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From Beyond the Grave |
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From Beyond the Grave - 1973 | 97 mins | Horror | ColourThe Production TeamDirector: Kevin Connor. Produce: Max Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky. Script: Raymond Christodoulou and Robin Clarke. (stories by R. Chetwynd-Hayes) Cinematography: Alan Hume. Film Editing: John Ireland. Production Design: Maurice Carter. Costume Design: John Hilling. Makeup Department: Mibs Parker and Neville Smallwood. Sound Department: Peter Handford, Peter Keen and Nolan Roberts. Costume and Wardrobe Department: Ruth Knight. Original Music: David Gamley. |
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The Cast Peter Cushing
- Antique Shop Proprietor Segment "An Act of Kindness" Ian Bannen - Christopher Lowe Diana Dors - Mabel Lowe Donald Pleasence - Jim Underwood Segment "The Elemental" Ian Carmichael - Reggie Warren Margaret Leighton - Madame Orloff Nyree Dawn Porter - Susan Warren Segment "The Gate Crasher" David Warner - Edward Charlton Wendy Allnutt - Pamela Rosalind Ayres - Prostitute Segment "The Door" Ian Ogilvy - William Seaton Lesley-Anne Down - Rosemary Seaton Jack Watson - Sir Michael Sinclair |
Plot SynopsisAlthough a vast improvement on the derisory Vault of Horror, this seventh and penultimate Amicus horror omnibus, using a quartet of stories by Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes, suffers from much the same faults as its immediate predecessors. Debut director Kevin Connor discovered the source anthology of horror stories whilst waiting in an airport, and bought first the book, then the rights to the stories. Connor was planning to adapt them as a television series, but Milton Subotsky invited me to turn them into a film. From Beyond the Grave is predictably uneven, with episodes two and three a bit more successful than the first and last one. The first and last episodes are closely modelled on the Haunted Mirror story from Dead of Night, so much so that the final segment seems to be a virtual remake of the first. But both of them are creepily effective in conjuring the parallel universes. The second is a miserable chronicle of suburban marriage, until the unhappily married clerk at the centre of the story enters into a weird extra-marital relationship with a spooky, dirge-humming daughter. The third tale of demonic possession boasts an enjoyably outrageous turn from Margaret Leighton. Situated between a cemetery and a nearby demolition contractor in the East End of London is the small 'Temptations Antiques' shop, a most curious old curiosity shop. The old proprietor (Peter Cushing) promises a surprise with every purchase. Of four customers, three cheat the enigmatic proprietor while a fourth plays fair with him; the first three pay with their lives and even the fourth has a highly unpleasant experience. The first tale, The Gate Crasher, is unusually gruesome by Amicus standards. Following a séance, Edward Charlton (David Warner) is possessed by the spirit of Jack the Ripper after purchasing an antique mirror. His flat is soon awash with blood as Charlton is degraded to genuinely disquieting depths by the bloodthirsty demands of a ghostly face in the glass, which, when materialised, serenely explains that "We are Legion; we sit in high places and fan discord." The second, An Act of Kindness, features retired army officer Christopher Lowe (Ian Bannen), who wishes to acquire a measure of self-esteem through a DSO medal to which he isn't entitled. Dominated by his wife (Diana Dors), a chance encounter with ex-service man and match seller Jim Underwood (Donald Pleasence) results the unhappily married Lowe commencing a love affair with Underwood’s daughter Emily (Angela Pleasence). In an effort to shake free of his loveless marriage, Emily uses voodoo to dispose of his wife. The third story, The Elemental, follows Reggie Warren (Ian Carmichael), whose bland, commuter-belt self-satisfaction is invaded by an invisible 'elemental' roosting on his shoulder. As the demon takes up residence, Warren's disgruntled Surrey housewife (Nyree Dawn Porter) becomes tormented by the invisible demon. Warren calls on medium Madame Orloff (Margaret Leighton) to perform an exorcism and despite all initially appearing well, there’s a demonic twist. And the fourth story, The Door, concerns William Seaton (Ian Ogilvy), who purchases an antique door and installs it in his house, only to find that it opens into the ghostly 'blue room' home of its original owner – a man who lived for the pursuit of evil and was given to performing human sacrifices. Seaton finds himself cornered by raddled Restoration necromancer Sir Michael Sinclair (Jack Watson), a grimly powerful figure bent on "the entrapment of those yet to be born." Watching the customers as they go in and out of the antique shop, a petty criminal sees the old proprietor as an easy mark. But when he attempts to rob and kill the old proprietor, he finds a chest filled with vicious Iron Maiden spikes. As the lid descends upon the robber, the shop bell rings. "Ah, another customer," says the proprietor benevolently. "Come in..." |
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