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IMDbPro

Scream of the Demon Lover

Original title: Il castello dalle porte di fuoco
  • 1970
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
574
YOUR RATING
Scream of the Demon Lover (1970)
Horror

A young female biochemist travels to a castle seeking employment as a researcher by a wealthy baron, only to be sucked into a web of violence and intrigue.A young female biochemist travels to a castle seeking employment as a researcher by a wealthy baron, only to be sucked into a web of violence and intrigue.A young female biochemist travels to a castle seeking employment as a researcher by a wealthy baron, only to be sucked into a web of violence and intrigue.

  • Director
    • José Luis Merino
  • Writers
    • Enrico Colombo
    • María del Carmen Martínez Román
    • José Luis Merino
  • Stars
    • Erna Schürer
    • Carlos Quiney
    • Agostina Belli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    574
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • José Luis Merino
    • Writers
      • Enrico Colombo
      • María del Carmen Martínez Román
      • José Luis Merino
    • Stars
      • Erna Schürer
      • Carlos Quiney
      • Agostina Belli
    • 23User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos58

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    Top cast13

    Edit
    Erna Schürer
    Erna Schürer
    • Ivanna Rakowsky
    • (as Erna Schurer)
    Carlos Quiney
    • Janos Dalmar
    • (as Charles Quinney, Jeffrey Chase)
    Agostina Belli
    Agostina Belli
    • Cristiana
    Cristiana Galloni
    • Olga
    • (as Christina Pathé)
    Antonio Jiménez Escribano
    Antonio Jiménez Escribano
    • The Butler
    • (as Antonio Gimenez Escribano)
    Mariano Vidal Molina
    Mariano Vidal Molina
    • Inspector
    Enzo Fisichella
    • Igor
    Ezio Sancrotti
    • Driver Turning Rapist
    Giancarlo Fantini
    • Doctor
    Franco Moraldi
    • Mayor
    Renato Paracchi
    • Police Writer
    • (as Paracchi Renato)
    Javier de Rivera
    • Judge
    • (as Javier Rivera)
    Silvia Faver
    • Ivanna
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • José Luis Merino
    • Writers
      • Enrico Colombo
      • María del Carmen Martínez Román
      • José Luis Merino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.1574
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    10

    Featured reviews

    4paul_m_haakonsen

    Watchable, but nothing outstanding...

    Of course I was not familiar with the 1970 Italian horror movie titled "Il Castello Dalle Porte Di Fuoco" (aka "Scream of the Demon Lover") prior to stumbling upon it here in 2025 by random chance. And given my love of all things horror, of course I had to check out what director José Luis Merino had to offer. The English title of the movie was a bit odd, as the Italian title translates into "The Castle With the Door of Fire".

    Was I harboring any grand expectations? No, not at all, as the movie was made five years before I was born, and the movie's synopsis wasn't exactly promising something extraordinary.

    Writers Enrico Colombo, José Luis Merino and María del Carmen Martínez Román put together a fair enough script and storyline. It made for a watchable movie, for sure, but hardly a gem in the horror cinema.

    Given my limited exposure to Italian cinema, much more so Italian cinema from before I was born, then I wasn't familiar with a single actress or actor on the cast list. The acting performances in the movie were definitely fair.

    The version I had the chance to watch was dubbed in English, and yeah, I am not fond of movies dubbed in general, as I prefer to watch a movie in its original language. But at least the dubbing work in this 1970 movie wasn't as dubious as in many other dubbed movies, so that counted for something at least.

    The movie doesn't really utilize special effects much, so there wasn't much to write home about there.

    Watchable a single time, but the movie doesn't have the contents for more than that single viewing.

    My rating of director José Luis Merino's 1970 movie "Il Castello Dalle Porte Di Fuoco" lands on a four out of ten stars.
    lazarillo

    Absolutey ridiculous but highly entertaining

    A female scientist goes to work for a reclusive baron in an old castle. The previous baron of the castle has apparently been blown up in an experiment and the new baron, his younger brother, is continuing his work on "matter regeneration". Despite the dire warnings from the townspeople that the new baron has a voracious appetite for women and that several of his previous conquests have been found naked and apparently ripped apart by dogs, the protagonist finds the one man in town who will take her to the castle (and who, of course, tries to rape her in route). When she arrives the baron at first refuses to employ her because she's a woman, but he eventually relents. And if she doesn't have enough reason to leave yet, the first night there she is drugged and wakes up tied to a bed naked and being pawed by some kind of hideous monster! Of course, the baron convinces her that it was all a dream and that she should stay, so she does and naturally she falls in love.

