House of the Long Shadows

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House of Long Shadows
UK quad poster for House of Long Shadows
Directed byPete Walker
Screenplay byMichael Armstrong[1]
Based onSeven Keys to Baldpate
by Earl Derr Biggers
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyNorman Langley[1]
Edited byRobert Dearberg[1]
Music byRichard Harvey[1]
Production
company
Distributed byCannon Film Distributors[1]
Release date
  • 17 June 1983 (1983-06-17) (United Kingdom)
Running time
101 minutes[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom[1]
LanguageEnglish

House of the Long Shadows is a 1983 British comedy horror film directed by Pete Walker. It is notable for featuring four iconic horror film stars (Vincent Price, Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing and John Carradine) together for the first[2] and only time.[3] The screenplay by Michael Armstrong is based on the 1913 novel Seven Keys to Baldpate by Earl Derr Biggers,[2] which was also adapted into a famous play that gave birth in turn to several films.

Plot summary[edit]

Kenneth Magee, a young writer, bets his publisher $20,000 that he can write a novel of the calibre of Wuthering Heights in 24 hours. To get in the mood for the undertaking, he goes to a deserted Welsh manor. Upon his arrival, however, Magee discovers that Bllyddpaetwr Manor is not as empty as he was told. Still there are Lord Grisbane and his daughter, Victoria who have been maintaining the mansion on their own. As the stormy night progresses, more people come to the mansion, including Lord Grisbane's sons Lionel and Sebastian, Magee's publisher's secretary, Mary Norton, and Corrigan, a potential buyer of the property.

After much coaxing, the Grisbanes reveal that they are here to release their brother, Roderick, who was imprisoned in his room for 40 years because he seduced a village girl when he was 14 and killed her when he found out she was pregnant. When they go to release him, they find the room empty and conclude that he broke out recently by breaking the bars in front of the window. Moments later, Lord Grisbane has a fatal heart attack. As Magee talks about getting the police, screams are heard and they find Victoria strangled to death. When Corrigan, Magee, and Mary decide to leave, they discover all of their cars have slashed tyres. Soon, Diana and Andrew, a young couple who Magee met at the railway station, arrive seeking shelter from the storm. They are soon killed when Diana washes her face with water that has been replaced by acid and Andrew drinks poisoned punch. The remaining five decide to find Roderick and kill him before he kills them.

Magee, Sebastian, and Mary search a series of tunnels behind a bookcase. During their search, they get separated and Sebastian is hanged to death from the ceiling. Mary makes it back to Corrigan and Lionel while Magee remains lost in the tunnels. Corrigan soon reveals that he, in fact, is Roderick and that he escaped his prison decades ago, but returns every now and then to make them think he was still trapped. He then proceeds to kill Lionel, who really killed the girl all those years ago and framed him, with a battle axe and chase Mary throughout the manor. Magee soon finds them and, after the ensuing fight, knocks Roderick down the stairs; during the fall, Roderick accidentally stabs himself with the axe. As Roderick is dying, his victims suddenly walk into the room, very much alive; it is revealed that all was a joke put on by Magee's publisher, even Roderick rises, his wound also a fake.

It is then revealed that everything was part of Magee's imagination while writing the story, as he finishes his novel in the morning and returns to give it to his publisher. When his publisher gives him his $20,000 he proceeds to rip it up, as he has learned that some things are more important than money. Magee then meets his publisher's real secretary, Mary Jameson, who looks exactly like Mary Norton, which intrigues him, and after talking for a short while he asks her if she believes in love at first sight. As the couple walk out of the publisher's office and pass by a pub down the hall in the same building, Magee notices that the waiter attending the gentlemen in the bar looks exactly as Lionel Grisbane. Startled, he quickly hides his surprise and asks Mary to walk faster and get out of the place as quickly as they can.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Filming location[edit]

The film was shot at Rotherfield Park, a manor house in rural Hampshire, England.[4]

Release[edit]

House of the Long Shadows was released on June 17, 1983.[5]

Critical response[edit]

In a contemporary review, Kim Newman (Monthly Film Bulletin) stated that the main selling point of the film was the return of these particular horror actors, which in turn became a "major surprise, and disappointment, in that the film should waste these Grand Old Icons on an entirely superfluous remake of Seven Keys to Baldpate"[1] The review states that, along with the producers' film The Wicked Lady, their work was long out of date and that the "preposterous twist ending" that showed "Armstrong and Walker display an appalling contempt for the audience", and that the ending turned "a disappointing project into an infuriating one."[1]

In a review of the Blu-ray release, Chris Coffel of Bloody Disgusting compared it to a Hammer horror film and said "It’s not the best movie for any of the four stars involved. But it may very well be the best tribute ever made to the golden age of horror and that makes it something very, very special."[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Newman, Kim (1983). "House of the Long Shadows". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 50, no. 588. United Kingdom: British Film Institute. p. 99. ISSN 0027-0407.
  2. ^ a b McLean, Ralph (4 March 2022). "Cult Movies: House Of The Long Shadows should have been condemned". The Irish News. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  3. ^ a b Coffel, Chris (25 September 2015). "[Blu-ray Review] 'House of the Long Shadows' Pays Tribute to Classic Horror". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  4. ^ Hall, William (26 December 1982). "FOUR FILM GHOULS GATHER IN 'HOUSE OF LONG SHADOWS'". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, Calif. p. m5.
  5. ^ "Releases". British Film Institute. Retrieved 27 November 2020.

External links[edit]