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7/10
Lushly Gothic visuals, a great score and Barbara Steele....what more could you want from an Italian horror film?
The_Void1 November 2005
My main reason for seeing this film was the fact that it's on the Redemption label. Redemption films are often not all that good, but they have great cult value and are usually worth seeking out. Of course, Barbara Steele offered up another reason for watching - but still, my expectations for this film weren't very high. After the first twenty minutes, however, my low expectations turned into hopefulness; as I prayed that the remaining eighty minutes would be as great as the first twenty! The film grabs you instantly with it's combination of crisp black and white photography, morbid subject material, Gothic locations and a score courtesy of the great Ennio Morricone. The film is pure cult class, which really doesn't let up until the final credits role. The plot follows a man who, after finding his wife with another man, proceeds to torture them both. However, she takes the upper hand when she lets him know that all of her wealth has been left not to him - but to her imbecile sister! Our protagonist isn't taking this lying down, however, and it isn't long before he's returning to the castle with a new bride…

Just like she did in Mario Bava's masterpiece "Black Sunday", Barbara Steele takes on a dual role. Despite being obviously the same actress, it's easy to buy into the fact that she's playing too different characters. Her roles are suitably different, and she plays them both to perfection. Steele is often passed off as merely a horror film actress; but she really does have talent. The rest of the cast's performance is marred somewhat by some really awful dubbing and a script that isn't much better, but it doesn't matter too much because the focus of the film is never on the acting - it's clearly on the atmosphere. The plot gives way to a beautiful set of locations; the lushly Gothic castle photographed in the same cinematic style as the best black and white films that Italian cinema has to offer. At times, the film is incoherent and the plot doesn't always flow well; but it doesn't matter much, because there is always enough of the style element to ensure that the film remains interesting. The fact that the plotting isn't soaked with silly jump moments and out of place imagery makes me love the film even more; as it's clear that the director cares more about delivering story and atmosphere rather than simply trying to scare the audience. On the whole; the film has flown under more than a few radars, but that's unfair as it's damn good! Take that as a recommendation.
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6/10
Let Your Italian Nightmares Begin
gavin694217 March 2006
A mad scientist finds his wife cheating on him with the butler. After torturing them with electric shock and other gruesome methods (whippings, beatings) he finally kills them. But to get the inheritance from his wife's family, he has to marry her lunatic sister who is now cursed with the spirit of his dead wife. On top of this, we have an old women who remains young with the blood of the dead wife, who feels the dried and cold blood inside her.

Sounds good, right? And it is. The only thing that could have been better was the dubbing from Italian to English, but after the first five minutes you hardly notice anymore. The black and white really sets a mood and the fact the blood is black (because it can't be red) makes it seem even more sinister than it had to be.

Luca Palmerini calls this one an "elegantly executed story of love after death." Director Mario Caiano (under the name Allan Grunewald) is upstaged the same year by Mario Bava's "Planet of the Vampires", though I daresay the former is better. "Vampires" is given too much credit, while this film (and "Terror Creatures From the Grave") are forgotten. Caiano has said that Barbara Steele had a face that was "elusive and obscure", and was "an introverted sort of person." Considering her mythical status, even at the time, this may strike the viewer as odd. It sure seemed odd to me! And let us not forget the classic, creepy organ music by Ennio Morricone.

The Madacy DVD claims to be "digitally remastered", but is in the same poorly lit, grainy black and white as always. A better copy would surely improve this film's legacy. (Caiano had intended the film to be in black, white and red!) Interestingly, when you put the disc in a computer, it claims to be "Last Man on Earth".

I'm beginning to grow more fond of old horror films, especially with my disillusionment with modern horror. And this film is one of the better old horror films I've found. Recommended for those who are sick of Hollywood pumping horror films out for little girls.
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7/10
So weird, so shocking, do you dare see it?
catfish-er24 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I'm working my way through the Horror Classics 50 Movie Pack Collection and NIGHTMARE CASTLE is one of the movies in the set. I am watching them with my soon-to-be seven-year old daughter, which makes most of these movies a laugh riot.

