fiction.wikisort.org - MovieThe Old Dark House is a 1963 British-American comedy horror film directed by William Castle. It is a remake of Universal's 1932 film of the same name directed by James Whale. The film was based on the 1927 novel by J. B. Priestley originally published under the name Benighted, and the new screenplay was written by Robert Dillon. The opening title art was drawn by legendary macabre cartoonist Charles Addams, whose signature is painted by a hairy hand.
1962 film by William Castle
The Old Dark House |
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 US film poster |
Directed by | William Castle |
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Screenplay by | Robert Dillon |
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Based on | Benighted by J. B. Priestley |
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Produced by | |
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Starring | |
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Cinematography | Arthur Grant |
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Edited by | James Needs |
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Music by | Benjamin Frankel |
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Production companies |
- William Castle Productions
- Hammer Film Productions
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Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
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Release dates |
- 30 October 1963 (1963-10-30) (U.S.)
- 16 September 1966 (1966-09-16) (UK)
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Running time | 86 minutes |
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Countries |
- United Kingdom
- United States
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Language | English |
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Synopsis
Tom Penderel, an American car salesman in London, delivers a car to an old mansion on Dartmoor for his eccentric roommate Casper Femm. The car is damaged by a falling statue in a raging storm, Tom enters the house, and finds that his roommate Casper is dead. Tom is invited to stay at the house by members of Casper's family, including his twin brother Jasper, his cousins, the demure young Cecily and the seductive Morgana, and his Uncle Potiphar, who has been building an ark in anticipation of another great flood.
Each of the relatives is required to return to the dilapidated mansion before midnight each evening or forfeit his share of the family fortune. During the night, one of the Femm family dies every hour. First Agatha Femm, Casper's mother, is discovered with her knitting needles stuck in her neck. Casper's twin brother, Jasper, is the next victim, followed by Roderick, the head of the family.
Tom stumbles upon the fact that the killer is a woman, and he suspects Morgana, but discovers that Cecily is guilty just before she confesses, explaining that she wanted the entire family estate. Cecily runs from the house, and Tom discovers that she has placed time bombs in all of the clocks in the house. Racing against time, he frantically defuses each of the bombs. With moments to spare, he hurls the last bomb out of the window, and it explodes at Cecily's feet.
Cast
Reception
The remake has not been as well received by modern critics as the original film. Craig Butler of the film database Allmovie wrote of the 1963 film, that "When compared with the James Whale original upon which it is based, this remake of The Old Dark House is pretty sorry stuff."[1] Halliwell's Film and Video Guide 2000 describes this film as "a travesty which has nothing to do with the 1932 film and possesses no merit of its own. The cast is left floundering".[2] The Hammer Story: The Authorised History of Hammer Films called it "one of the oddest pictures [Hammer Film Productions] ever made", but "strangely endearing".
Home video
In the US, the film was originally released by Sony Pictures on an anamorphic 1.85 aspect ratio DVD, with the only extra being the original theatrical trailer. It was later paired on disc with Mr. Sardonicus and included in two separate William Castle box sets. The original disc was later reissued as a DVD-R burn-on demand release from Sony Pictures Choice Collection. The film has also been released on DVD in Spain, retitled La vieja casa oscura, both separately and as part of a William Castle box set.
See also
- List of American films of 1963
References
- Butler, Craig. "The Old Dark House review". Allmovie. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
- John Walker (ed.) Halliwell's Film and Video Guide 2000, London: HarperCollins, 1999, p.611
Sources
- Hearn, Marcus; Barnes, Alan (September 2007). "The Old Dark House". The Hammer Story: The Authorised History of Hammer Films (limited ed.). Titan Books. ISBN 978-1-84576-185-1.