    Obviously, this is a pretty dumb movie and not too suspenseful as there really are only two possible solutions: the new baron is a Dr. Jeckyl.Mr. Hyde type, or his supposedly dead and grossly disfigured brother is still alive. Still this is an enjoyable if completely demented adult fairy tale (with a lot of gratuitous nudity from the lead Erna Schrurer and from Augustina Belli as a very sexual precocious and unbelievably naive maid). You definitely need to leave logic (and good taste) at the door--and if you're a scientist your head will probably explode when you hear some of ridiculous pseudo-scientific mumbo jumbo the characters speak with a straight face. Still as ridiculous as this movie is. it's a lot of fun. And if you like this, check out the director's other well-known movie, "The Hanging Woman" with Paul Naschy as a necrophilic gravedigger.
    6melvelvit-1

    A "bargain basement Bava"

    This is the second José Luis Merino film I've seen this week and comparing the two, SCREAM OF THE DEMON LOVER is much more sexual in nature than TERROR OF THE LIVING DEAD due, no doubt, to the Italians being involved. DEMON LOVER is also set in the nineteenth century and stars Erna Schürer as a kittenish chemist who's come to Baron Dalmar's medieval estate to assist him in trying to bring his dead brother back to life. The villagers warn her that the Baron is killing women and ripping them to shreds after consensual sex but she stays on anyway, even after being drugged nightly and put on a rack in the dungeon (?!).

    Although it's nowhere near as atmospheric or entertaining, the movie owes something of a debt to Mario Bava's THE WHIP AND THE BODY and it's fascination with sadomasochistic mise-en-scène. The Baron and his hounds cut a dashing figure atop the grand staircase and sexy Schürer shows her globes a lot but she's outshone by the exquisite Agostina Belli, who also bares her boobs in the secondary role of a castle servant.

    Erna Schürer was born Emma Costantino in Naples, Italy and modeled for "Vogue" and "Harper's Bazaar"before appearing in the popular "fumetti" foto-comic "Satanik" in the mid-60s. Placed under contract by movie producer Alberto Grimaldi, Erna spent most of the '70s cranking out "classics" like EROTIC CONFESSIONS FROM A WOMEN'S PRISON, YOUR HANDS ON MY BODY, STRIP NUDE FOR YOUR KILLER, MY PLEASURE IS YOUR PLEASURE, and DEPORTED WOMEN OF THE SS SPECIAL SECTION before more-or-less disappearing from the cinema scene. There's no birth or death dates given for Erna on IMDb and there's precious little about her on the worldwide web, either, for that matter. Today, Schürer's sure as sh!t a GILF somewhere (unless she's split the scene, if you know what I mean).
    7BrandtSponseller

    For fans of understatement

    Blood Castle (aka Scream of the Demon Lover, Altar of Blood, Ivanna--the best, but least exploitation cinema-sounding title, and so on) is a very traditional Gothic Romance film. That means that it has big, creepy castles, a headstrong young woman, a mysterious older man, hints of horror and the supernatural, and romance elements in the contemporary sense of that genre term. It also means that it is very deliberately paced, and that the film will work best for horror mavens who are big fans of understatement. If you love films like Robert Wise's The Haunting (1963), but you also have a taste for late 1960s/early 1970s Spanish and Italian horror, you may love Blood Castle, as well.

    Baron Janos Dalmar (Carlos Quiney) lives in a large castle on the outskirts of a traditional, unspecified European village. The locals fear him because legend has it that whenever he beds a woman, she soon after ends up dead--the consensus is that he sets his ferocious dogs on them. This is quite a problem because the Baron has a very healthy appetite for women. At the beginning of the film, yet another woman has turned up dead and mutilated.

    Meanwhile, Dr. Ivanna Rakowsky (Erna Schürer) has appeared in the center of the village, asking to be taken to Baron Dalmar's castle. She's an out-of-towner who has been hired by the Baron for her expertise in chemistry. Of course, no one wants to go near the castle. Finally, Ivanna finds a shady individual (who becomes even shadier) to take her. Once there, an odd woman who lives in the castle, Olga (Cristiana Galloni), rejects Ivanna and says that she shouldn't be there since she's a woman. Baron Dalmar vacillates over whether she should stay. She ends up staying, but somewhat reluctantly. The Baron has hired her to try to reverse the effects of severe burns, which the Baron's brother, Igor, is suffering from.

    Unfortunately, the Baron's brother appears to be just a lump of decomposing flesh in a vat of bizarre, blackish liquid. And furthermore, Ivanna is having bizarre, hallucinatory dreams. Just what is going on at the castle? Is the Baron responsible for the crimes? Is he insane?