However, NIGHTMARE CASTLE is not one of them! In fact, it is just my kind of old-fashioned, B-grade horror movie. It is an especially creepy thriller!

Barbara Steele plays a duel role as an unfaithful wife; and, her mentally fragile sister. Despite being obviously the same person, it's easy to suspend one's disbelief because the characters are so completely different – the wig doesn't hurt either.

The plot gives way to Dr. Stephen Arrowsmith marrying the sister, to keep his hands on his late-wife's fortune (of course after torturing her and her lover in the first part of the movie). He does this to continue his bizarre experiments, including extracting the hearts of his two victims, for the benefit of his ally Solange, the maid – who really wants to be more than that in the doctor's life.

NIGHTMARE CASTLE features beautiful cinematography, lush locations; and, an aptly Gothic castle. It is rather thin on plot; and, has absolutely abysmal dialogue, due to poor dubbing.

Barbara Steele is exceptionally well cast; and, offers up apt performances. The score is quite eerie (I wish the sound was better on this print); and, sufficiently intensifies the atmosphere and action.

Yes, the plot reads like a sordid melodrama. But, I like NIGHTMARE CASTLE.
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The ultimate Barbara Steele movie!
verna5516 November 2000
All right, the writing is something to be desired, but this movie is so richly photographed and the great '60's Scream Queen Barbara Steele is so alluring that it hardly matters. This movie uses Steele to full advantage, and even casts the sultry, sinister star in a dual role, much like Mario Bava's classic BLACK SUNDAY. Babs stars as a faithless wife who, along with her lover, is tortured to death by her vengeful-husband. However, her hubby finds that this may not have been the great revenge he thought it would be because his wife left her inheritance to her mentally unbalanced sister(Steele again, this time in a blonde wig). Of course, being the sadistic, money-hungry, conniving little swine that he is, he decides to marry his sister-in-law, and drive her to complete hysteria so he can commit her to the local loony bin and claim the family fortune for himself. Naturally, things don't go exactly as planned, but I won't give the rest of this weird little gem away. Shown in the US in a severely cut version that is so butchered, it's hardly worth watching. The original full-length European version is rare, but definitely worth seeking out.
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7/10
A Good Gothic-Styled Ghost Film
Rainey-Dawn6 June 2015
"Nightmare Castle" aka "The Faceless Monster" aka "Night of the Doomed" aka "Lovers Beyond the Grave" - whatever name you call the film it is a good Gothic horror Italian film.

The copy of the film I have is dubbed in the English language quite good. It was hard to tell the film's language is in Italian so that is a credit to film's dubbers.

The movie itself is quite fun and interesting to watch. We have a large creepy house, ghosts, a mad doctor, Jenny who is a woman seemingly going mad, greed, lust, revenge & murder - all are the makings for a good horror film.

I have to say this IS a ghost film but the ghosts seem similar to zombies because they can be touched and pushed so I guess they can materialize and solidify their bodies into flesh again. Quite wicked these ghosts are towards those that have wronged them.

BTW, Barbra Steele is good in this as usual. She play two roles with two very different personalities quite well: Muriel Arrowsmith / Jenny Arrowsmith.

This film is one of those popcorn-flicks to watch on a "dark and stormy night". It's a very good b-rated Gothic horror.

7/10
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7/10
Better than average Italian Gothic with astonishing crimes and a mad doctor conducting bizarre experiments
ma-cortes29 July 2021
Above average Italian horror movie with chills , thrills , surprises , atmospheric sets and scary happenings . A genuinely creepy tale , competently musicalized , well photographed , filled with lights and shades , reflecting paleness the victims . It deals with a sadistic count and crazy doctor (Paul Muller) tortures his unfaithful wife (Barbara Steele) and her lover (Rik Battaglia) , but then things go awry . Years later, the count remarries and the new wife (Barbara Steele herself) experiences nightmares and hauntings . In time , the perturbed ghosts appear and seek vengeance , causing a real nightmare .The eerie ghosts of the slain go back to exact their bloody and lethal vendetta , until their hearts are destroyed. A mad, sadistic scientist on the loose! So weird! ...So shocking! Do YOU dare see it! WARNING! See it with someone who's shockproof!

