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Crypt of the Vampire

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Crypt of the Vampire

Count Karnstein sends for a doctor to help his sick daughter Laura. Her nurse believes she is possessed by the spirit of a dead ancestor, Carmilla. A young woman becomes intrigued by the mysterious deaths surrounding Laura after a carriage accident outside the castle forces her to stay. They become close friends until Laura becomes convinced the spirit of Carmilla is forcing her to kill.

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Release : 1964
Rating : 5.8
Studio : Hispamer Films,  E.I. Associates Producers,  Alta Vista, 
Crew : Production Design,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : Christopher Lee Adriana Ambesi Ursula Davis José Campos Véra Valmont
Genre : Horror

Cast List

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Reviews

Hellen
2021/05/13

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Pacionsbo
2018/08/30

Absolutely Fantastic

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Doomtomylo
2018/08/30

a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.

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Robert Joyner
2018/08/30

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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Darkling_Zeist
2014/01/23

Terror In The Crypt' happily boasts two gloriously-breasted starlets, and the looming, venerable presence of Christopher Lee, whose sepulchral-toned, Count Ludwig adds much verisimilitude to the overtly familiar Karnstein family misfortunes. 'Terror In The Crypt' is a noirish Gothic melodrama, with prolific scrivener, Ernesto Gastaldi doing yet another riff on, Sheridan le Fanu's 'Camilla'. While the film has an admittedly lugubrious pace, this actually sits quite happily against the musty, high contrast, cobwebbed theatrics. Whereas, Jesus Franco will have even less plot, a surfeit of orgiastic flesh and interminable half-hour zooms; DP's, Guiseppe Aquari & Julio Ortas have clearly taken care over the breathtaking compositions; with their effective use of chiaroscuro lighting, and some impressive, yet wonderfully subtle tracking shots. The masters are equally atmospheric, allowing one a splendid gander at all the finely honed Gothic baroque, Camillo Mastrocinque has so meticulously generated. I was also most impressed by, Carlo Savina's spare, eerie, piano-led score, placing the viewer dead centre within all these macabre machinations. To the uninitiated this all might seem a tad ponderous, but to those of us who appreciate a ripping yarn; where buxom, kohl-eyed lovelies cower beneath their vampiric violators, and bloody maleficence creeps beyond the boundaries of death, 'Terror In The Crypt' is a timeless classic deserving of a little more kudos than it currently generates.

