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51 out of 52 people found the following review useful:
The Original British Horror Omnibus/Anthology, 27 May 2001
Author:
BaronBl00d (baronbl00d@aol.com) from NC
Dead of Night is responsible for so many films made in the horror genre, because it was the first that took a huge gamble and pieced several unconnected stories together within a narrative that loosely keeps them together. Tales From The Crypt, Vault of Horror, Tales That Witness Madness, The House That Dripped Blood, Torture Garden, The Monster Club, Creepshow, Tales From the Darkside: the Movie are just a few of the films that owe part of their existence to this little British film. The frame story details how a man goes to the country for a weekend only to say he has been there before and met the people there before in his recurring dream. He is thrust into a discussion between those that believe in his dream and one lone doctor(psychiatrist) who seems able to explain all phenomena in a scientific way. Each of the guests then in turn tells a story about their brush with the supernatural. Most of the stories are very inventive(although by modern standards cliched as they have been copied many times)and entertaining. Two of the stories really stand-out. The first is about a mirror that shows you a different room as you look into it, and the other about a ventriloquist with a split personality. The other stories are good, and one is humorous(perhaps out of place but fun nonetheless). Acting is solid throughout with Mervyn Johns as the man subjected to the same dream over and over again. Richard Valk excels as the doctor, and Michael Redgrave is outstanding as the man able to give the gift of speech to a "dummy." Also of interest is the pairing of Basil Radford and Naughton Wayne form Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes. They DO compliment each other so very nicely. A wonderful, eerie film.
51 out of 61 people found the following review useful:
One of the best horror films ever!, 20 September 2000
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Author:
Horror-Fan from Bridgewater, MA, USA.
This is one of my favorite horror film along with Masaki Kobayashi's
Kwaidan. Like Kwaidan, this is also a horror anthology. But this directed by
four directors and are not separate like Kwaidan's are. This film begins
with an architect arriving at a remote farm house for a party. When he's
there he feels like he's been here before. Then everyone starts telling
scary stories. Each of these stories are shot by different directors. The
first story "Christmas Party" is about a girl at a Christmas Party who finds
a hidden flight of stairs. She goes up them and finds a boy who's crying.
The second story "The Haunted Mirror" is about an engaged couple who marry
and the wife buys him a mirror. Needless to say, it is not a normal mirror
with a horrifying past. The third story is called "The Hearse Driver". It is
about a man who dreams he sees a hearse go by and a creepy man iside tells
him "There's room for one more". This becomes a premonition of things to
come. I heard a story like this one in a scary story book. The fourth story,
"Golfing Story" is about two golfers who love a girl so much they hold a
special golfing tournament. The winner gets to marry the girl the loser
dies. One of the men wins and the other is forced to drown himself. The
fifth and final story "The Ventriloquist" is about a ventriloquist who
thinks his dummy is out to get him.
As I said this could be one of the best horror films ever.
Forget Jason or Freddy or Chuckie, this is the real thing. It certainly is
the best B&W horror film. It is very creepy and it really works well in
imparting the feeling of the supernatural. ESPECIALLY the "Ventrioloquist"
tale. That is chilling enough to scare the bejebers out of you. If you are a
fan of new high tech garbage slasher flicks, then I DO NOT recommend this to
you. But if you really love all horror films, classic or new, then you will
treasure this creepy classic.
Rating: ***** out of *****
53 out of 67 people found the following review useful:
A CHERISHED CHILDHOOD MEMORY OF FEAR, 28 December 2003
Author:
Randall Phillip (monstermonkeyhead@yahoo.com) from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
I was fortunate enough to see this movie the way it was meant to
be seen: I was about 13 and my brother was 11. We were
supposed to go to bed, but we snuck and watched this movie. We
were also fortunate enough to see it on PBS (of all places!) uncut,
without commercial interruption. Perhaps, the fear of being caught
by our parents added to the experience. We sat by the flickering
light of the TV set (on low volume) in the dark. Needless to say, by
the end of the movie we thought our heads would explode with
fear. I thought my eyes would bulge out of my sockets. It was a
definitive bonding experience for me and my brother. Strange that
fear should be so relished! Up to this day, when posed with the
question, "You wouldn't do that?" Our response is in that devilish
high-pitched voice, "Wouldn't I? WOULDN'T I??" Thanks to Anchor
Bay putting out the dvd double feature of Dead of Night with Queen
of Spades (also excellent!), I have just watched it again and that
old friend fear comes right back. Hugo Fitch lives on!
