WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Horror >

The Dunwich Horror

Watch The Dunwich Horror For Free

The Dunwich Horror

Dr. Henry Armitage, an expert in the occult, goes to the old Whateley manor in Dunwich looking for Nancy Wagner, a student who went missing the previous night. He is turned away by Wilbur, the family's insidious heir, who has plans for the young girl. But Armitage won't be deterred. Through conversations with the locals, he soon unearths the Whateleys' darkest secret — as well as a great evil.

... more
Release : 1970
Rating : 5.4
Studio : American International Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Property Master, 
Cast : Sandra Dee Dean Stockwell Ed Begley Lloyd Bochner Sam Jaffe
Genre : Horror

Cast List

Related Movies

Rana: The Legend of Shadow Lake
Rana: The Legend of Shadow Lake

Rana: The Legend of Shadow Lake   1980

Release Date: 
1980

Rating: 3.1

genres: 
Adventure  /  Horror  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Bruno Alexander
Dracula
Dracula

Dracula   1931

Release Date: 
1931

Rating: 7.4

genres: 
Horror
Stars: 
Bela Lugosi  /  Helen Chandler  /  David Manners
The Barn
The Barn

The Barn   2016

Release Date: 
2016

Rating: 5.2

genres: 
Horror
Stars: 
Mitchell Musolino  /  Will Stout  /  Lexi Dripps
Munchies
Munchies

Munchies   1987

Release Date: 
1987

Rating: 3.9

genres: 
Horror  /  Comedy  /  Science Fiction
Terror Birds
Terror Birds

Terror Birds   2016

Release Date: 
2016

Rating: 3.4

genres: 
Horror  /  Science Fiction
Silent Hill
Silent Hill

Silent Hill   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Horror  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Radha Mitchell  /  Sean Bean  /  Jodelle Ferland
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Creature from the Black Lagoon

Creature from the Black Lagoon   1954

Release Date: 
1954

Rating: 6.9

genres: 
Adventure  /  Horror  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Richard Carlson  /  Julie Adams  /  Richard Denning
The Relic
The Relic

The Relic   1997

Release Date: 
1997

Rating: 5.8

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Penelope Ann Miller  /  Tom Sizemore  /  Linda Hunt
Alone in the Dark
Alone in the Dark

Alone in the Dark   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 2.4

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Horror  /  Action
Stars: 
Christian Slater  /  Tara Reid  /  Stephen Dorff
The Island of Dr. Moreau
The Island of Dr. Moreau

The Island of Dr. Moreau   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 4.6

genres: 
Horror  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Marlon Brando  /  Val Kilmer  /  David Thewlis
Cat's Eye
Cat's Eye

Cat's Eye   1985

Release Date: 
1985

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Drew Barrymore  /  James Woods  /  Alan King
The Fly
The Fly

The Fly   1986

Release Date: 
1986

Rating: 7.6

genres: 
Horror  /  Science Fiction
Stars: 
Jeff Goldblum  /  Geena Davis  /  John Getz

Reviews

Vashirdfel
2018/08/30

Simply A Masterpiece

More
Smartorhypo
2018/08/30

Highly Overrated But Still Good

More
Maidexpl
2018/08/30

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

More
Glimmerubro
2018/08/30

It is not deep, but it is fun to watch. It does have a bit more of an edge to it than other similar films.