External links
Hammer Horror |
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Films | Quatermass | |
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Frankenstein | |
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Dracula | |
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The Mummy | |
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Jekyll & Hyde | |
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Vampires | |
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She | |
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Cave Girl | |
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The Devil | |
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The Karnstein Trilogy | |
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The Woman in Black | |
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Other films | |
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Television | |
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Characters | |
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Category |
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Novels |
- Adam in Moonshine (1927)
- Benighted (1927)
- Farthing Hall (1929 with Hugh Walpole)
- The Good Companions (1929)
- Angel Pavement (1930)
- Faraway (1932)
- I'll Tell You Everything (1932 with Gerald Bullett)
- Wonder Hero (1933)
- They Walk in the City: The Lovers in the Stone Forest (1936)
- The Doomsday Men (1938)
- Let the People Sing (1939)
- Blackout in Gretley (1942)
- Daylight on Saturday (1943)
- Three Men in New Suits (1945)
- Bright Day (1946)
- Jenny Villiers (1947)
- Festival at Farbridge (1951)
- Low Notes on a High Level (1954)
- The Magicians (1954)
- Saturn Over the Water (1961)
- The Shapes of Sleep (1962)
- Sir Michael & Sir George (1964)
- Lost Empires (1965)
- Salt Is Leaving (1966)
- It's an Old Country (1967)
- London End (1968)
- Out Of Town (1968)
- Snoggle (1971)
- Found, Lost, Found (1976)
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Short stories |
- "The Town Major of Miracourt" (1930)
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Short story collections |
- The Other Place (1953)
- The Carfitt Crisis (1974)
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Plays |
- Time Plays series
- The Good Companions (1931)
- Dangerous Corner (1932)
- The Roundabout (1932)
- Eden End (1934)
- Laburnum Grove (1934)
- Cornelius (1935)
- Duet in Floodlight (1935)
- Bees on the Boat Deck (1936)
- Time and the Conways (1937)
- I Have Been Here Before (1937)
- People at Sea (1937)
- Mystery of Greenfingers (1937)
- Music at Night (1938)
- When We Are Married (1938)
- Johnson Over Jordan (1939)
- The Long Mirror (1940)
- Goodnight Children (1942)
- They Came to a City (1943)
- Desert Highway (1944)
- An Inspector Calls (1945)
- Ever Since Paradise (1946)
- The Long Mirror (1947)
- The Rose and Crown (1947)
- The Linden Tree (1947)
- Home Is Tomorrow (1949)
- Summer Day's Dream (1949)
- Bright Shadow (1950)
- Dragon's Mouth (1952)
- Mother's Day (1953)
- Private Rooms (1953)
- Treasure on Pelican (1953)
- The White Countess (1954)
- Mr. Kettle and Mrs. Moon (1955)
- The Glass Cage (1957)
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Poetry |
- The Chapman of Rhymes (1918)
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Screenplays | |
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Non-fiction |
- Brief Diversions (1922)
- Papers from Lilliput (1922)
- Open House (1927)
- Self-selected Essays (1932)
- English Journey (1934)
- Midnight on the Desert (1937 autobiography)
- We Live In Two Worlds (1937 documentary)
- Rain Upon Godshill (1939 autobiography)
- British Women Go To War (1943)
- Margin Released (1962 autobiography)
- Man and Time (1964)
- The Edwardians (1970)
- Over The Long High Wall (1972)
- Particular Pleasures (1975)
- Instead Of The Trees (1977 autobiography)
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Film and TV adaptations | |
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Related | |
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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На других языках
[de] Das alte finstere Haus
Das alte finstere Haus ist ein britisch-amerikanischer Spielfilm aus dem Jahr 1963. Der Film entstand in Zusammenarbeit des britischen Filmstudios Hammer Films mit dem US-amerikanischen Produzenten William Castle. Castle, der auch die Regie übernahm, drehte mit diesem Film ein komödiantisches Remake des Horror-Klassikers Das Haus des Grauens aus dem Jahre 1932 von James Whale. Wie schon Whales Film basierte auch Castles Werk auf dem 1927 erschienenen Roman Von der Nacht überrascht von John Boynton Priestley.
- [en] The Old Dark House (1963 film)
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