After a chance meeting while traveling the country side, a man and a woman become suspected of murder. They begin to leave a lot of dead bodies in their wake, but, unbeknownst to the police,... Read allAfter a chance meeting while traveling the country side, a man and a woman become suspected of murder. They begin to leave a lot of dead bodies in their wake, but, unbeknownst to the police, the real culprits are living dead zombies.After a chance meeting while traveling the country side, a man and a woman become suspected of murder. They begin to leave a lot of dead bodies in their wake, but, unbeknownst to the police, the real culprits are living dead zombies.
- Awards
- 4 wins total
- Edna Simmonds
- (as Christine Galbo)
- Martin West
- (as Jose Ruiz Lifante)
Featured reviews
Solid zombie flick
The contrast between the picturesque scenery and the horrific events works well, and Grau builds an eerie atmosphere which he maintains throughout. It has a feel (for those old enough to remember) of Jon Pertwee-era 'Doctor Who', or the original BBC TV show 'Survivors', both of which ran around the time this was made. Lovelock and Galbó are okay as the young couple (although Lovelock is overshadowed by the camp, unintentionally funny performance of his English voice actor), but the standout is easily Arthur Kennedy's bigoted, hippy-hating Inspector (we never get his name), whose contempt for the 'permissive society' brought in by the 1960s is almost tangible! 😄 The film is over-slow at times, it's a little light on gore (although there is certainly some), and the 'shock' ending doesn't really hang together. But it's a fun watch. 7/10.
Atmopsheric 70's Horror
Loved the atmosphere and gore, of course, but it seems like this movie has something else on its mind that I really appreciate.
Now THIS is a zombie movie!
Ray Lovelock takes the title role, and looks the part as a young London man. His style, along with very over the top dubbed in London accent work a treat, and his performance adds something of a sense of humour to the picture. Christina Galbó has less to do opposite Lovelock, but she does well with what she has and makes for a good heroine. The film starts off rather slowly, but the relaxed pace never makes the film boring, but it does add to the film when the horror really starts; as we're sufficiently on the edge of our seats by then. Director Jorge Grau creates a fabulous atmosphere through his English countryside setting, and I personally thought it made a very nice change for the zombie antics to be set in the English countryside rather than America, as they usually are. Despite the fact that this is an Italian film, the filmmakers have managed to implement a great British feel to the movie, and the movie feels something like a fusion between Italian and Hammer horror. This is certainly a plot line that Hammer would have taken on! The gore in the film is few and far between, but when it's on screen, you'll definitely know about it, as it doesn't exactly hold back! On the whole, I think it's criminal that this film hasn't won itself more recognition. Let Sleeping Corpses Lie is a film that I wont hesitate to name as one of the best zombie films ever made, and it therefore comes with the highest recommendation!
Possibly the most underrated zombie movie ever made.
Christine Plays Defense
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Jorge Grau purposely cast an actress known for having a flat chest in the role of the nurse so that a fake chest piece could be applied that the zombies could tear into for her death scene.
- GoofsIf you look at the lettering on the door while the police and George are at the Old Owl, you can see that owl is mistakenly spelled "Olw".
- Quotes
The Inspector: You're all the same, the lot of you, with your long hair and faggot clothes. Drugs, sex, every sort of filth! And you hate the police. Don't you?
George: You make it easy.
- Alternate versionsThe 1987 UK Network video release was pre-cut by 1 minute 27 secs by the distributors before submission (as per the cinema version) and then cut by a further 26 secs by the BBFC
- the edits being made to remove shots of the policeman's mutilated body, Guthrie pulling a stake from his throat, all footage of flesh eating, shots of zombies on fire, the killing of the Doctor with an axe, and a nurse being eviscerated and her breast ripped off. The 2003 Anchor Bay UK DVD features the full uncut version of the film (all previous cuts have finally been waived) and has the added bonus of an alternative opening credit sequence. The aforementioned "eyeball munching scene" has been proved to have never existed as no version of the film contains it and no footage of it can be found. There is still speculation over whether or not the scene was shot but if it was, the footage is now long gone.
- ConnectionsEdited into Cent une tueries de zombies (2012)
- How long is Let Sleeping Corpses Lie?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue
- Filming locations
- Thorpe Cloud, Dovedale, Derbyshire, England, UK(stepping stones/Guthrie's attack)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $40,468
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1