Enjoyable terror movie revolving around the house haunted plot , a scientific laboratory with its insane doctor and a relentless vengeance with plenty of ghosts , scary appearances formed by preternatural beings , creepy murders and ghastly events . Set at the ordinary ghastly mansion where happens scabrous and horrifying events . In spite of a few escenarios and its low budget the picture is pretty well , thanks to the adequate filmmaking , stunning cinematography taking great use of lights and shades as well as camera positioning to complement appropriate horror set pieces . Surprisingly realized with startling visual content and decently scripted by Fabio De Agostini and director Mario Caiano himself , resulting in an attractive horror movie with sensational atmosphere . Great Barbara Steele , here become a terror myth . As Barbara Steele is splendid , as always , she was the most beautiful star of the greatest horror masterpiece of Italian film, Mario Bava's Black Sunday or Mask of the demon (1960) , after following its American success, AIP brought Barbara to America, to star in Roger Corman's The Pit and thee Pendulum (1961) , she won a role in Federico Fellini's Fellini 8½ (1963); she only had a small role, but it was memorable. Reportedly, Fellini wanted to use her more in the film, but she was contracted to leave Rome to start work on her next horror movie, The horrible secret of doctor Hitchcock (1962). More horror movies followed, such as Lo spettro (1963), Nightmare Castle (1964), Un angelo per Satana (1966) and others; this success lead to her being typecast in the horror genre, where she more often than not appeared in Italian movies with a dubbed voice. Appearing in The Curse of the Crimson Altar (1968), which was mainly eye candy, with scantily-clad women in a cult. Unfortunately, Barbara got sick of being typecast in horror movies . Here Steele is well accompanied by a fine cast as Paul Muller who gives a nice acting as jealous mad scientist murders his wife and her lover , removing their hearts from their bodies, as well as Rik Battaglia as the unfortunate lover , Helga Liné as the mysterious Solangeas , Giuseppe Addobbati or John McDouglas as a butler and Marino Masé as Dr. Dereck.

Displaying a thrilling and frightening musical score by the great veteran maestro Ennio Morricone to have a long career . It contains a dark and sinister cinematography in black and white by Enzo Barboni , future succesful director of Spaghetti Westers in the hits starred by Terence Hill and Bud Spencer . The motion picture was compellingly directed by Mario Caiano . Rating 7/10. Essential and fundamental seeing for horror lovers. The picture will appeal to Italian Gothic aficionados. And Barbara Steele fans .
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5/10
Mediocre horror film aided by good acting. Has shades of Riccardo Freda's/Mario Bava's I Vampiri aka The Vampires.
Fella_shibby7 March 2019
I first saw this in the 80s on a rented vhs. Revisited it few days back. The film is about a scientist (Paul Muller) who tortures his wife (Barbara Steele) n her lover after catchin em red handed with the aid of his old n haggard maid (Helga Liné, much more attractive than Steele). The torturous punishment is only an excuse. The real motif is to usurp's the wife's property n spend time with the maid who turns very young n attractive after a blood transfusion. Told ya. Things turn bad for the scientist as the wife informs him that she had made her step sister (Barabara Steele in a double role) the nominee of the property.....

The isolated castle with its huge rooms appeared eerie, the atmosphere towards the end with the rainfall n the acting were the only good aspects. The ending seemed rushed, the ghosts weren't spooky, there is implausibility which will make one scratch their head n the stupidity shown/done by a scientist is beyond belief.
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6/10
Now, all of you nightmares are over and done with forever.
lastliberal4 April 2010
In a nutshell, scream queen Barbara Steele (Black Sunday, "The Winds of War", "War and Remembrance") get caught dallying with her lover and is tortured by her husband (Paul Muller).

