MovieChat Forums > Torture Garden (1968) Discussion > HELP! What other Amicus Anthologies are ...

HELP! What other Amicus Anthologies are there?


Please help - I am looking to get my hands on EVERY Amicus Anthology, so far I have:

Dr. Terror's House Of Horrors
The House That Dripped Blood
Asylum
Vault Of Horror
Torture Garden

I am looking for Tales From The Crypt too, but I don't think you can get it right now.

Are there any more that I have missed? I've heard of the following:

Tales That Witness Madness
Tales From Beyond The Grave

Would someone please reply to this post with a definitive list of their anthology films.

Thanks.

reply

[deleted]

Tales from..., Vault of..., and From Beyond the Grave are all now available in Region 2 (Europe).

Tales that Witness Madness isn't Amicus, but a Hollywood treatment of the anthology horror filmed in England, and, in my opnion, just as good (far better than Torture Garden or Dr Terror's House of Horrors!)

reply

"Tales From The Crypt" is only avalable on Region 1.

reply

Tales from the Crypt / Vault of Horror available on a Midnite Movies DVD.

$5 at Wal-Mart.

reply

Personally I though Dr Terror's was the most fantastic of the bunch. Also excellent were Asylum and Tales from The Crypt.
Btw, I found the other titles also fun to watch.

-I don't discriminate between entertainment
and arthouse. A film is a goddam film.-

reply

It's not by Amicus, I know, but I'd definitely recommend the 1945 black and white film Dead of Night:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0037635/

Of it's five stories, I'd say only one was very good, the fifth, whilst one was good but a little predictable, that's the second one, the fourth was silly (it was a misplaced attempt at humour before the final story and the genuinely upsetting ending), and stories one and three were nothing special at all.

So why recommend it so highly (and I do)? Because it has by far the best over arcing story of any film of this type that I've ever seen. Granted, that's not saying much, as at best the story is usually a very weak ploy to get a few different people together, with no logic or real relevence, but in The Dead of Night, there is a genuine story, but what's far more important, is that the story is not only interesting and well presented, but it leads up into possible the most disturbing ending of any film I have ever seen. There's no gore, no blood, no bad language, etc, but the ending is so fantastically well done that even now, after all the times I've seen it, and after the countless horror films I've seen, from the very early silent films up until modern day horror films, this film is still the one I'd recommend to anyone who wants to watch a genuinely frightening film.

Not that it's for everyone. Modern horror films are all speed, violence, people being massacred in all sorts of bloody ways, etc. If the film engrosses you (which most modern horrors fail to do), then they can inspire some sort of feelings inside you, such as revulsion or shock, but that's not horror. The ending of The Dead of Night is true horror, because it stays with you and does not leave the fascination - I've seen so many stabbed/shot/burnt alive in films that these things no longer inspire horror in me, as I know it's just a film (in reality it would horrify me, of course), but The Dead of Night doesn't resort to anything like brutality, and the ending still makes me shiver a little, even after all this time, for what it suggests. I can't even hint at what happens, or what it's about, but it makes EVERY other horror film I've seen look pathetic by comparison. And that that was in a 1945 film just shows how good writing combined with good ideas and good direction can beat any number of big budget modern films.

Seriously, if you can get this film, then you should. Just don't let anyone tell you about the film, as you have to watch it for yourself, preferably at night, alone, and with the lights off.

I had to order it from America, but it's now on sale in England I think, and it's sometimes on TV too, but not often, as black and white films aren't too common on TV any more, which means that many people nowadays have never heard of Laurel and Hardy, tragically.

reply

There were eight in total:
The Monster Club (1980)
The Vault of Horror (1973)
From Beyond the Grave (1973)
Asylum (1972)
Tales from the Crypt (1972)
The House that Dripped Blood (1971)
Torture Garden (1967)
Dr Terror's House of Horrors (1965).

reply

[deleted]

I would definitely recommend The Uncanny. It's not an Amicus film, but it is just like one and even stars Peter Cushing. All of the stories are about evil cats so the first story in this one would've fit right in as a segment of The Uncanny as a matter of fact.

Death lives in the Vault of Horror!

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]