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The House on Skull Mountain

  • 1974
  • PG
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
888
YOUR RATING
The House on Skull Mountain (1974)
Folk HorrorHorrorMystery

Murders occur at the southern estate of a voodoo priestess when four relatives gather to hear her will.Murders occur at the southern estate of a voodoo priestess when four relatives gather to hear her will.Murders occur at the southern estate of a voodoo priestess when four relatives gather to hear her will.

  • Director
    • Ron Honthaner
  • Writer
    • Mildred Pares
  • Stars
    • Victor French
    • Janee Michelle
    • Jean Durand
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    888
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ron Honthaner
    • Writer
      • Mildred Pares
    • Stars
      • Victor French
      • Janee Michelle
      • Jean Durand
    • 20User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top Cast15

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    Victor French
    Victor French
    • Dr. Andrew Cunningham
    Janee Michelle
    Janee Michelle
    • Lorena Christophe
    Jean Durand
    • Thomas Pettione
    Mike Evans
    Mike Evans
    • Phillippe Wilette
    Xernona Clayton
    • Harriet Johnson
    Lloyd Nelson
    Lloyd Nelson
    • The Sheriff
    Ella Woods
    • Louette
    Mary J. Todd McKenzie
    • Pauline Christophe
    Don Devendorf
    • The Priest
    Jo Marie
    • The Doctor
    Leroy Johnson
    • Mr. Ledoux
    • (as Senator Leroy Johnson)
    Ray Bonner
    • Deputy Sheriff
    O.J. Harris
    • Voodoo Dancer
    Dennis Lehane
    Dennis Lehane
    • Lucky
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Dean Wilson
    • Grave Digger
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ron Honthaner
    • Writer
      • Mildred Pares
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    4.7888
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    Featured reviews

    4kevin_robbins

    The House on Skull Mountain is an uneven and below-average entry to the horror genre

    I recently viewed The House on Skull Mountain (1974) on a random streaming service. The plot revolves around a southern voodoo lady's death, prompting her family to gather for the will, only to realize their lives may be in jeopardy.

    Directed by Ron Honthaner in his sole directorial venture, the film features Victor French (Highway to Heaven), Mike Evans (The Jeffersons), Lloyd Nelson (The Dead Pool), and Denis LeHane (The Town that Dreaded Sundown).

    While the film explores unique family dynamics and presents some suspenseful and unpredictable situations, it falls short overall. The made-for-television vibe is pervasive, and despite entertaining voodoo scenes, the absence of compelling kill scenes, gore, or blood splatter is noticeable. The background music is reminiscent of classic '70s horror and complements the atmospheric elements with storms, thunder, and rain. The surprising conclusion adds some value.

    In summary, The House on Skull Mountain is an uneven and below-average entry to the horror genre. I would rate this a 4/10 and suggest skipping it.
    2nancyblues

    Reminds me of Saturdays I spent as a kid watching "Shock Theater."

    I enjoyed this maybe BECAUSE it is so lame. Victor French as Dr. Andrew Cunnigham and Janee Michelle as Lorena Christophe were actually pretty good in their roles. They seem like they are good at their craft, in spite of the silliness of the movie and it's implausible premise. The other folks in the movie had a lot to overcome with the trite lines they were given. At the beginning of the film there is a scene where two of the "heirs" are on a winding mountain road in separate cars on their way to the house (you know---the one on SKULL HILL!). The info about the movie says the house is located in mountains on the outskirts of Atlanta, GA. Right. It was obviously filmed on the Pacific Coast, which is even more "un-voodoo-like" than Atlanta. The terrain, trees and vegetation made the Atlanta location totally unbelievable. And the music! Over-dramatic and hysterical. It's a good movie to watch on a night when your boyfriend is out of town. You can watch it alone and still turn out the lights without being creeped out. I get tired of all the gore in movies today, so this movie at least seems kind of like less of an assault to the senses and kind of harmless. But it still leaves me wondering... How can a movie be so BAD and yet still kind of charming in its own way?
    8kannibalcorpsegrinder

    A really enjoyable and entertaining voodoo film

    Called away to a remote house, a woman and her ancestors gathered together for a will reading find that a powerful voodoo spell has been enacted which begins to kill them off and forces the remaining family members to put a stop to its ancestor's plans.