She plays her step-sister in a dual role, and her ex has to figure out how to get their money.

The film features a great score by Ennio Morricone.

The atmosphere is terrific and the movie is suspenseful. Steele does great as the dual vixen/mentally unstable and naive role.

Despite all his machinations, her husband is no match for Muriel (Steele). She gets her revenge.
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5/10
What saves it is the setting and atmosphere
ComedyFan201028 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A crazy scientist catches his wife cheating and tortures both her and her lover to death, after he marries her sister because she inherits the castle and the ghosts come back for revenge.

The movie is full of horror clichés. Crazy scientists, castles, ghosts, screaming, but in the atmosphere of a 60's Gothic horror movie those clichés seem to be kind of charming. If this movie was done in our time with the same story and dialogues that made me giggle, but using modern special effects I would not be as generous with my rating.

The atmosphere of the movie is definitely its best part. It is very dark and beautiful. The castle and the fact that it is black/white make it look very chilling and one really feels the haunted atmosphere that is the positive part of this movie.

Another great thing that saves this movie from a 2/10 rating is the fact that the "Queen of Scream" Barbara Steele is actually playing a dual role. And she is great at it. We can see the strong difference between Muriel and Jenny. The only problem is that the part of Muriel is much better than Jenny. Muriel is the goth beauty with a dark and sexy side while Jenny is sort of a wall flower, and yet we only see Muriel in a few scenes at the beginning and the end. Those scenes are actually very powerful. It is of course not very scary for our time, but seeing Muriel play the organ in the castle at the beginning of the movie made me think that I will love it. Unfortunately the middle of the movie are badly written dialogues that make the movie go very slow.

The rest of the cast does a good job with this poor script as well. Paul Muller is great in the role of a crazy scientist and I was surprised to see that this is the only part Laurence Clift has played.

This movie is not something that I would consider a classic, but it is beautiful and something one could enjoy on a thunder night in in a dark room while eating candy. For a good old horror movie there definitely are better choices.
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7/10
Ambient Steele
macabro35710 June 2003
Warning: Spoilers
(aka: NIGHTMARE CASTLE)

*spoilers attached*

The DVD from Retromedia calls it THE FACELESS MONSTER but I like the older title, better.

We also have an early, haunting Morricone score that alternates between a lushly scored piano waltz and a solo church organ. It's quite creepy and effective for the film and fits right in to the story being shown.

Story involves a jealous doctor (Paul Muller) who catches his wife Muriel (Barbara Steele) in the arms of her lover, their stableman, David (Rik Battaliga) inside the greenhouse. He knocks both of them out with his cane and then has them shackled and tortured in his dungeon.

There, he finds out that he has been left out of his wife's will and that all her wealth will go to her step sister Jenny (again played by Steele) that will not only make him poor but will put an end to his mad experiments in his quest for the fountain of youth. He uses these experiments in order to keep his lover Solange (Helga Line) both young and beautiful. Without fresh blood, she will grow old and hideous.

He kills Muriel and David anyway, with a bolt of electricity in order to make way for him to marry Jenny and become executor of her estate. It seems Jenny is fragile and unstable herself and if pushed, could wind up in a mental institution.

I like the end where the rotting ghosts of Muriel and David come to avenge their deaths at the hand of the doctor. The doctor is strapped to a chair and his body is set on fire, burning him to a crisp. Solange is also cut off from her blood supply, immediately turning her into a rotting corpse - skeleton. Only when Muriel's preserved heart is thrown into the fire will her spirit find peace.

This film has excellent atmospherics and a creepy 17th century castle to boot, much like Steel's earlier CASTLE OF BLOOD (1964) had. And being filmed in b/w helps with the atmosphere, immensely.

Unfortunately, the Retromedia DVD looks like it was taken from a VHS source and is quite snowy with drop-outs and pops in it's soundtrack. Too bad they couldn't find the original film material. But even with that going against it, it's still a great horror classic from the 60s.

