"Count Regula...I sentence you to death for the crime of shamelessly ripping off the opening sequence from Mario Bava's BLACK SUNDAY."
A nubile baroness (Karin Dor, best remembered as SPECTRE femme fatale Helga Brandt in the James Bond classic YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE) and her equally nubile servant, as well as a dashing young lawyer (former Tarzan Lex Barker), are invited to Count Regula's castle, where the baroness is to receive a large sum of money, while the lawyer seeks to learn details of his own nebulous origins. Along the way they encounter and travel with a monk (Vladimir Medar) who seems rather shady, and as they draw closer to the castle, the mundane world seems to blur into a nightmarish landscape of forbidding forests that are home to crumbling ruins of a once-thriving inn, and trees from which hang the corpses of dozens of men.
Eventually, all and sundry find themselves at Castle Regula, where the Count's servant prepares to revive the Count from the dead. Regula's experiments involved sorting out the secret of eternal life, with the blood of the baroness being the 13th and final component needed to ensure his immortality, and it is revealed that the baroness and the lawyer are the descendants of those who got Regula sentenced to death. From there it's a question of whether or not good will triumph over evil, and the results are predictable at best.
I'll give THE TORTURE CHAMBER OF DR. SADISM this much: It has a lot of atmosphere in its locations and sets, which was likely a conscious attempt at cribbing from the flavor of classic era Hammer Gothics,
but the end result is mercilessly padded out to get to anything truly involving, and by then it's a case of too little too late. Plus to say nothing of the film ripping off several elements from the vastly superior THE MASK OF SATAN/BLACK SUNDAY.
Count Regula's 12 virginal victims, perfectly preserved after 35 years...
No comments:
Post a Comment