More
ferbs54
2017/12/27

Having enjoyed great success with a string of some seven pictures based on the works of the writer who has been called the greatest horror author of the 19th century, Edgar Allan Poe, American International Pictures (AIP) soon turned its attention to the horror author who has been called the greatest of the 20th, the so-called "Sage of Providence," Howard Phillips Lovecraft. For their first Lovecraft attempt, the studio came out with the Boris Karloff outing "Die, Monster, Die," loosely based on the author's 1927 story "The Color Out of Space." And five years later, the film in question, "The Dunwich Horror," was released, in January 1970 (just weeks before the studio came out with the Peter Cushing/Vincent Price/Christopher Lee outing "Scream and Scream Again"), again rather loosely based on a classic Lovecraft horror tale, this one dating back to 1928. Roger Corman, who had helmed all those Poe adaptations, this time acted as executive producer only, handing the film's reins to Daniel Haller, who had brought home the first Lovecraft adaptation. And once again, the film sported a respectable cast and impressive production values, resulting in a picture that just might please all fans of ol' H.P., even though it is a far cry from the author's original. In the film, 69-year-old Ed Begley, here in his final screen role and refreshingly playing the good guy/hero for a change, is Dr. Henry Armitage, a professor of occult studies at a Massachusetts university. He is approached by a rather odd and soft-spoken young man, Wilbur Whateley (Dean Stockwell, who would go on to appear in the epic disaster "The Last Movie" in the following year, as well as "The Werewolf of Washington" three years later), who asks to see and even borrow the incredibly rare book known as "The Necronomicon." When his request is denied, Whateley uses his hypnotic power to coerce Armitage's pretty blonde assistant, Nancy Wagner (Sandra Dee, here 28 years old and a far cry more mature than in her Tammy films), to drive him to his home in Dunwich, a town of notorious repute. Once there, the young man uses drugs to further control the young woman. Wilbur lives in the family abode with his creepy grandfather, Old Whateley ( Sam Jaffe, 30+ years post-"Gunga Din"), while in the locked bedroom upstairs resides...something, which makes eerie noises and clamors for release. Eventually, Wilbur's goals come into focus: He intends to use the virginal Nancy in an arcane rite, and once he steals "The Necronomicon" from the university library, use certain passages in that evil tome to effect the release of The Old Ones, a race that had once dwelt here on Earth and that is now confined in another dimension. But can Armitage and Dr. Cory, who had delivered Wilbur in childbirth, and played by the great character actor Lloyd Bochner, stop him in time, before The Old Ones manage to break through, along with the elder god Yog-Sathoth? "The Dunwich Horror," although only partially faithful to its source material, yet boasts any number of features that commend it mightily to even the casual viewer. For one thing, the film itself looks fantastic, with sumptuous sets (Wilbur's house really is a colorful masterpiece of decor) and art direction (the Devil's Hop Yard, high atop a cliff overlooking the ocean, where Wilbur conducts his ghastly rites, is really something to see). The film, though shot on a modest budget, yet boasts some impressive yet perforce restrained special effects, such as that rampaging creature that bursts out of the Whateleys' upstairs; we see it largely from its own POV, thus only getting a sense of its tentacular monstrosity, but it is sufficient to stun and impress. Perhaps most striking in the film is Haller's ultrastylish direction, utilizing bizarre camera angles, colorful negative images (what Wilbur's insane mother sees as she lies dying in an asylum), and surreal dream sequences (the one in which Nancy seems to engage in coitus with Wilbur might forcefully bring to mind the similar sequence in 1968's "Rosemary's Baby"). In one extended sequence, we see Nancy's drug-induced consciousness through what appears to be a burlap sacking covering the camera lens; in the scene in which the whatzit attacks Nancy's galpal Elizabeth, the screen is aswarm with flashing colors, lights and...tentacles? It is a most psychedelic display! Throw in some unusual musical cues (courtesy of Les Baxter, the author of at least seven prior AIP film scores), some surprising toplessness, the inclusion of some interesting bit actors (such as Talia Coppola, later Shire, and "A Bucket of Blood's Barboura Morris), and some pleasing touches (I love when Wilbur and Nancy drive into the Shell station outside of Dunwich, and the "S" of the Shell sign is obscured....), and you have a surprisingly winning entertainment. True, the film's ending is something of a mess--I still don't know why Wilbur bursts into flames at the film's tail end, or just what happened to that ravening monster--but overall, good fun. Too bad AIP never decided to tackle H.P.'s "At the Mountains of Madness"; now THAT might have really been something!

More
SnoopyStyle
2017/08/10

At a Massachusetts University, Wilbur Whateley (Dean Stockwell) searches out for the mysterious Necronomicon book. Dr. Henry Armitage (Ed Begley) is unwilling to lend it to him. Student Nancy Wagner (Sandra Dee) gives him a ride back to Dunwich. He lives with his grandfather Old Whateley (Sam Jaffe). He keeps her at the house through drug-induced hallucinatory visions. Armitage and her friend Elizabeth Hamilton come looking for her.This is a lower grade slow-moving B-horror. There is nothing scary. Stockwell does his best creep but there isn't much else. The hippie old visual effects saps any horror from the movie. This is based on a H.P. Lovecraft story but it really doesn't deserve the name. The snakes-headed figure is only in the film for a seconds and is a disappointing stiff static thing.

More
Hitchcoc
2016/12/28

I am a real H.P. Lovecraft, having read just about everything he has written, including five volumes of letters. Unfortunately, his canon mostly concerns the Cthulhu mythos. The Old Ones and their ilk are always made worse by an inability to describe something so horrible. In film, one does not have that option. So it's left to our imagination. Dean Stockwell (you may remember for Quantum Leap) is Wilbur Whateley, who is descended from some wizard who knows how to call up these "eldrich" creatures from somewhere beyond. He goes to Miskatonic University and borrows the original copy of the Necronomicon of the dreaded Arab, Abdul Alhazred. He takes with him Sandra Dee who was big in idiotic teen movies in the fifties and sixties. What happens is dense and somewhat incomprehensible. Lovecraft may be slightly below Edgar Allen Poe in skill as a horror writer, but has never garnered the respect he deserved, partly because his creations first appeared in pulp magazines.

More
JoeB131
2009/10/24

This was one of the first movies to mine H.P. Lovecraft's works for a plot, using the story of the same title, but radically changing the plot interactions and characters. (The story was a linear progression from the view of outsiders, while the movie was told from the perspective of Wilbur). It's keeps a lot of the ambiance of Lovecraft's tale, but is completely different in its take. It also includes a lot of 1960's occultism that would have embarrassed HPL.Dean Stockwell is creepy as Wilbur Whatley, the more human looking twin spawn of Yog-Sothoth. Where the movie falls down is in the actual monster twin,(the main focus of the story, but an afterthought here.) It looks like a guy in a costume, and no amount of filtered photography was going to take away from that.The selling point of this movie is Sandra Dee, who manages to be quite sexy as the intended sacrifice/receptacle for the Old Ones. The level of sex in this movie would have gotten an NC-17 today...

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now