Ruth, a reporter for the women's section of a newspaper, participates in a weight-loss course with a hidden secret behind it.Ruth, a reporter for the women's section of a newspaper, participates in a weight-loss course with a hidden secret behind it.Ruth, a reporter for the women's section of a newspaper, participates in a weight-loss course with a hidden secret behind it.
James Cosmo
- Willis
- (as James Cosmos)
Gerard Kelly
- Andrew
- (as Gerrard Kelly)
John Louis Mansi
- Rossi
- (as Louis Mansi)
Andrew Andreas
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Walter Henry
- Security Guard
- (uncredited)
Laurie Rose
- Slimmer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Ruth, the reporter of the women page of a magazine, is assigned by her editor to participate of a ten weeks course of a new weight organization called "Think Thin". In accordance with the letter of a reader, the system would be very masochist and depressive, destructing the self-esteem of the patient. Ruth makes a friend in the course, and he dies in a car crash. In the funeral, an employee of the funeral house discloses weird events that are happening in his job. In her investigation, Ruth finds dark and macabre secrets.
Although being predictable in a certain moment, I liked very much this short story of "Hammer House of Horror". This film is very well played and directed, has many outdoors scenes, very unusual in Hammer's movies, and is very dark. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "A 13a Reunião"("The Thirteenth Reunion")
Although being predictable in a certain moment, I liked very much this short story of "Hammer House of Horror". This film is very well played and directed, has many outdoors scenes, very unusual in Hammer's movies, and is very dark. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "A 13a Reunião"("The Thirteenth Reunion")
Ruth is a journalist for a female magazine and gets hold of a new miracle diet from an organisation calling itself Think Thin . After the death of a friend called Ben in a car crash one of the funeral directors Andrew who buried Ben visits Ruth and tells her there's something amiss at work and also something that ties in with the Think Thin organisation
This is a fairly efficient episode of THE HAMMER HOUSE OF HORROR . It's not exactly ground breaking but in its defence it doesn't contain any supernatural elements which makes it fairly credible . Okay it's not realistic drama but as a standard mystery thriller it just about works . The main problem is that once you know what is at the centre of the mystery involving the funeral directors and Think Thin the cat is let out of the bag and the impact is gone on repeat viewings . It also might work better if there's a fashionable diet in the news . The 13th Reunion was broadcast a few years before the F plan diet and if the cult of dieting had been in the news perhaps this episode might have been better remembered
One interesting aspect is the casting of a couple of Scottish actors in pivotal roles . One is James Cosmo who made a career playing ginger haired Scottish hard men and it's amusing seeing him reducing a dieter to tears " Have ya looked in the mirror recently ? No wonder your husband is working late " . The other actor is Gerard Kelly who would find fame in Scotland playing Willie Melvin in the long running Scottish sit com CITY LIGHTS and he gives a very understated performance here
This is a fairly efficient episode of THE HAMMER HOUSE OF HORROR . It's not exactly ground breaking but in its defence it doesn't contain any supernatural elements which makes it fairly credible . Okay it's not realistic drama but as a standard mystery thriller it just about works . The main problem is that once you know what is at the centre of the mystery involving the funeral directors and Think Thin the cat is let out of the bag and the impact is gone on repeat viewings . It also might work better if there's a fashionable diet in the news . The 13th Reunion was broadcast a few years before the F plan diet and if the cult of dieting had been in the news perhaps this episode might have been better remembered
One interesting aspect is the casting of a couple of Scottish actors in pivotal roles . One is James Cosmo who made a career playing ginger haired Scottish hard men and it's amusing seeing him reducing a dieter to tears " Have ya looked in the mirror recently ? No wonder your husband is working late " . The other actor is Gerard Kelly who would find fame in Scotland playing Willie Melvin in the long running Scottish sit com CITY LIGHTS and he gives a very understated performance here
Journalist Ruth is sent undercover to a clinic for weight loss, where strange goings on are occuring, and not just revolutionary weight loss.
If I had to pick a favourite episode from the series it would probably have to be this one. It is a wonderful mix of macabre, gory and just plain weird. The story is unique, the revelation comes as a big surprise.
It had some wonderfully memorable scenes, Warren Clarke's car chase is very creepy and sinister, I remember feeling unnerved that first time I watched it, however it's the ending that really does make this one stand out.
I think Julia Foster is great as Ruth, the inquisitive and brave journalist. Kevin Stoney is suitably sinister as always.
My favourite in the series, 9/10.
If I had to pick a favourite episode from the series it would probably have to be this one. It is a wonderful mix of macabre, gory and just plain weird. The story is unique, the revelation comes as a big surprise.
