An English country house provides the setting for four Robert Bloch tales in the Amicus anthology film, THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD. A.J. Stoker (John Bryans) explains to Detective Inspector Holloway (John Bennett) that the murders the detective wants to solve stem from an evil which dwells in the walls of the cottage. To prove his theory to the incredulous police officer, he tells four stories.
“Method for Murder” stars Denholm Elliott as Charles Hillyer, an author of murder mysteries who needs the peace and quiet of a country house to write. He and his wife, Alice (Joanna Dunham) move into the house so Charles can finish his book. Charles loves the house from the beginning. With bookshelves swollen with Edgar Allen Poe books and gothic bric-a-brac, he thinks the house will be the perfect cure for his writer’s block. He’s right. Soon, Charles’ creative juices flow and he creates a crazed killer to perform his literary evil deeds. When Charles thinks he sees this madman around his house, things go off the rails a bit. Elliott and Dunham play well together and the direction by Peter Duffell moves it along smartly.
You know when you go into a rural wax museum and see a figure who looks like your ex? Me neither. Philip Grayson (Peter Cushing) has worked hard all his life and amassed enough to live out the rest of it comfortably. He sees the house as a quiet spot where he can read and think. While strolling through the nearby village, Grayson sees a sign for Jacquelin’s Museum of Horror. Charmed by the thought of such a place out in the country, Grayson enters the shop. Unfortunately, all is not as it seems in the quaint museum. “Waxworks” also stars Joss Ackland as Neville, Grayson’s old friend, who also wanders into the shop. The two men become fixated on what they find there. They probably should have gone into the tea shop instead.
Christopher Lee looks sufficiently tweedy in “Sweets to the Sweet”. He plays John Reid, a successful businessman who moves out to the country house with his daughter, Jane (Chloe Franks). He doesn’t want to send the shy, troubled girl to school so he hires a private tutor, Ann Norton (Nyree Dawn Porter) to teach her at home. The teacher and child develop a bond almost immediately and Ann begins to wonder why Reid wants to keep Jane so isolated. The closer teacher and student get, the farther apart Reid and his daughter become. What’s the secret causing such tension? I’ll never tell.
In “The Cloak”, Jon Pertwee plays Paul Henderson, a conceited movie star on the decline. Forced to appear in a low-budget vampire film, Henderson complains about everything from the script to the wardrobe. To introduce some authenticity into his role, Henderson heads to a costume shop and buys an old cloak. As soon as he puts it on, Henderson discovers the cloak is more than just a costume. Ingrid Pitt also stars in this fun take on the horror film business. There’s also a cool in-joke. In an obvious reference to Christopher Lee, Henderson says he wants to play a vampire “…like Bela Lugosi, not this new fella.” I smiled all through The Cloak. The whole cast, including Geoffrey Bayldon and an uncredited Joanna Lumley, worked well together.
“I’m telling you that director’s a Dalek.”
The writing, cast, and atmosphere in THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD keep you entertained and thinking. Fun flick.
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