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ferbs54
2011/12/28

Everyone knows how wonderful the great Christopher Lee can be at playing the monstous heavy--not for nothing is he known to his fans as Mr. Tall, Dark and Gruesome!--but many forget that he can be equally adept at portraying "the good guy." Thus, fans are often pleasantly taken aback when they see the 1968 Hammer film "The Devil Rides Out" for the first time, in which Lee plays the Duc de Richleau, a combater of Satanists in 1920s England (though this film is weak tea compared to Dennis Wheatley's 1934 source novel). For further proof of Lee's ability to portray a defender of right and light, viewers may be interested to seek out Camillo Mastrocinque's Italian Gothic horror film "Crypt of the Vampire" (1964), which can also be seen under the title "Terror in the Crypt" (a superior appellation, I feel, as the vampiric elements in the film are very minor). In this picture, Lee plays the Count Ludwig Karnstein, who fears that his daughter, Laura (Adriana Ambesi), has become possessed by a witch who was put to death by his ancestors 200 years previously, and who had sworn to return to take vengeance on the family's descendants. Following the advice of his young blonde mistress, Annette (Vera Valmont), the count hires a young expert on antiquarian matters, Friedrich Klauss (Jose Campos), to learn more about this deceased witch and, hopefully, unearth a portrait of her. Laura has been suffering strange visions of late, and having eerie dreams, and it really does seem as if the poor gal has become possessed. Her lot brightens, however, when a carriage breaks down near the Karnstein castle, and the beautiful Ljuba (Ursula Davis) becomes a guest in the ancient pile for a few days....If this story line sounds at all familiar, it can be revealed here that, yes, this IS yet another reworking of the oft-filmed Sheridan Le Fanu novelette of 1872, "Carmilla"; I might also add that it is not nearly as effective a filmization as Spanish director Vicente Aranda's "The Blood- Spattered Bride" (1969), a film that I just love. Still, "Crypt of the Vampire" is darn good enough, although its debt to Mario Bava's seminal "Black Sunday," made four years earlier, is fairly apparent, and never more so than in that 17th century witch-slaying sequence. "Crypt" also shares similarities with another Italian Gothic that I had recently watched, 1963's "The Blancheville Monster." Both were filmed in B&W, feature ancient family curses, showcase some impressively moldering, realistically UNDERadorned castles and decrepit tombs, highlight some surrealistic dreams suffered by the leading lady, sport a trio of young starlets, and surprise the viewer with twist endings. And both, unfortunately, suffer from a sluggish middle third and an ending that can only be described as weak; "Crypt" drags even further when Lee is not on the screen. But when he IS present, the picture is galvanized; thank goodness for his always welcome presence, and that great, mellifluous voice of his, which has survived the dubbing process here. Lee's star power gives this film, automatically, an extra, uh, star. I must also add that some scenes in the film do not make 100% sense when considered in the light of that twist ending, and that the characters of Klauss and Laura seem miscast. Jose Campos, a young Bill Bixby type, seems a bit too boyish for the role; someone on the hunky order of Giacomo Rossi Stuart would have been preferable (check him out in Bava's great film from 1966, "Kill, Baby, Kill," to see what I mean). And Adriana Ambesi-- you'll forgive me for saying so--is almost too homely to portray Laura; she looks like a cross between Barbra Streisand's plain Jane sister and the social misfit, Catherine Sloper, that Olivia de Havilland brilliantly portrayed in 1949's "The Heiress." Surely, Italian cinema has never lacked for lovely starlets; any of them might have been preferable.Anyway, the good news is that "Crypt" does boast a number of very well-done scenes, including the discovery of a hanged hunchback with his hand cut off, and the subsequent use of that hand as a candelabra in a Satanic ceremony, as well as the final sequence, in which Count Karnstein & Co. explore the ancient witch's tomb. The film is never without interest, even during its slower stretches, and I suppose is required viewing for all fans of Christopher Lee or Italian Gothic horror. The DVD that it comes to us on, from RetroMedia, sports a decent-looking print but is completely devoid of extras; not even the customary chapter stops! Note to some aspiring outfit: Howzabout a loving restoration and presentation of THIS relatively obscure instance of 1960s Eurohorror?!?!

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Lee Eisenberg
2007/03/07

While I usually like Christopher Lee, he couldn't win 'em all. "La cripta e l'incubo" (AKA "Terror in the Crypt") loosely centers on a family in which the daughter may or may not be a reincarnation of an executed relative who may or may not have been a witch. As I understand it, this movie was based on a story called "Carmilla"; well, hopefully someone will one day make a clearer version (or has there already been one?).Yes, there are some really hot women in this movie, but that's about it; in most of these kinds of movies, hot women and a cool plot complement each other. It's far from the worst movie ever, but it might have come out better with the presence of Barbara Steele and/or Ingrid Pitt.

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BrentCarleton
2006/02/15

Though only superficially faithful to Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's famous novella, "Carmilla," this picture merits praise for its consistent visual distinction, and a unity of mood, (elsewhere, and accurately described as "stately") that lift it far above the overpraised (and dramatically disjointed) "Castle of the Living Dead" which Mr. Lee completed about the same time.Allegedly set in Styria, but filmed in Italy, this film boasts deep focus black and white cinematography that clearly takes its visual cues from Bava's "Black Sunday." Indeed, this film even features a witch condemnation sequence rather similar to the one depicted in the earlier film.The castle interiors are alive with looming shadows, the rooms dressed with the appropriate paraphernalia of the genre, (flaming braziers, suits of armor, baroque prickets and saint statues; while the exteriors contain some of the most enchanting landscapes one could wish for--not to mention unforgettable nightscapes--as of two women fleeing across a hillside in billowing peignoirs and lit by the moon, (rather like the cover of a Phyllis Whitney novel).Also in its favor are some scenes quite faithful to Mr. Le Fanu's original, as in the barouche accident which occasions the arrival of the vampiress, (here re-named "Luba" for inexplicable reasons).There are some demerits: a heroine that looks like a cross between Barbara Streisand and Maria Callas, and an Elke Sommerish Lady in Waiting whose adulterous relationship with Mr. Lee seems entirely gratuitous.Nonetheless, admirers of 1960s Italian gothics need to re-examine this piece which is often unfairly dismissed, as it warrants far more attention and respect than such slush as "Terror Creatures From the Grave."

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