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The Sinister Monk

Original title: Der unheimliche Mönch
  • 1965
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
826
YOUR RATING
The Sinister Monk (1965)
MysteryThriller

A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.

  • Director
    • Harald Reinl
  • Writers
    • Edgar Wallace
    • J. Joachim Bartsch
    • Fred Denger
  • Stars
    • Karin Dor
    • Harald Leipnitz
    • Siegfried Lowitz
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    826
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harald Reinl
    • Writers
      • Edgar Wallace
      • J. Joachim Bartsch
      • Fred Denger
    • Stars
      • Karin Dor
      • Harald Leipnitz
      • Siegfried Lowitz
    • 15User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos54

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    Top cast25

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    Karin Dor
    Karin Dor
    • Gwendolin Gilmore
    Harald Leipnitz
    Harald Leipnitz
    • Inspector Bratt
    Siegfried Lowitz
    Siegfried Lowitz
    • Sir Richard
    Siegfried Schürenberg
    • Sir John
    Ilse Steppat
    Ilse Steppat
    • Lady Patricia
    Dieter Eppler
    Dieter Eppler
    • Sir William
    Hartmut Reck
    • Ronny
    Kurt Waitzmann
    • Cunning
    Rudolf Schündler
    Rudolf Schündler
    • Alfons Short
    Kurd Pieritz
    • Monsieur d'Arol
    • (as Kurt Pieritz)
    Uta Levka
    Uta Levka
    • Lola
    Dunja Rajter
    • Dolores
    Susanne Hsiao
    Susanne Hsiao
    • Mai Ling
    Uschi Glas
    Uschi Glas
    • Mary
    • (as Ursula Glas)
    Eddi Arent
    Eddi Arent
    • Smith
    Walter Echtz
    • Mr. Smith
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Helmut Heyne
    • Notar
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Manfred Meurer
    • Gangster (bewacht Mädchen)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Harald Reinl
    • Writers
      • Edgar Wallace
      • J. Joachim Bartsch
      • Fred Denger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.3826
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    Featured reviews

    7The_Void

    Excellent Krimi thriller!

    I've only just really started getting into the Krimi genre and most of the ones I have seen so far have been the later entries which were in colour. As such, one of the things I like most about this type of film is the wacky colour schemes; yet although The Sinister Monk is shot in black and white and thus doesn't feature one, it's still a very nice film to look at and also provides an interesting and entertaining mystery - ensuring that The Sinister Monk is one of the very best Krimi flicks that I've seen so far! The plot is, as usual, based on a novel by British crime writer Edgar Wallace and this time focuses on a family in turmoil over the distribution of a family will. It turns out that the late patriarch of the family intended to leave all of his wealth to his favourite granddaughter Gwendolyn; a fact that doesn't exactly go down well with the rest of the scheming family. Naturally, they plot to ensure that the granddaughter doesn't get what's coming to her; but things are complicated when a monk with a whip shows up and starts picking people off!

    The plot is not exactly original and has literally been seen a hundred times before in mystery thrillers - but the film is made good by Edgar Wallace's strange approach and we get a plot peppered with things such as the whip wielding monk (evidently a Wallace favourite), a wall full of death masks and a revelation involving carrier pigeons! Naturally, the film doesn't always completely make sense and sometimes you just have to go along with it; but really, that is what makes this film so much fun to watch. There's plenty of entertainment and since the film is only short at about eighty minutes, the runtime is rather crowded - but that is a benefit if you ask me! The cinematography is just great; the black and white picture adds a real foreboding atmosphere to the film and the fog-drenched castle in which most of the film takes place makes for a really great central location. It all boils down to an unexpected and silly conclusion; but it's satisfying enough, despite feeling a little bit too rushed. Overall, The Sinister Monk is an excellent little film and I can certainly recommend it!
    8ZeddaZogenau

    Karin DOR in a West German Edgar Wallace Crime Movie by Harald REINL

    The best Edgar Wallace film adaptations in the West German film industry come from Alfred VOHRER, Jürgen ROLAND and the ACADEMY AWARD nominee Harald REINL (nominated in 1971 for his documentary film EREMNERUNGEN AN DIE ZUKUNFT).

    In 1965, Harald REINL made the contribution DER UNHEIMLICHE MÖNCH, which with its suggestive black and white images became a highlight of the long-running series (1959 - 1973). An inheritance case, a dysfunctional family, an eerie castle (shot at Hastenbeck Castle near Hameln), a murderer disguised as a monk and many beautiful women! That's all it takes for a typical horror thriller from West German assembly line production.

    REINL's second wife Karin DOR plays the young heiress Gwendolin Gilmore, who returns to the family castle after years and is immediately confronted with inheritance disputes and dark family secrets. Her aunt (Ilse STEPPAT) runs a girls' boarding school in the castle, so the people there are exclusively beautiful young ladies (Uschi GLAS / Uta LEVKA / Dunja RAJTER). An evil uncle (Siegfried LOWITZ), a crazy tenant (Rudolf SCHÜNDLER), a pushy janitor (Eddi ARENT) and of course the murderous monk round off the gruesome events. Inspector Bratt (Harald LEIPNITZ) and the scatterbrained Sir John (Siegfried SCHÜRENBERG) have their hands full trying to solve the case.

