Gruesome Twosome, The (1967)
“Napoleon, I’m afraid we have a problem!”
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Review: Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“Napoleon, I’m afraid we have a problem!”
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Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:
Review: Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“Hormones. Female hormones!”
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Review: Note: As others have pointed out, it helps that Bates and Beswick both possess gender-fluid, similarly structured faces; it’s not hard to imagine them as flip sides of one person. Redeeming Qualities and Moments:
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“This force may have us trapped — but it fascinates me; it’s part of me!”
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Review: … is truly the main draw of this silly but atmospherically staged Hammer Studios horror film, which was infamously plagued with production issues: Peter Cushing pulled out one day into filming when his wife was diagnosed with emphysema, then director Seth Holt died on-set five weeks into the six-week filming schedule. DVD Savant writes that this film has “sharply divided horror fans over the years, with most finding it confusing and dull, while a few passionate defenders have hailed it as an underappreciated gem.” He goes on to assert that it suffers from “a script that is both confusing and uninvolving” — a point I would agree with. He writes:
Indeed, if Leon herself weren’t so bewitching to look at, this film would be even more of a clunker (albeit an ambitious one). Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“He is the embodiment of all that is evil; he is the very Devil himself.”
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Review: Note: The other Hammer Dracula titles included in GFTFF are The Horror of Dracula (1958) and The Brides of Dracula (1960). Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links:
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“I believe in the existence of everything which the human brain is unable to disprove.”
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Review: Meanwhile, Cushing’s motives remain unclear throughout, and the solution to the mystery of the gorgon is foreshadowed far too soon. Another problem is the ineffective make-up used for Megaera (the gorgon): … which can’t hold a candle to the enjoyable special effects used for Medusa in the same year’s 7 Faces of Dr. Lao (1964). Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“As a trained espionage agent, I could tell that she was attracted to me.”
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Review: … Towne’s dense delusion that Jones-Moreland is desperately in love with him: … Dickerson and Bean’s silly romances with local women: … and more, rather than genuine thrills. Jones-Moreland’s focused performance as the crew’s sociopathic beauty is the film’s highlight: … while its lowlight is undoubtedly the “creature” itself: hard as this is to imagine, it really does seem to win a prize as one of the least convincing, most ridiculous Z-grade cinematic monsters ever created. Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“If a guy’s not a success, he’s got nobody to blame but himself.”
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Review: Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Categories
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“They are the living dead — they’re zombies!”
“Burn the witch!”
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Response to Peary’s Review:
So, is Horror Hotel worth watching on its own merits? Scriptwise, no: as DVD Savant writes, “we know we’re in one of those horror movies where certain things have to be taken for granted”; indeed, you’ll roll your eyes at the characters’ denseness. But atmospherically speaking, it’s a winner, and a visual treat all the way. Fans of the genre probably won’t be too disappointed. Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Must See? Links: |
“I’m fascinated by your skin.”
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Review: Note: As far as I can tell, the only other Franco title listed in Peary’s book is Barbed Wire Dolls (1976), one among many women-in-prison flicks he apparently made later in his career. Redeeming Qualities and Moments:
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