    This here was quite the enjoyable Blaxploitation offering. One of the more enjoyable elements featured here is the fact that the Blaxploitation angle makes for an incredibly fun and enjoyable introduction to the voodoo at play. That's a big part of this one, coming off almost immediately with the opening shots of the tribal ceremony featuring all the dancers in the middle of their ritual while they prepare all the different trinkets and artifacts that start this one off on a great note. The later scenes throughout the house where we get the flashes of the ghostly ancestor raised and warding off the remaining parts of the family offer up some really thrilling moments here as the frequency and unexpectedness of them work and given the inserts showing the the practitioner engaging the ceremonial practices in his room where he has the paraphernalia laid out as he sets about his rituals which offer some fun, cheesy thrills here. It manages to really explore the idea of voodooism quite nicely in really letting the supernatural take-over here, from the need for keeping the objects of power and control around to the matter of the controlled bodies engaging in dangerous activities through the voodoo spell and it really gives this one the kind of building blocks to get a lot of great atmosphere during here which carries over nicely into the finale which features some fantastic voodoo-based action here. Going from the discovery of the ceremonial chamber beneath the house where the dancers are in the middle of their rituals with the entire room lit up using black candles before the fine brawl and leading up into the atmospheric confrontation in the finale, it's got so much to like here. There wasn't much of anything wrong with this one. The main issue here is the fact that the main backstory is given a really large portion of the film which is a little weird to have. The fact that it consists of a long portion of the film is what really hurts it, since it would've been far easier had this done the simple thing and just clumped them all together in one segment without having to jump around with having so many parts in different places as it wasn't that hard to figure out anyway and didn't need the trickery into thinking it was harder to figure out than it really was. The last part here is the scene near the end where they go out on the town. Since it's so close to the end, everything has been figured out and the horror should begin to grow in intensity, as it's after the voodoo ceremony scene, yet this one doesn't do that and it's really hard to understand why it's even there in the first place, serving no purpose for the story and coming across as filler. Beyond these two problems, it's not that bad.

    Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and Language.
    5lee_eisenberg

    there seriously could have been more going on

    Although I thought that "The House on Skull Mountain" was overall a fairly neat movie, I wish that it had featured more action. And people need to realize that voodoo is more than just people sticking pins in dolls; voodoo is a religion. Of course, there can never be too many movies about haunted houses.

    The plot is that an elderly African-American woman dies and a couple of people are invited to her house near Atlanta. Sure enough, there are bad things going on in this house. I thought that Phillippe was sort of a cliché (alcoholic wise guy), but he was the neatest character in the movie! Anyway, there's nothing special about this movie.
    5elo-equipamentos

    Blaxploitation blending Horror on Voodoo's cult from over Haitian dynasty of King Henry Christoph!!!

    In my reassessment process of my first movies watched at my tender age, the large majority had an upgrade of the ratings, in other hand just a few have a downgrading, The House of Skull Mountain is one of them, officially it never come out in Brazil, thus just leaves me call on the last expectancy the Youtube's files, I've found a fine print in English language without subtitles and I went ahead anyway.

    The story is about an elderly black woman Pauline Christoph (Mary J. Todd Mackenzie) about to die from Haiti when her descendent was the first King Henry Christoph of Haiti after spelled the French there, a sort of hero who defeated the slavery on French colony, due it Pauline demands to the Priest (Don Devendorf) four letters to their Americans Christoph's bloodline, they appeared too late when Pauline already died, actually no one of them never heard about their progeny coming from Haitian Pauline Christoph, the first one the young gorgeous Lorena Christoph (Janee Michelle), the comes a young male Phillip Willete (Mike Evans) a sort of philandering playboy often spoken in black jargon.

    The third mature women Harriet Johnson (Xernoma Clayton) a humble housekeeper and the last one is an Anthropology Professor Dr. Andrew Cunnigham (Victor French) oddly enough a white man even having Christoph's ancestry, gathered all them in a gloomy mansion at high mountain looks like a skull each one has been killed without any reason by Voodoo's cult on the mansion's underground, Phillip fallen down at elevator pit and Harriet is bitten by a poisoned snake at Pauline's room, just remains Lorena and Dr. Andrew alive, in house has a couple of old servants which lie all suspicious about those unusual murders, the bleak Thomas (Jean Durant) and his jealous wife Louette (Ella Woods) although Thomas intents keep with the eye-candy Lorena for yourself.

    A kind of Blaxploitation blending with Horror strongly based on Voodoo's cult from African roots, where numerous Haitians used to do at there, bringing to America's south-east and south as well during the slavery time, the movie takes place at nearby Atlanta, Giorgia.

    Thanks for reading.

    Resume:

    First watch: 1981 / How many: 2 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 5.

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    Related interests

    Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
    Folk Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      On the beneficiaries' first night in the house, Lorena sits in front of a large, circular vanity mirror preparing for bed. The shot creates an optical illusion of a skull: the shape of the mirror is the outline, Lorena's hair and its reflection form the two eyes and a row of toiletry bottles and its reflection create the teeth. An illustration of a skull is superimposed briefly over the shot to drive the point home. The same effect appears at Phantom Manor, Disneyland Paris' version of The Haunted Mansion; there the effect is enhanced by a crack in the wall behind the bride, the reflection of which forms the skull's nose.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Ledoux: It will not be in vain, for blood calls to blood, and will not be denied.

    • Connections
      Featured in Out of this World Super Shock Show (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      My Home Town Is Just A Stranger Now
      Lyrics by Ruth Talmadge

      Music by Art Freeman

      Sung by Debbi Lindsey

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 16, 1974 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fruktans hus
    • Filming locations
      • Underground Atlanta - 50 Upper Alabama Street, Atlanta, Georgia, USA(Day Out sequence)
    • Production companies
      • Pinto
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $350,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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