Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
    HORRORSCREAMS VIDEOVAULT – SUPPORTING INDEPENDENT HORROR
    • Home
    • Film Reviews
      • Films Beginning With Numbers or Symbols
      • A – C
      • D – F
      • G – I
      • J – L
      • M – O
      • P – R
      • S – U
      • V – X
      • Y – Z
    • Book Reviews
    • Franchise Corner
    • Competitions
    • Horror Screams Podcast
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
    HORRORSCREAMS VIDEOVAULT – SUPPORTING INDEPENDENT HORROR

    Film Review: HOUSE OF THE LONG SHADOWS (1983)

    Steven WestBy Steven West8th June 2022No Comments3 Mins Read

    HOUSE OF THE LONG SHADOWS **** UK 1983 Dir: Pete Walker. 97 mins

    In a bold move, Cannon Films asked Pete Walker, the filmmaker responsible for some of the most nihilistic, establishment-baiting British horror films of the 1970s, and MARK OF THE DEVIL screenwriter Michael Armstrong to adapt “The Seven Keys to Baldpate” into an all-star old-school horror picture. The once in a lifetime horror-icon ensemble (only missing the intended Elsa Lanchester, who proved unavailable) gives all of its ageing legends a decent slab of screen time after earlier (less expansive) team ups like SCREAM AND SCREAM AGAIN usually reduced them to cameos.

    The old-dark-house set-up has mullet-sporting writer Desi Arnaz Jr., deliberately out of of place amidst all the above-the-title genre stars, betting his agent (Richard Todd) that he can crank out a Gothic novel better than “Wuthering Heights” in 24 hours, at a foreboding mansion overseen by ominous caretakers John Carradine and Sheila Keith. Emerging melodramatically from the shadows and accompanied by strategically placed thunderclaps, the stars are afforded fabulously grandiose entrances: the biggest showman of them all, Vincent Price, turns up announcing “I have returned!” and relishes the best of Armstrong’s lines: “Don’t interrupt me while I’m soliloquising!”

    The most amusing aspect is the central conceit of a family reunion wherein Carradine is the father of Price, Keith and Peter Cushing  – allowing for the bizarre fanboy casting of Cushing and Price as brothers! Cushing, afflicted with a speech impediment, has a lot of fun, Keith warbles at the piano (upon her murder, Price quips “Piano wire…he must have heard her singing…”) while offering dubious punch to everyone and Christopher Lee is the heartless bugger intent on tearing down the property he has just purchased.

    The various, knowing nods to classic Gothic fiction (Bad Brother in the attic) and horror cliches (black cats, “the classic heroine line”) add to the pleasure and, although the script is punctuated by discreetly gruesome murders, the approach and form is closer to Agatha Christie than the-then fashionable slasher genre. The epilogue is especially delightful – variations of it appear in later self-conscious horror films like APRIL FOOL’S DAY – allowing for marvellous interaction between the veterans, who gamely make fun of their own careers onscreen. A wonderfully delivered, catty / affectionate “Bitch!” from Price to Lee is probably worth buying the movie on its own.

    As a postscript, Derek Pykett’s feature-length documentary “House of the Long Shadows…Revisited” (included on the recent U.K. Fabulous Films Blu-ray) is one of the best of its kind, with fascinating insights into its creation and genuinely touching recollections from key players that will only make you love it more.

    Review by Steven West

     

    HOUSE OF THE LONG SHADOWS is available on Amazon

     

    Facebook0Like0Share0Tweet0Pin0
    1980s 1980s Horror Christopher Lee Classic Horror Comedy desi arnaz jr. Fabulous Films Gothic Horror Horror Horror Comedy house of the long shadows John Carradine julie peasgood Mystery old dark house pete walker Peter Cushing richard todd sheila keith Vincent Price

    Related Posts

    Tapeheads come together for Drive-In VHS FEST 666, with special guest Ginger Lynn!

    3rd July 202204 Mins Read
    Read More

    Striking and Hallucinatory Sci-fi ULTRASOUND out now on Digital Download

    2nd July 202201 Min Read
    Read More

    Indiegogo campaign for 80’s aerobics thriller, MURDERCISE, is live!

    1st July 202202 Mins Read
    Read More

    Fabulous Films releasing MUNSTER,GO HOME on Blu-ray this July

    1st July 202202 Mins Read
    Read More

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Search The Website
    Recent Posts
    • Latest UK DVD & Blu-ray Releases – Week Commencing 4th July 2022
    • Film Review: RONDO AND BOB (2020)
    • Tapeheads come together for Drive-In VHS FEST 666, with special guest Ginger Lynn!
    • Michael Joy announced as producer on new horror film, Camp Pleasant Lake starring Felissa Rose
    • Limited Edition Mediabook release coming this July for Joe Begos’s blood-soaked hallucinatory trip film BLISS
    Archives
    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.