    This horror thriller thrives on the spooky atmosphere, which is expertly created by the old master director REINL. A Wallace thriller like something out of a picture book, which lives enormously from the black and white images (from 1966 Edgar Wallace was in color!) and the outstanding acting ensemble. No wonder that actors like Karin DOR (YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE / TOPAZ), Ilse STEPPAT (ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE) and Rudolf SCHÜNDLER (THE EXORCIST / SUSPIRIA) have been cast in international films in the future.

    An exciting and entertaining climax to the long-running Edgar Wallace series of successes in the West German film industry!
    7jfrentzen-942-204211

    Fast-Paced Krimi is Mildly Entertaining

    Immediately before his death, the wealthy patriarch of the Darkwood Manor modifies his will, leaving his entire fortune to his granddaughter Gwendoline (Karin Dor). This upsets the plans of the dead man's greedy relatives, which includes Patricia (Ilse Steppat), who needs the money to finance the girl's school she operates at the manor, brother Richard (Siegfried Lowitz), and her son William (Dieter Eppler). William is the kind of fellow you wouldn't want anywhere near your daughter, and Richard doesn't balk at killing the family lawyer by forcing his car off the road, and stealing the will.

    Into this den of malefactors comes Gwendoline, unaware of the events swirling around her. The malice continues: A student is murdered; a mysterious monk stalks the manor, strangling people with a whip; and Gwendoline is sexually harassed by William, whose earlier murder of a school girl was hushed-up by the family. Mr. Short, an oddball character sequestered in the manor's attic, raises carrier pigeons and has made plaster life masks of locals who recently died.

    Scotland Yard inspector Bratt (Harald Leipnitz) attempts to clarify the mystery when the monk kills one of his men. After some school girls disappear without trace, he tracks one of Mr. Short's pigeons and discovers a ring of white slave traders, led by the monk. Gwendoline is abducted and brought to Richard, who explains the history of her grandfather's will and attempts to blackmail her. He is interrupted and strangled by the monk, who then dies from his wounds. Bratt arrives too late to do anything other than reveal the monk's identity.

    Filmed as part of the Edgar Wallace series of krimis produced by Berlin's Rialto Films, this mildly entertaining thriller was the last black-and-white film of the successful crime series. It was very successful during its initial release, and holds up well more than 30 years later.

    Director Harald Reinl, then husband of the film's star Karin Dor, moves things at a fast pace. Though it's not too difficult to guess which character plays the monk, there are numerous red herrings and distractions, and THE SINISTER MONK boasts a high body count overall. The film's "deadly accoutrements" include the whip, which is modified to break one's neck in an instant, and a water pistol that fires sulfuric acid.

    The movie is an adaptation of Edgar Wallace's novel "The Terror," which had previously been offered as a stage play in London in the 1920s, followed by three forgotten film versions in 1928, 1934 (as RETURN OF THE TERROR), and 1938. THE SINISTER MONK was itself remade two years later, as DER MÖNCH MIT DER PEITSCHE (1967), directed by Alfred Vohrer.
    7unbrokenmetal

    Closing a chapter

    Gwendolin (Karin Dor) inherited a fortune from her grandfather, but doesn't know it yet. Her greedy relatives try to get her out of the way, but that's not as easy as it seems, when a hooded monk sneaks through the night and kills people with his whip. Is it a ghost, a psychopathic killer, or a man with a secret plan? Harald Leipnitz plays the inspector investigating on this case, whilst one of the most famous inspectors of German TV history, Siegfried Lowitz, plays the villain this time. The 20th movie of the Edgar Wallace series (which began only 6 years earlier with "Der Frosch mit der Maske") was the last one in black & white. Somehow the later color movies didn't have the same atmosphere anymore and ran out of ideas. "Der unheimliche Mönch", however, is spooky, foggy fun and absolutely worthy to close this chapter of the classic series.
    6coltras35

    The Sinister Monk

    The setting is a girls' school where a hooded killer, "the Monk," lashes his victims to death with a whip. Scotland Yard tries to track him down, but more slayings occur before they can find the killer.

    Meanwhile the sweetly avaricious family that runs the school are trying to outdo a young heiress (Karin Dor) of the fortune she doesn't know she's received.

    You get two future bond villainess here, Karin Dor and iilse Steppet, in this decent krimi thriller which takes some time to get going but midway the plot starts to boil and it's entertaining enough, though the music can be annoying and can kill the tension. The finale is quite lively, the characters are eccentric which I love. Not great, but far from awful.

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    Related interests

    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The last of Rialto Film's Edgar Wallace films to be shot in black and white, yet it was one of the most successful films of the series with approximately 3,500,000 viewers during its initial theatrical run and approximately 1,500,000 more during the following years up to 1970. It also was the last film of the series directed by Harald Reinl (he directed the first one, "Face of the Frog (1959)" and the last appearance of his wife Karin Dor. Both made five Edgar Wallace films, four of which together.
    • Goofs
      When Sir William is killed, he turns around and watches the monk face to face. But in the next moment he can be seen again with his back turned on the monk.
    • Crazy credits
      In the opening Titels the name of cast and crew are in white over a colored scene of a burning car.
    • Connections
      Featured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-in Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 5 (1998)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 17, 1965 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Der unheimliche Mönch
    • Filming locations
      • Trafalgar Square, St James's, London, England, UK(Gwendolin walks past it.)
    • Production company
      • Rialto Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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