35 out of 42 people found the following review useful:
Scared me nearly to death as a kid., 12 March 2001
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Author:
cweed06 from New Jersey, USA
I saw Dead of Night when I was ten years old, and the horror stayed with me through most of my teen years. The mini-story about the antique mirror that showed the reflection of a totally different room than the one the man was in, made me afraid to be alone in a room with a mirror. Even to this day, as a grown man, I am a bit uncomfortable if I am alone at night in a room with a big, old mirror. Most of the mini-stories in this movie stayed with me for years, making me shudder whenever I would think about them. It is interesting, too, that the story of the ventriloquist's dummy that "comes to life," an oft-repeated theme in other movies and TV shows, originated with Dead of Night. I did not see the movie again until decades later. I was not as horrified, seeing it as an adult, but certain scenes still made me shudder. The main, underlying, weird idea of the movie, which becomes plain in the closing scene, leaves you with a spooky feeling and this thought: "could something like this be true of my life too?"
27 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
It's Deja Vu all over again, 18 September 2005
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Author:
theowinthrop from United States
This is one of those horror stories that just does not diminish over
the years. An architect (Mervyn Johns, in his best dramatic role) is
invited to the country home of a wealthy man (Roland Culver) and from
the moment he drives up, he is aware that something familiar, and evil,
is involved in this visit. Yet nothing bad is going on - it should be a
routine visit. Still if it is a business visit, from the start it is
not treated as a business visit. For one thing there is a set of guest
at the home, including a psychiatrist (Frederick Valk), a young girl
(Sally Ann Howe), a female family friend (Googie Withers), and a racing
car driver (Anthony Baird). Johns acts nervously when he enters (he
recognizes the interior of the house as well as it's outside
surroundings), and he explains the situation to Culver and the others.
They reassure him nothing is wrong, and proceed to give him a drink and
discuss unexplained occult phenomenon they have all experienced (even
the skeptical voice of reason Valk). It is these five experiences that
take up the bulk of the film.
Although it is a well known horror movie, I will avoid explaining the
moment of horror and how it expands, involving all the stories in a
fierce conclusion. This is the best "Chinese Box" story that has ever
been put on screen, in that everything does fall into place. The irony
(for the viewer - and for Walter Craig, the nervous architect - is that
we find at the end that the whole nightmare is about to begin all over
again.
The best of the sequences (although a matter of taste) are the racing
driver's, the female friend's, and the psychiatrist's. The driver,
recovering from a crash in a hospital, keeps having a nightmare where
he sees a hearse outside his window at a certain time, with a driver
(Miles Malleson) who repeats, "Just room for one inside sir." This
actually is a classic occult urban legend, as the face of the figure of
doom reappears later at a key moment to scare the dream bearer into not
proceeding with a normal act. The female friend's story is about how
she and her husband barely manage to survive the acquiring of a
Victorian mirror from an antiques dealer (Esme Percy). The mirror, it
seems, has a life and evil spirit of it's own, and nearly makes history
repeat itself.
The moment that raised this film to it's heights was the psychiatrist's
tale. It deals with a ventriloquist (Michael Redgrave) who shoots a
rival (Hartley Power) for trying to steal the affections of his dummy
Hugo. Besides the obvious homosexual overtones of the story, the story
has Redgrave's best film performance (unless one counts his Jack
Worthing in THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST or his Andrew
Crocker-Harris in THE BROWNING VERSION) as the insane Maxwell Freer. It
also has a chilling unexpected conclusion when Valk, trying to get to
the heart of Redgrave's psychosis, unleashes a demon that nobody
expected.
