Directed by:
Vernon Sewell
One can't get their hopes up too high
when the opening credits contain the four words "Directed by Vernon Sewell." Not to come down
too hard on this guy, but his track record in Brit horror is pretty weak,
especially considering the amount of talent he frequently got to work with. I'll
always associate Mr. Sewell with two films in particular. The
first is THE BLOOD BEAST TERROR (1968), a poor and sometimes downright
inept monster movie which was such an unpleasant experience for stars Peter
Cushing and Robert Flemyng that both lambasted the film in later interviews.
Flemyng didn't have many nice things to say about the film nor the director,
while Cushing would go on record as calling it the worst film he'd ever appeared
in. The second and more distressing film as far as lost opportunities are
concerned was the occult chiller THE CRIMSON CULT (1968). It's one thing to make
a crappy horror film, but it's another thing to have actors Christopher Lee,
Boris Karloff, Barbara Steele and Michael Gough at your disposal and still
make a crappy horror film. Other than that, Sewell was responsible for the
blandly passably Ghost Ship (1952) and a few other genre offerings I've
not yet seen like The Ghosts of Berkeley Square (1947) and The Horrors
of Burke and Hare (1972). House of Mystery, currently coming it at a 6.6 / 10,
is his highest rated horror film on IMDb. Taking that into consideration I was hoping this
would rise above the rest of his work. The good news is that it does. The not-so-good news it that it doesn't by all that much.
Alan (Ronald Hines) and his new wife (Colette Wilde) are
looking into buying a home and stumble upon a deal that's too good to be true. Orchard Cottage is a large country estate on the market for just 2500 dollars
and, though it'll need some thorough cleaning, that's still an absolute steal. But just why is it
so cheap? Well, soft-spoken caretaker Stella (Jane Hylton) is pretty
blunt about its reputation: "No one's taken it because of the ghost." She then
goes into a series of flashbacks explaining the home's sordid history. Once a
farm house, Orchard Cottage was purchased by eccentric hermit and electronics
expert / engineer Mark Lemming (Peter Dyneley), who converted it all over
to electricity. There was a rumor going around town that Mark's wife was having
an affair with Clive Mayhew (John Merivale); a family friend who was
staying with them. Both the wife and the friend mysteriously disappeared and,
six months later, Mark himself was found dead; ironically electrocuted to death.
It was written off as an accident in the coroner's report, a distant relative
inherited the place and then turned around and sold it to young couple Harry (Maurice
Kaufmann) and June (Nanette Newman) Trevor. It isn't long before
strange and creepy things begin happening in the home.
The lights constantly flicker on and off, but inspection by an electrician
proves there's nothing wrong with the wiring. June spots a man standing by the
window in the living room, but he promptly disappears. The same man's image
shows up on a TV screen, but a call to the TV station to verify it proves that
no such man was on the program they were watching. Psychic investigator Mr.
Burdon (Colin Gordon) shows up armed with all kinds of gadgets to help.
Using a camera and light meter, he's able to pick up on strange vibrations in
the living room where most of the supernatural events have been taking place. A photograph of Mark Lemming confirms their worst fears: the dead man is the same man they've been spotting around the house. Burdon calls in psychic Mrs. Bucknall (Molly Urquhart) to have a séance and then
we get involved in a flashback-inside-a-flashback detailing Mark's revenge
against his wife and her lover, who were both plotting to kill him for his
money.
Mystery runs just 54 minutes, played as a second feature in British
cinemas and was also screened in Germany under the title Das Landhaus des Dr.
Lemming ("The Country House of Dr. Lemming"). Because of its compact run-time,
it turned up here in America as an episode of the TV series Kraft Mystery
Theatre.
Though modest, ultimately predictable and nothing spectacular, it's well-acted and at least manages to maintain
interest in several different ways. First, there are some interesting and
well-thought-out scientific explanations for the ghostly phenomena as opposed to the
then-typical "it is what it is" matter-of-fact approach. Second, the instruments
used by Mr. Burdon to sniff out the presence of ghosts - which are pretty much
the norm in numerous films and TV reality shows like Ghost Hunters and Ghost
Adventures these days - were fresh concepts when this was made. Finally,
how the engineer goes about getting his revenge is pretty ingenious. Apparently
this was based (sans credit) on a play called "L'Angoisse" written by Pierre
Mills and Celia de Vylars, which Sewell had already adapted two other
times; as the short The Medium in 1934 and as the feature Latin
Quarter (aka Frenzy) in 1945.
★★1/2
I remember this playing on TV in the late '60's at odd hours in the morning but I've never seen it. Some day I might. You are absolutely right about the director and The Crimson!
ReplyDeleteThis one is pretty tough to find. I don't think it's ever had a VHS or DVD release here in America, but just last year it was put out in the UK in a box set called Edgar Wallace Mysteries Volume 4, which is odd because it has nothing to do with Wallace.
ReplyDeleteTo watch this again after all those of remembering it from Kraft Mystery Theater, I had to order a copy from a private seller in England. It wouldn't work on US DVD, so I had to watch it on the computer.
ReplyDelete