Amicus Portmanteau Horror Films

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Amicus Portmanteau Horror Films There are 7 of these episodic films from Amicus Productions beginning with "Dr Terror's House of Horr Daniel and Anna Massey as siblings with an inheritance.

Amicus is perhaps best known for Milton Subotsky's own trademark portmanteau horror anthologies, inspired by the Ealing Studios film Dead of Night. Amicus' portmanteau films included
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors (1964), directed by genre stalwart Freddie Francis,
Torture Garden (1967),
The House That Dripped Blood (1970),
Tales From The Crypt and Vault of Horror (1973). The last two were base

d on stories from EC horror comics from the 1950s. These films, typically feature four or sometimes five short horror stories, linked by an overarching plot featuring a narrator and those listening to his story. The casts of these films are invariably composed of name actors, each of whom play small parts in the various stories. Along with the expected genre stars, such as Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee and Herbert Lom, Amicus also drew its actors from the classical British stage (Patrick Magee, Margaret Leighton and even Sir Ralph Richardson), up-and-comers (Donald Sutherland, Robert Powell and Tom Baker), or former stars on the way down (Richard Greene, Robert Hutton, and Terry-Thomas). Some, such as Joan Collins, Britt Ekland and Charlotte Rampling were in their mid-career doldrums when they signed on with Amicus. Torture Garden and The House That Dripped Blood were were written by Robert Bloch, based upon his own stories with the exception that the Waxworks segment of The House That Dripped Blood was scripted (uncredited) by Russ Jones, based on the Bloch story. The earlier non-portmanteau film The Skull was also based on a Bloch story (though scripted by Milton Subotsky), and Bloch was also the screenwriter of The Psychopath and the adaptation of The Deadly Bees (based upon H.F.Heard's A Taste of Honey). Vault of Horror 1973 starred Terry Thomas as an independant man of means with a serious case of OCD. Michael Craig and Edward Judd (The First Men In The Moon) with a scam in mind. Curt Jurgens (Stromberg in The Spy Who Loved Me) as an arrogant magician on holiday in India. From Beyond The Grave 1973 starred a host of talent:
Peter Cushing as the Curiosity Shop Owner connecting the stories. David Warner in an early role buying an ancient mirror with a History. Ian Carmichael with a s***f box and a malevolent elemental. Ian Ogilvy with a centuries old door. Ian Bannen as a very memorable downtrodden husband, hen-pecked by wife Diana Dors. Donald Pleasence with his real life daughter Angela magnificently cast as sinister otherworldly daughter Emily who, "doesn't often get to meet a real gentleman..."

“He who fights with monsters must take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze long into the abyss…”There...
12/07/2025

“He who fights with monsters must take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze long into the abyss…”
There are horror films that chill, and there are those that wound. The Ghoul (1975) does both, but quietly. It is not an Amicus production in name, yet it carries the echo of that house style: Gothic settings, moral consequence, and a theatrical intimacy. But this film is something else entirely. It is a lament.
Peter Cushing stars as a reclusive clergyman-turned-hermit, living in a decaying house on the edge of the moor. But he is not acting. His beloved wife Helen had died not long before filming began, and it shows in every moment of his performance: the sunken eyes, the restraint, the sorrow. There is a scene where he looks wistfully at a framed photograph on the mantelpiece, that is her. Helen Cushing. Not a prop. Not fiction. Just a man, in a horror film, remembering love.
The Ghoul is often dismissed for its slow pacing or unclear monster mythology. But look again. The real horror here is not the creature in the attic, it is the grief in the parlour. The film’s stillness, its fog-bound silences, and its glacial sadness all seem to mirror a kind of spiritual disintegration.
John Hurt appears too - young, volatile, and seething with class rage. It’s one of his rare ventures into horror before Alien, and he brings a nasty, desperate energy that offsets Cushing’s ghostlike fragility.
This is not a portmanteau film, but it belongs to the same world. It is haunted, not by spectres, but by Cushing's real loss.

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