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House of the Black Death is a 1965 American horror film directed by Harold Daniels, Reginald LeBorg and Jerry Warren. The film was written by Richard Mahoney, based on a novel titled The Widderburn Horror by Lora Crozetti.
The movie starred Lon Chaney Jr. and John Carradine, although the two actors shared no scenes in the film.
Plot summary
Two elderly brothers who are warlocks, Belial (Lon Chaney Jr.) and Andre (John Carradine), have been feuding with each other for years over the family estate. Belial, who sports small goat's horns on his forehead and runs a coven of witches, has been using his black magic to bewitch members of the family, while Andre spends the entire film bedridden. Andre keeps warning people that his brother Belial is evil and up to no good. Belial turns Andre's son into a werewolf by way of a magical spell and bewitches Andre's daughter (Serena) into dancing and gyrating sensuously. Much of the plot involves scenes of the sexy witches belly-dancing in front of their satanic altar.
Cast
Lon Chaney Jr. as Belial Desard
John Carradine as Andre Desard
Andrea King as Dr. Katherine Mallory
Tom Drake as Paul Dessard
Dolores Faith as Valerie Dessard
Sabrina as Belly-Dancer
Jerome Thor as Dr. Eric Campion
Sherwood Keith
Catherine Petty
George Mitchell
Katherine Victor as Lila
Margaret Shinn
Production
The film was originally to be titled Night of the Beast or The Widderburn Horror, but it was theatrically released as Blood of the Man Devil. When it was later released to television, the title was again changed to House of the Black Death. Although the film was made in 1965, when most new films were being made in color, it was shot in black-and-white for $70,000.
Harold Daniels initially shot the film in 1965 with actors Chaney and Carradine, and Reginald LeBorg co-directed in an uncredited capacity. Reginald LeBorg claimed that he did very little actual directing. He said his work "consisted of little more than some shots of actors wandering around amongst the trees in the forest scenes."
Afterwards, the producers felt the film needed something more, so Jerry Warren was hired to add some extra footage to pad out the running time and edit the film. Warren brought Katherine Victor into the project, casting her as the leader of a coven of witches. Interviewed by Tom Weaver, Jerry Warren said "They had a terrible mishmash of a movie. It wasn't a movie, it was a bunch of film. It came out bad but it came out playable, and it did pull out some money for the people who made it".
Critical response
Fred Olen Ray claims to have seen the film under the title Blood of the Man Devil in the drive-in in the early 1970s on a quintuple "Blood" bill with Blood Mania and three other films. The fact that the film was made in black and white might have had something to do with its distribution difficulties."
James O'Neill wrote "Cardboard monstrosity culled from footage contributed by three different directors....Most of the veteran cast look sick or drunk, or both". Stephen Jones called it "an incomprehensible mess....with plenty of gratuitous belly-dancing".
Film historian Wheeler W. Dixon remarked that on The House of the Black Death, "the less said the better."
See also
List of American films of 1965
Notes
References
Dixon, Wheeler Winston. 1992. The Films of Reginald LeBorg: Interviews, Essays, and Filmography. Filmmakers No. 31 The Scarecrow Press, Metuchen, New Jersey. ISBN 0-8108-2550-3
External links
House of the Black Death at IMDb