IMDb RATING
4.3/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
An actress reads the Tibetan Book of the Dead on the creepy set of a director's horror movie.An actress reads the Tibetan Book of the Dead on the creepy set of a director's horror movie.An actress reads the Tibetan Book of the Dead on the creepy set of a director's horror movie.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Carole Wells
- Anne
- (as Carol Wells)
Dennis Record
- Tommy
- (as Larry Record)
Ronald Víctor García
- Charles Beal
- (as Ron Garcia)
Laurie Bartram
- Debbie
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
In THE HOUSE OF SEVEN CORPSES, a film crew attempts to shoot a horror movie involving seven mysterious deaths. They happen to be filming in the very house where the actual deaths occurred.
Uh oh!
A book of spells is found, and they decide to use it in their movie. Big mistake! Bad things start happening almost immediately: A cat is mutilated, turning into a sock puppet, and the book's mumbo jumbo causes the cold inhabitants of the nearby cemetery to stir!
This all culminates in the best part of the movie when a ghoul goes on a killing rampage. The last 20 minutes are pretty good, but the rest is a grueling slog.
John Ireland stars as the cranky director, Faith Domergue is the cranky actress, and John Carradine plays the cranky old caretaker.
Recommended, strictly for the macabre finale...
Uh oh!
A book of spells is found, and they decide to use it in their movie. Big mistake! Bad things start happening almost immediately: A cat is mutilated, turning into a sock puppet, and the book's mumbo jumbo causes the cold inhabitants of the nearby cemetery to stir!
This all culminates in the best part of the movie when a ghoul goes on a killing rampage. The last 20 minutes are pretty good, but the rest is a grueling slog.
John Ireland stars as the cranky director, Faith Domergue is the cranky actress, and John Carradine plays the cranky old caretaker.
Recommended, strictly for the macabre finale...
Attempting to shoot a horror movie on a cursed location where the real life murders they're emulating occurred, a film crew accidentally conjures a deformed being that slowly begins killing them off one-by-one.
A slightly disappointing but overall quite creepy effort, this one really could've been great with the fixing of a few minor details. The main issue at hand here is the remarkably slow-paced offering, as there's just hardly anything going on but the movie shoot for the entire running time in the first hour, leaving this to rely on it's other efforts to work but basically doesn't even get started with it's killing until the hour mark or even making any mention of the killer until then and it causes the film to go along quite slowly. This is the most disturbing feature since the rest of the film is quite nice, with a large Victorian house serving as the basis for both the film and the movie being shot there giving off an incredible atmosphere, the slow-building set-up making for a chilly time and the rampage by the decomposing corpse being quite bloody and enjoyable, but overall it's just really hurt by it's slow set-up.
Rated R: Violence and Language.
A slightly disappointing but overall quite creepy effort, this one really could've been great with the fixing of a few minor details. The main issue at hand here is the remarkably slow-paced offering, as there's just hardly anything going on but the movie shoot for the entire running time in the first hour, leaving this to rely on it's other efforts to work but basically doesn't even get started with it's killing until the hour mark or even making any mention of the killer until then and it causes the film to go along quite slowly. This is the most disturbing feature since the rest of the film is quite nice, with a large Victorian house serving as the basis for both the film and the movie being shot there giving off an incredible atmosphere, the slow-building set-up making for a chilly time and the rampage by the decomposing corpse being quite bloody and enjoyable, but overall it's just really hurt by it's slow set-up.
Rated R: Violence and Language.
I saw this Schockley horror film a half of dozen times since the 1970's and although anyone who seen it would have to admit it very flawed, it to me was a lot of fun to watch! It is an old school type of horror film,doesn't go to far with the blood and gore and relies on spooky atmosphere, music, and sound effects! And man was that atmosphere spooky, especially the opening score! In my own personal opinion, the opening score was one of the spookiest ever in a horror film, and I have seen many! The music from the chorus, the creepy looking house and paintings, the sound effects, and showing how each Beale family member died make that intro very, very, scary! If the rest of the film was as good as the introduction this film would have been a classic, but they didn't seem to want it to be that way! But, for some reason, I still love this film and hope someday they make a remake of it, with the same atmosphere, music, sound effects and creepy mansion, this time focusing on the Beale Family and what lead to their demise!
Great little 70's film that also happens to have one of my favorite titles of that early 70s era. The cast is great, but there were some times when the director (this was his only theatrical feature, but he has done tons of television) should have pulled in their reins with the ham chewing.
If you like films of the slash and gash variety, this may not be for you... This one smolders and is a slow burn that builds to a flip of an ending... Other reviews that compare it to Night Gallery are not far off, because it does have that feel of a shorter anthology story stretched to feature length. Pop some corn and make a rainy evening of it.
If you like films of the slash and gash variety, this may not be for you... This one smolders and is a slow burn that builds to a flip of an ending... Other reviews that compare it to Night Gallery are not far off, because it does have that feel of a shorter anthology story stretched to feature length. Pop some corn and make a rainy evening of it.
6KMR
A creepy, fun little low-budgeter about a hideous walking dead man stalking the cast and crew of an in-production horror movie filming at spooky old Beale Manor. I watched it over and over as a kid and it never failed to spook and entertain me. A good renter for horror buffs on an idle Thursday evening.......
Did you know
- TriviaSome of the soundtrack is taken from the TV series The Outer Limits (1963), such as the scene where John Carradine approaches the cemetery, just before his death scene.
- GoofsThe film depicts The Tibetan Book of the Dead as some kind of black magic grimoire, when in reality it is nothing more sinister than a Buddhist treatise on the period between death and rebirth.
- Quotes
Eric Hartman: [the director is frustrated when Anne asks how she should play her death scene] Trust me... dying's easy! Living is hard.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Elvira's Movie Macabre: The House of Seven Corpses (1982)
- How long is The House of Seven Corpses?Powered by Alexa
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