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The Beast Must Die |
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The Beast Must Die - 1974 | 93 mins | Horror | ColourThe Production TeamDirector: Paul Annett. Producer: Max Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky. Script: Michael Winder. (from the story James Blish) Cinematography: Jack Hildyard. Editing: Peter Tanner. Production Design: John Stoll. Makeup Department: Paul Rabiger and Bobbie Smith. Sound Department: Richard Langford, Ken Ritchie and Ean Wood. Original Music: Douglas Gamley. |
The CastCalvin Lockhart - Tom Newcliffe Peter Cushing - Dr. Christopher Lundgren Marlene Clark - Caroline Newcliffe Anton Diffring - Pavel Charles Gray - Arthur Bennington Ciaran Madden - Davina Gilmore Tom Chadbon - Paul Foote Michael Gambon - Jan Jarmokowski Sam Mansary - Butler Andrew Lodge - Pilot |
Plot SynopsisIntriguing Amicus horror whodunit based upon SF writer James Blish’s story ‘There Shall Be No Darkness’. The Beast Must Die is a stolid mixture of William Castle b-movie gimmick and a variation on Agatha Christie’s ‘Ten Little Indians’ as the guests are disposed of one by one and the viewer must identify the killer. Director Paul Annett puts in a 'werewolf break' and provides 30-seconds in which the audience is invited to guess who the werewolf is. The werewolf, in fact a real wolf, is disappointing and excellent actors like Peter Cushing, Charles Gray and Michael Gambon are criminally underused in this run-of-the-mill mystery horror. A millionaire big-game hunter, Tom Newcliffe (Calvin Lockhart), aided by onlooker Pavel (Anton Diffring), hope to discover the identity of a werewolf by inviting an assortment of his rural neighbours to spend a weekend at his isolated hunting lodge during a full moon. All the guests have past associations with bizarre murders involving flesh eating, and sure that one of his guests is the werewolf, he intends to smoke out the lycanthrope via a closed circuit television hunt he has devised. Amongst the guests are Newcliffe’s wife Caroline (Marlene Clark), concert pianist Jan Jamokowksi (Michael Gambon), his socialite girlfriend (Ciaran Madden), an ex-UN delegate (Charles Gray), a medical student (Tom Chadbon) once imprisoned for eating human flesh, and Swedish Dr. Christopher Lundgren (Peter Cushing) who has studied the subject. The first victim is Pavel, Newcliffe’s ‘eyes and ears’ in the surveillance room, and with him gone the beast is free to roam the estate unseen. |
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