The other two stories are less frightening - one (Sally Howes' story
about a personal ghost experience, probably when she was visiting the
English town of Road) concerning an actual 1860 murder of a little boy,
Francis Saville Kent. The murderer who was eventually punished (his
sister Constance) survived a twenty year incarceration after her
confession - and lived to be 101 in Australia. Nowadays, recent studies
of that case suggest that Constance was not the killer - her father
Samuel, or his mistress, the family nurse, may have killed Francis to
keep him from talking to his mother about seeing a tryst. Constance
loved her father, and may have taken the rap to protect him. However,
Francis was her step-brother, not a full brother, and the originally
investigation by the brilliant Scotland Yard Detective Jonathan Whicher
in 1860 pointed to Constance as the killer.
The least of the stories (told by Culver) is based on an amusing golf -
ghost tale by H.G. Wells. It is a pleasant diversion (it stars Basil
Radford and Naunton Wayne as rival golf players), and allows the
segment with Redgrave greater effect by coming just before it.
The film has had effects ever since it came out. For instance, Danny
Kaye (who slightly resembles Redgrave) played a ventriloquist with
psychological problems (or an independent dummy) in KNOCK ON WOOD a few
years later. A troublesome dummy named "Gabbo" (also a reference to
Eric Von Stroheim's THE GREAT GABBO) briefly replaced "Crusty the
Clown" in the rating of Springfield in THE SIMPSONS. But for the best
effect it is Redgrave's moment of madness here, and the wonderful
climax of this frightening movie. Are there better deja vu films? Just
room for one sir!
21 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
A prime example of a well-made horror-anthology, 27 July 2006
Author:
Camera Obscura from The Dutch Mountains
Anthology n.: a collection of selected literary pieces or passages of
works of art or music.
This classic horror-anthology from Britain's Ealing Studios is composed
of four separate stories, composed around a group of strangers that is
mysteriously gathered at a country estate where each reveals their
chilling tale of the supernatural. But even after these frightening
tales are told, does one final nightmare await them all?
The horror-anthology has proved a difficult sub-genre, usually made
with only limited success, because it's notoriously difficult to get it
right. If only one of the stories fails to deliver, the whole piece is
dragged down. But this multi-part horror effort from Britain's Ealing
Studios still proves to be very effective and justifiably still is one
of the most revered and successful horror anthologies ever made. It
features appearances by many of the best British actors of it's day,
including Mervyn Johns, Ralph Michael, Basil Radford and Michael
Redgrave. With four different directors at the helm, not all four
segments are equally effective and are quite different in tone, but
they are all good in their own right. The standout for me, not judged
in terms of the best, but certainly the most frightening story of the
four, is "The Ventriloquist Dummy" by Brazilian born Alberto Cavalcanti
(he's simply billed as Cavalcanti), the only non-British director
involved in DEAD OF NIGHT. Michael Redgrave plays a renowned
ventriloquist who descends into an abyss of madness and murder, when
his dummy takes on a life of his own. One of the most unsettling
stories I've ever seen.
The somewhat less effective (if only slightly) mirror sequence by
Robert Hamer shows something very scary can be achieved with very basic
means. When Ralph Michael looks in the mirror, to his horror he keeps
seeing the reflection of a dark Gothic room lit with candles,
completely different from the room he's standing in and slowly, he
begins to loose his mind. Ultimately, it is the extremely unsettling
music score that makes it work. Basic but very effective.
As with most anthologies, it's difficult to keep track of the main
interwoven storyline, because between the different stories we're told,
your mind is still very much trying to grasp what you've just seen.
This is probably why the genre became increasingly unpopular over the
years. With the exception of "The Ventriloquist Dummy", don't expect
anything particularly scary, but it did leave me quietly disturbed. The
peerless British cast and the witty, slightly old-fashioned
tongue-in-cheek dialog makes this very pleasant and appropriately
unsettling viewing.
