House of Terror (film)

La Casa del Terror

Original Mexican theatrical release poster
Directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares
Produced by Fernando de Fuentes hijo
Written by Fernando de Fuentes
Juan García
Gilberto Martínez Solares
Starring Tin-Tan
Yolanda Varela
Lon Chaney Jr.
Yerye Beirute
Music by Luis Demetrio
Cinematography Raúl Martínez Solares
Edited by Carlos Savage
Distributed by Alfa Films (Belgium)
Release dates
March 24, 1960
Running time
60 mins
Country Mexico
Language Spanish

La Casa del Terror (House of Terror) is a 1960 Mexican monster horror/comedy film.

Plot summary

Casimiro, night watchman at a wax museum of horrors, is even more sleepy than his usual laziness makes him - because his boss, the Professor, is secretly draining blood from him while he dozes to use in experiments in raising the dead. These haven't worked so far, and the bodies have been covered in wax and placed on display in the museum to cover his crimes. His big chance seems to come, however, when he learns that the mummified body of a modern man has been found in an Egyptian sarcophagus. The professor and his two henchmen steal the body and take it back to his lab - where the experiment flops again. Or it seems to. While the villains are out of the lab, and Casimiro sleeps on duty, a bolt of lightning gives the electrical boost which the Professor's machinery has needed, and the body comes back to life. Then the clouds part, the full moon shines through, and the resurrected one becomes a werewolf. When Casimiro sees it wandering the museum, no one will believe him, not even Paquita, his girlfriend. But the professor finds his subject alive and soon witnesses a transformation. Eventually, the creature escapes him and makes off into the night, terrorizing the city and ending up at Paquita's apartment.

Production

Gilberto Martínez Solares wrote the story[1] and Juan García wrote the film adaptation. It was filmed by film director Gilberto Martínez Solares, and then released on 24 March 1960 in Mexico. Footage from La Casa del Terror was combined with footage from La Momia Azteca in order to create Face of the Screaming Werewolf.

See also

1960 in film

References

External links

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