jan Read
Based onan original story by Jan Read
Produced byJohn Croydon
executive
Richard Gordon
StarringBoris Karloff
Jean Kent
Elizabeth Allan
Anthony Dawson
CinematographyLionel Banes
Edited byPeter Mayhew
Music byBuxton Orr
Production
company
Amalgamated Productions
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (U.S.)
Eros Films (U.K.)
Release dates
11 May 1958 (United States)
11 October 1958 (United Kingdom)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£80,000[1]
Box office$650,000 (on double bill)[2]

Plot


In Victorian era-London, Edward Styles is accused of being the notorious Haymarket Strangler, the brutal killer of five women. He is tried and executed for these crimes. As he is being buried, an unknown person slips a knife into his coffin.

Twenty years later, James Rankin (Boris Karloff), a novelist and social reformer, launches an investigation to prove that Styles was innocent. His search for clues leads him to the sleazy Judas Hole music hall, where the Strangler picked his victims from the can-can dancers and loose women. Rankin comes to believe that the real murderer was a doctor named Tennant, who was institutionalized after Styles was executed, then disappeared with a nurse from the hospital. He sets out to find Tennant. Rankin goes to Newgate Prison cemetery, where Styles was buried and disinters his body. He finds the knife in the coffin and holding it causes a physical transformation: his face is distorted and his left arm is paralyzed. He is now a crazed murderer, and he returns to the Judas Hole where he kills a dancer. Alternating between himself and the killer, Rankin kills others, finally coming to realize that he is, in fact, Tennant, the person he's been looking for. His wife confirms this, telling him that she spirited him away from the hospital twenty years earlier because she had fallen in love with him. Again taking up the knife, he kills her and escapes his house. When he returns, as Rankin, he confesses that he is the killer, but no one believes him. Thinking he has gone insane, the authorities commit him to an asylum. There he again assumes the persona of the killer and escapes. He returns to his house and attempts to kill his daughter, but stops himself and becomes Rankin again. Confronted by the police, he leaps out a window and goes back to Newgate cemetery to put the knife back into Styles' grave. The police find him there and kill him.


Cast



Production


The film was originally going to be called Stranglehold and was written by Jan Read, a friend of Boris Karloff's. He gave the script to producer Richard Gordon, who was looking to make a horror movie in the U.K. Gordon set up Amalgamated Productions with Charles Vetters and had started providing U.S. funding and talent for eight pictures shot in Britain.

Amalgamated went into partnership with British producer John Croydon and negotiated a deal with distributor Eros Films who agreed to guarantee 70% of the film's budget after delivery of the final product. The remaining 30% of the budget was provided by the National Film Finance Corporation.[1]

The agreement with Eros was conditional on Amalgamated providing a second film, so Gordon arranged to make Fiend Without a Face back to back with a different cast and director. MGM picked up both films for release.[1] Gordon later estimated the cost of the two movies together was approximately £80,000 exclusive of the costs of imported American stars.[4]

Read's script was rewritten by John Croydon, who brought in the idea of making the killer a Jack the Ripper-style murderer and having the transformation be physical (in the original draft, Rankin was only possessed by the killer's spirit).[1]

The film was shot in Walton Studios in Surrey.[1] Karloff was paid $27,500 for four weeks, with an option to make a second film for Amalgamated.[4]

Executive producer Richard Gordon and interviewer Tom Weaver talk about the making of The Haunted Strangler on the audio commentary of the Criterion DVD, available as part of the 2007 box set Monsters and Madmen.


Reception


According to MGM records, this film and Fiend Without a Face together earned $350,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $300,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit to the studio of $160,000.[2]


See also



References


  1. John Hamilton, The British Independent Horror Film 1951–70, Hemlock Books 2013, p. 29-34
  2. The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  3. Stephen Jacobs, Boris Karloff: More Than a Monster, Tomahawk Press 2011, p. 410-412
  4. Tom Weaver, The Horror Hits of Richard Gordon, Bear Manor Media 2011, p. 26-40



На других языках


- [en] The Haunted Strangler

[it] Lo strangolatore folle

Lo strangolatore folle (Grip of the Strangler) è un film del 1958 diretto da Robert Day.



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