    I wanted to like Blood Castle more than I did. As I mentioned, the film is very deliberate in its pacing, and most of it is very understated. I can go either way on material like that. I don't care for The Haunting (yes, I'm in a very small minority there), but I'm a big fan of 1960s and 1970s European horror. One of my favorite directors is Mario Bava. I also love Dario Argento's work from that period. But occasionally, Blood Castle moved a bit too slow for me at times. There are large chunks that amount to scenes of not very exciting talking alternated with scenes of Ivanna slowly walking the corridors of the castle.

    But the atmosphere of the film is decent. Director José Luis Merino managed more than passable sets and locations, and they're shot fairly well by Emanuele Di Cola. However, Blood Castle feels relatively low budget, and this is a Roger Corman-produced film, after all (which usually means a low-budget, though often surprisingly high quality "quickie"). So while there is a hint of the lushness of Bava's colors and complex set decoration, everything is much more minimalist. Of course, it doesn't help that the Retromedia print I watched looks like a 30-year old photograph that's been left out in the sun too long. It appears "washed out", with compromised contrast.

    Still, Merino and Di Cola occasionally set up fantastic visuals. For example, a scene of Ivanna walking in a darkened hallway that's shot from an exaggerated angle, and where an important plot element is revealed through shadows on a wall only. There are also a couple Ingmar Bergmanesque shots, where actors are exquisitely blocked to imply complex relationships, besides just being visually attractive and pulling your eye deep into the frame.

    The performances are fairly good, and the women--especially Schürer--are very attractive. Merino exploits this fact by incorporating a decent amount of nudity. Schürer went on to do a number of films that were as much soft corn porn as they were other genres, with English titles such as Sex Life in a Woman's Prison (1974), Naked and Lustful (1974), Strip Nude for Your Killer (1975) and Erotic Exploits of a Sexy Seducer (1977). Blood Castle is much tamer, but in addition to the nudity, there are still mild scenes suggesting rape and bondage, and of course the scenes mixing sex and death.

    The primary attraction here, though, is probably the story, which is much a slow-burning romance as anything else. The horror elements, the mystery elements, and a somewhat unexpected twist near the end are bonuses, but in the end, Blood Castle is a love story, about a couple overcoming various difficulties and antagonisms (often with physical threats or harms) to be together.
    6Coventry

    Average goth-horror...

    The handsome Baron Janos Dalmar is believed to be a homicidal maniac who rapes the girls he lures to his castle before feeding the bodies to his monstrous dogs. Still, these are just rumors nobody can prove. Dalmar then recruits the beautiful and intelligent female chemist Ivanna and, through her dreams, she discovers that there are much deeper secrets hidden behind the castle's walls. "Blood Castle" is mediocre Gothic horror with a lot of routine plotting and only one or two really ingenious moments. The castle setting is terrific, though, and the make up effects on the actual murderer are quite eerie and convincing. The lead actress drivels way too much and she doesn't only seem to bore her male counterpart but also us; viewers. All the clichés are there, with the beast in the cellar, the ominous servants and the superstitious villagers who only just survived a plague-epidemic. This film is watchable enough, but there are many other Gothic horror classics available, so you don't really need to waste your time on this average installment. The better choices include "The Virgin of Nuremberg", "The Whip and the Body", "Nightmare Castle", "Baron Blood" and "Danse Macabre".

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Igor strikes his victim only twice across her upper body, but the following shot shows multiple stripes across the entire body.
    • Goofs
      Igor strikes his victim only twice across her upper body, but the following shot shows multiple stripes across the entire body.
    • Quotes

      Ivanna Rakowsky: [of Igor] The way he treats me in that horrible torture chamber isn't very nice ... He just touches me though. He doesn't try to make love to me because he knows I don't want to.

      Janos Dalmar: [horrified] What is this place where you say you were tortured?

      Ivanna Rakowsky: Well, it was a room where... I wasn't ever really hurt though. All you ever did was stretch me out on some sort of rack

      [!]

    • Alternate versions
      SCREAM OF THE DEMON LOVER was the re titled US release via New World. It ran approx. 78 minutes and was hacked down to fit on a double bill with THE VELVET VAMPIRE. SCREAM was also syndicated to television and with the nudity removed fit snugly in a 75 minute time slot. The Retromedia DVD contains the full length version.
    • Connections
      Featured in Reel Wild Cinema: Lunatics on the Loose (1996)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 8, 1970 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Das Geheimnis von Schloß Monte Christo
    • Filming locations
      • Castello di Montechiarugolo, Parma, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Hispamer Films
      • Prodimex Film
      • Órbita Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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