Camera Obscura --- 8/10 --- 10/10 for "The Ventriloquist Dummy"
22 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
Grandfather of the multi-horror story film genre, 19 May 2002
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Author:
henrywooten from Washington DC
Dead of Night is one of those movies that actually started a genre. Tame to today's standards many of its short stories can be traced to horror plots today; most notably the ventriloquist dummy come to life (Michael Redgrave sequence). This movie takes horror where it should remain...the suspense film. We can see all the blood and gore today but why do films like The Six Sense (1999) or What Lies Beneath (2000) remain a success? Everyone has their own fears and thoughts of horror; and the thought of that fear and horror adds to the suspense film in all ways more thansay the breed of horror slasher films...probably best portrayed by Psycho, Halloween and the Scream Films. Dead of Night isn't a Hitchcock film but it uses the same actors of his England days and uses the same suspense techniques seen in his tv series. Check this film out and watch it from the perspective of the 1940s viewers eyes and see why it was popular. Also check out Cat People (1942)and M (1931)
17 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
"Christmas Party" Episode, 30 May 2005
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Author:
christinekay from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Many of the reviews I've read over the years of "Dead of Night" seem to
sideline the "Christmas Party" episode as being less successful and
effective than the other stories involved. At first, I tended to agree
with them; however, after a while it dawned on me that there was
something rather unusual about the sequence that I couldn't quite place
my finger on. Normally, in a ghost story, any part of the story
containing the appearance of the ghost looks rather unreal in
comparison with the everyday part to underline the supernatural aspect
of the spectre's apparition. However, in this particular story, it's
the (real) children's party that looks unreal, and the (supernatural)
ghost that looks real. The party shows a massive house, with a roaring
log fire, loads of toys, food, etc, and the children enjoying
themselves enormously, without any adults present. It has the look of a
fantasy of the perfect party any child would want. However, the meeting
with the young boy seems more rooted in reality, and this is the irony
of the story - that Constance Kent, the sister he mentions, actually
did exist and did admit to killing her younger brother. In real life,
the boy was actually a baby when he was murdered, but his age has
obviously been changed so that Sally could talk to him. This gives an
extra poignancy to the story, in that he likes Sally and presumably
would have wanted her for his real sister, but instead had Constance,
who killed him - the worst crime she could have committed against a
helpless child.
I think it would be wrong to overlook this sequence as unworthy of
comment, and reassess its value in "Dead of Night". It may not be as
frightening as the famed ventriloquist story, but it does carry an
emotional power which is perhaps its strongest point.
26 out of 39 people found the following review useful:
And I thought I might have dreamed up the whole thing!, 11 March 2004
Author:
cleda from Pittsburgh
For years I've wondered if I really saw a movie that served as the source
for innumerable childhood dreams and fears. I tried telling folks about
seeing this British film on TV in the 1960s, but it was so jumbled in my
memory that I really couldn't describe it properly. I knew it led to a
lifelong dread of ventriloquist dummies, but I couldn't figure out how
that
tied to an architect at a country house party.
For no apparent reason today I put "ventriloquist movie" into yahoo and
skimmed down to Dead of Night - British 1945. At long last I knew that I
hadn't imagined the whole thing - and boy am I relieved! I'm also
delighted
to find that I've been "haunted" by a classic of the genre that has had a
big impact on so many others.
I'm looking forward to ordering it and watching it again.
17 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Round Robin of Ghost Tales, 27 August 2004
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Author:
Mike-764 (michaelnella@yahoo.com) from Flushing, NY
Walter Craig goes away for the weekend to relax to a place suggested by a friend. When he arrives he finds that he's has been to this place before, but in his dreams, and the host, his mother, and the 5 other guests he has also encountered in his dreams (though never in person), but as Craig later puts it, they should be called nightmares. One of the guests, Psychologist Dr. Van Straaten, believes there is a logical explanation for Craig knowing the house and of the guests, but the remaining guests debunk Van Straaten's theory but telling of their supernatural encounters, but Craig later believes the longer he stays at the manor, the greater chance, tragedy will occur. This is the movie that Tales of the Crypt could not ever hope to become. The film starts off slowly (its lone drawback), but as the film progresses, it become more mysterious and eerie. The Hearse Driver segment is wooden, the Christmas party is the weakest, the Haunted Mirror is a great spook tale, and the Golfing Story is a nice humorous change of pace, however the Ventriloquist's Dummy segment, the one the film is known for, is clearly the best of the lot, with Michael Redgrave giving the performance of his life as Frere. Mervyn Johns is very good as the tormented Craig, and the linking narratives are add its own spookiness as well. Great ending. Rating, 10.
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