Chamber of Horrors backdrop
Chamber of Horrors

Chamber of Horrors

The unspeakable vengeance of the crazed Baltimore strangler!

5.6 / 1019661h 39m

Synopsis

A one-handed madman (he lost the hand while escaping a hanging) uses various detachable devices as murder weapons to gain revenge on those he believes have wronged him.

Genre: Horror, Crime, Thriller

Status: Released

Director: Hy Averback

Website:

Main Cast

Patrick O'Neal

Patrick O'Neal

Jason Cravatte

Cesare Danova

Cesare Danova

Anthony Draco

Wilfrid Hyde-White

Wilfrid Hyde-White

Harold Blount

Laura Devon

Laura Devon

Marie Champlain

Patrice Wymore

Patrice Wymore

Vivian (Delano's hostess)

Suzy Parker

Suzy Parker

Barbara Dixon

José René Ruiz

José René Ruiz

Senor Pepe De Reyes

Philip Bourneuf

Philip Bourneuf

Insp. Matthew Strudwick

Jeanette Nolan

Jeanette Nolan

Mrs. Ewing Perryman

Marie Windsor

Marie Windsor

Madame Corona

Trailer

User Reviews

Wuchak

**_Victorian horror revolving around a wax museum in Baltimore_** This was originally intended to be a pilot for a proposed TV series with the proprietors of the museum (Cesare Danova and Wilfrid Hyde-White) acting as amateur sleuths who assist the police with horrific cases. It was decided to release it theatrically because it was ostensibly too intense for television at the time. The gimmick of a “Fear Flasher” and corresponding “Horror Horn” were added to increase the runtime, along with a cameo by Tony Curtis. It comes in the tradition of Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," which started the genre in 1841 and influenced Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, amongst others. The best film version of "Rue Morgue" is arguably the 1986 one with George C. Scott, Val Kilmer and Rebecca De Mornay. I bring that up because this is cut from the same cloth. Other comparisons include "House of Wax" (1953), Hammer's "The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll" (1960), "Terror in the Wax Museum" (1973) and Klaus Kinski's "Jack the Ripper" (1976), as well as "Edge of Sanity" (1989) and "From Hell" (2001). It's basically "old-fashioned" horror that's timelessly entertaining since these types of films keep being made decade after decade. "The Limehouse Golem" is a well-done example from more modern times. If you’re in the mood for colorful Victorian costumes & sets, horse-drawn carriages, foggy cobblestone streets, grisly murders (without much gore) and lovely women of the 1890s/turn-of-the-century, you can’t go wrong. Speaking of that last one, blonde Laura Devon is striking as Marie Champlain, a lady of ill repute from New Orleans whom the murderer (Patrick O'Neal) enlists to unknowingly assist in his diabolical deeds. Interestingly, there are glaring similarities to the B&W “Dark Intruder,” released the prior year. It runs 1 hour, 39 minutes, and was shot in Warner Brothers Burbank Studios in the area of northwest Los Angeles. GRADE: B

Sierbahnn

This is clearly part two or three of five The movie feels like it is supposed to be mid-narrative from the start, with established characters that had arcs before this movie, and continue to have them afterwards. In that sense this feels like it is part two or three of a five-part movie series. The movie itself is great, a period piece, and while the "alarm" is sensationalist fluff for the era, and an artifact of its time, it is a bit of fun. The story, direction, casting and visualization is on point here. Well worth a watch.