May 24, 2012

Films

The Vampire Lovers – 1970 | 91 mins | Horror | Colour

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Plot Synopsis

The Vampire Lovers

The Vampire Lovers was Hammer’s first and only co-production with Hollywood’s leading horror specialists American International, who have been responsible for most of the Edgar Allan Poe pictures. This film tapped a new source of classic horror literature, the work of J. Sheridan Le Fanu, and injected an audacious dose of sex into the proceedings.

Ingrid Pitt plays a beautiful female vampire, Mircalla Karnstein alias Carmilla. Carmilla rises from the grave to avenge the deaths of her relatives, claiming not only the odd male as victim, but also several attractive young girls, a lesbian aspect emphasised by her fanged attention to their breasts. Moving on to the family of Roger Morton (George Cole), Carmilla continues her revenge afresh on his impressionable daughter Emma (Madeleine Smith). Douglas Wilmer’s Baron Hartog is Carmilla’s chief adversary, arranging for a stake to penetrate her heart, while Peter Cushing‘s General Spielsdorf, father of one of her victims, makes doubly sure by removing her head!

Production Team

Roy Ward Baker: Director
Scott MacGregor: Art Direction
Moray Grant: Cinematography
Brian Cox: Costume Design
James Needs: Editing
Pearl Tipaldi: Make-up
Tom Smith: Make-up
Harry Robertson: Original Music
Michael Style: Producer
Harry Fine: Producer
Michael Style: Script
Tudor Gates: Script
Harry Fine: Script
Claude Hitchcock: Sound
Roy Hyde: Sound
Dennis Whitlock: Sound

Cast

Ingrid Pitt: Marcilla/Carmilla/Mircalla Karnstein
George Cole: Roger Morton
Kate O’Mara: The Governess
Peter Cushing: General von Spielsdorf
Ferdy Mayne: Doctor
Douglas Wilmer: Baron Joachim von Hartog
Madeline Smith: Emma Morton
Dawn Addams: The Countess
Jon Finch: Carl Ebhardt



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