IMDb RATING
7.1/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Decades after being executed for witchcraft, vengeful Princess Asa Vajda and her fiendish servant are resurrected and begin a bloody campaign to possess the body of Asa Vajda's beautiful loo... Read allDecades after being executed for witchcraft, vengeful Princess Asa Vajda and her fiendish servant are resurrected and begin a bloody campaign to possess the body of Asa Vajda's beautiful look-alike descendant Princess Katia.Decades after being executed for witchcraft, vengeful Princess Asa Vajda and her fiendish servant are resurrected and begin a bloody campaign to possess the body of Asa Vajda's beautiful look-alike descendant Princess Katia.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Barbara Steele
- Princess Asa Vajda
- (as Barbara Steel)
- …
Giuseppe Addobbati
- Priest
- (uncredited)
Fernando Cajati
- Crucifixion Torturer
- (uncredited)
Valentina Cortese
- Tavern Girl
- (uncredited)
Angelo Galassi
- Tavern Keeper
- (uncredited)
Nando Gazzolo
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Renato Montalbano
- Spectator
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMario Bava and Barbara Steele had a difficult working relationship. She sometimes refused to come to set because she did not like her wig or the fact that her cleavage would be shown. One time she refused because she believed Bava would force her to appear nude. She admits that she was difficult due to her inexperience and inability to understand Italian.
- GoofsIn the opening credits, Barbara Steele's name is misspelled as Barbara Steel.
- Quotes
Princess Asa Vajda: You, too, can feel the joy and happiness of hating.
- Crazy creditsFor "The Mask of Satan," the English language version prepared in Italy, Barbara Steele's name is listed as "Barbara Steel" on the trailer and on the credits of the film itself.
- Alternate versionsThe full list of differences between the 83-minute original cut and the 80-minute AIP cut:
- A different English-language dub, and a new score by Les Baxter.
- An added pre-text crawl warning the audience about the film's content: "The producers of the picture you are about to see feel a moral obligation to warn you that it will shock you as no other film ever has. Because it could be very harmful to young and impressionable minds, it is restricted to only those over fourteen years of age."
- Alternate opening credits.
- A brief exchange between Katja and Constantine where he tells her their father has died is cut.
- A scene where Katja and Andrej talk in the garden is cut.
- An exchange between Katja and Andrej outside her room is cut.
- Kruvajan's death scene is cut down significantly to remove shots of his eye spurting blood.
- The scene were Prince Vajda reanimates and menaces Katja is trimmed.
- Vajda's death scene, particularly the close-ups of his head melting, is trimmed.
- Asa taunting Andrej before being burned at the stake is cut.
- Added closing credits.
- ConnectionsFeatured in I motorizzati (1962)
Featured review
BARBARA STEELE became an icon of horror films (the way Christopher Lee did when he played Dracula), when she played the role of a vampire witch princess burned at the stake in the 17th century who returns two hundred years later with a vengeance. Not that the story itself is all that original, but when done as stylishly as it is here, with the perfect B&W atmosphere and chiller mood, it's a winner.
There's no let-up in suspense from the gripping opening scene where the mask of Satan is nailed onto the face of the poor victimized woman, even though the unfolding of the story is rather slow. The graveyard scene of an undead man rising from the earth is masterfully photographed. The mood becomes more and more intense as several key characters emerge as vampires.
As a young doctor who figures importantly in the plot, JOHN RICHARDSON is a rather wooden actor and makes a cardboard hero, but in a film that relies on its effect for brilliant camera-work and Gothic touches, it's not much of a flaw. Barbara Steele's impassive mask-like beauty is suitable in the eerie dual role she plays with wide-eyed conviction.
The moody camera-work captures the spirit of Gothic horror in every shadowy scene. While the story itself is less than inspired, it does fulfill the promise of a good cobweb chiller right up until the rather predictable ending.
Well worth watching for fans of this genre.
There's no let-up in suspense from the gripping opening scene where the mask of Satan is nailed onto the face of the poor victimized woman, even though the unfolding of the story is rather slow. The graveyard scene of an undead man rising from the earth is masterfully photographed. The mood becomes more and more intense as several key characters emerge as vampires.
As a young doctor who figures importantly in the plot, JOHN RICHARDSON is a rather wooden actor and makes a cardboard hero, but in a film that relies on its effect for brilliant camera-work and Gothic touches, it's not much of a flaw. Barbara Steele's impassive mask-like beauty is suitable in the eerie dual role she plays with wide-eyed conviction.
The moody camera-work captures the spirit of Gothic horror in every shadowy scene. While the story itself is less than inspired, it does fulfill the promise of a good cobweb chiller right up until the rather predictable ending.
Well worth watching for fans of this genre.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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