It had some wonderfully memorable scenes, Warren Clarke's car chase is very creepy and sinister, I remember feeling unnerved that first time I watched it, however it's the ending that really does make this one stand out.
I think Julia Foster is great as Ruth, the inquisitive and brave journalist. Kevin Stoney is suitably sinister as always.
My favourite in the series, 9/10.
A female journalist who works on the 'woman's section' of a magazine is sent on an assignment to check out a new diet club which uses controversial methods. A man she befriends there winds up dying soon afterwards in an accident. Before long she discovers that there is a strange arrangement between the funeral house where his body has been sent and the health farm she is investigating.
The Thirteenth Reunion is the second episode in the 'Hammer House of Horror' series and is a definite improvement on the opener, Witching Hour. It was directed by Peter Sasdy who helmed earlier Hammer feature films, such as the impressive Countess Dracula. This one works mostly due to its mystery/thriller set-up which ensures that the plot is quite intriguing throughout. A sinister atmosphere is maintained quite well as we get nearer and nearer to the truth of what dark secrets underlie the strange arrangement. I think the very fact that the script incorporates a weight watching organisation into the plot of a horror story makes it fairly distinctive as it's hardly the norm. Towards the end we discover that the macabre events all stem from a high profile plane crash, the fallout of which is somewhat disturbing. And it all ends on an agreeably dark note. Once again, Hammer have assembled a decent cast, with James (Trainspotting) Cosmo as a particularly nasty diet coach who berates a poor overweight woman in a memorably uncomfortable scene, Warren (A Clockwork Orange) Clarke is underused as the early victim and Gerard (Extras) Kelly is a young suspicious funeral house worker who initially raises questions about the strange events unfolding.
The Thirteenth Reunion is the second episode in the 'Hammer House of Horror' series and is a definite improvement on the opener, Witching Hour. It was directed by Peter Sasdy who helmed earlier Hammer feature films, such as the impressive Countess Dracula. This one works mostly due to its mystery/thriller set-up which ensures that the plot is quite intriguing throughout. A sinister atmosphere is maintained quite well as we get nearer and nearer to the truth of what dark secrets underlie the strange arrangement. I think the very fact that the script incorporates a weight watching organisation into the plot of a horror story makes it fairly distinctive as it's hardly the norm. Towards the end we discover that the macabre events all stem from a high profile plane crash, the fallout of which is somewhat disturbing. And it all ends on an agreeably dark note. Once again, Hammer have assembled a decent cast, with James (Trainspotting) Cosmo as a particularly nasty diet coach who berates a poor overweight woman in a memorably uncomfortable scene, Warren (A Clockwork Orange) Clarke is underused as the early victim and Gerard (Extras) Kelly is a young suspicious funeral house worker who initially raises questions about the strange events unfolding.
The second episode to Hammer's short running series "Hammer House of Horror", "The Thirteenth Reunion" is a truly weird and morbid little tale filled with a great sense of humor - extremely dark humor, that is, I may add. Being a great fan of Hammer's Gothic Horror films, I wonder what took me until recently to start watching the series, but I sure do enjoy finally watching it now. Whereas the episodes I've seen so far (the first four) do not quite deliver the gloomy Gothic atmosphere that makes the films so great, they are all highly entertaining, creepy, and enjoyable, and should therefore not be missed by any true Hammer-enthusiast. This second episode follows reporter Ruth Cairns (Julia Foster), who is investigating undercover in a weight-watchers institution whose clients are brought to loose weight by rather unusual methods. After a fellow client with whom she has just got acquainted dies in a car-crash, his body mysteriously disappears. Ruth decides to investigate in a different direction... The episode was directed by Hammer veteran Peter Sasdy, whom fans should known for the Hammer classics "Taste The Blood of Dracula", "Hands of The Ripper" and "Countess Dracula". And Sasdy, who would direct three further episodes to this series, once again doesn't disappoint. Admittedly, this episode may not be the most unpredictable thing ever made, but it does deliver some surprises, some creepiness, and, above all, an ingeniously dark sense of humor. This dark humor is present from the beginning, when a cruel trainer (played by prolific Scottish actor James Cosmo) goes on an angry rant about a chubby lady. The film has many other moments remarkably dark and morbid humor, none of which I will give away here, since I do not wish to spoil anything. Overall, this second episode is probably my favorite of the first four that I've seen so far (all of which I enjoyed). I guess that I still have the greatest HHH episodes ahead of me, the one I am most looking forward to is the seventh episode, "The Silent Scream" starring Peter Cushing. Even if the series maintains the level of this episode, however, I will be satisfied.
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Details
- Release date
- Filming locations
- Farringdon Street, London, England, UK(Ruth drives to the newspaper office in Fleet Street)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 52m
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