7 out of 10
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5/10
Steele in an atmospheric - but uneven - chiller.
imad_jafar10 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This atmospheric Italian period Gothic features one of Barbara Steele's greatest performances. When a sadistic count kills his unfaithful wife and her lover, he finds out that his wife's will stated that all her fortunes be handed over to her sister after death. Having remarried her sister, the count then starts to experience paranormal encounters with his first wife (now gruesomely deformed).

Clearly made to cash-in on the success of Mario Bava's "Black Sunday", Steele plays dual-roles as woman and monster in both films. Although Mario Caiano's directon is slow-moving and tedious, Ennio Morricone's effective score adds suitable tension to the film.
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10/10
Perfect For Halloween: Early Horror Classic
FloatingOpera722 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this chilling film from 1965 on a horror film showcase called Macabre Theatre co-hosted by Butch Patrick, Eddie from the Munsters. Directed by Mario Caiano, it stars Barbara Steele who was championed by horror film directors in Italy and who once upon a time even starred in Fellini's 8 1/2. Also in the cast: Paul Muller, Helga Line, Laurence Clift and Rik Battaglia. It has all the elements of Gothic romance/horror. Old castles, candles, organ music, ghosts, torture in a dungeon and eerie visuals. Muriel (Steele)is married to Dr. Stephen Arrowsmith (Paul Miller)but engages in an extramarital affair with the sexy gardener (Addobati). The lovers are caught en flagrance and Dr. Stephen extracts his brutal revenge by electrocuting them to death in his dungeon. Years later, he marries his dead wife's sister who looks just like her. Muriel and her lover, now ghosts, extract their own revenge on Stephen - and his current paramour the housemaid Solange (Helga Line)through the intervention of a psychiatrist Dr. Joyce (Laurence Clift). The latter parts of the film are the scariest, though the Eloctrocution scene is radically violent and sure to have earned the film an R rating. This movie seems to have been originally released in Italy and the sound/vocal-synch makes it obvious. It's in black and white but some versions are in color. Very evocative music and haunting cinematography. One of the greater horror classics.
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6/10
Gruesome Gothic fun, Italian style
Leofwine_draca4 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Yet another Gothic shocker, the ones that the Italians could make in their sleep by now. Once again events take place at a remote mansion, inhabited by sinister servants. Barbara Steele is on the receiving end of some nasty acts of violence before getting her revenge in the final reel. Sounds just like every other Italian Gothic film you've seen? You'd be right, and it's just as much fun.

Once again the use of crisp black and white photography creates some stunning images with light and darkness battling for domination of the screen. Then again I watched this film in a widescreen, pristine print so I may just be biased. There's lots of creeping around in crypts and inexplicable noises in the distance, windows blowing open, etc. which help to give this film a nicely spooky atmosphere. This atmosphere is also increased by a beautiful, stately Gothic score by Ennio Morricone, one of the best composers of all time.

The acting is good all round, only occasionally veering into ham. Barbara Steele once again gets to play a dual role, and also gets to dish out/be at the receiving end of some terrible torture. Indeed, the increased violence level here is what sets it apart from the other Gothic entries; while CASTLE OF BLOOD and contemporaries were happy to leave the violence implied and off screen, NIGHT OF THE DOOMED is happy to show some nasty torture in all its glory. One man has his face disfigured, another is burnt alive while tied to a chair, and there's a cruel hot poker moment in there too. The violence is only used occasionally, and there's nowhere near the amount that the blurb states, but it's shocking nonetheless. Steele also gets to wear some horrible makeup at the film's climax.

Many people would complain that the pacing of this film is too slow, but I loved it. For the most part Steele thinks she is going insane, hearing noises in her head and dreaming of a murder. There's even an added sub-plot about a servant who seems to have come straight from COUNTESS Dracula and needs to have blood transfusions to keep her young. McDouglas is excellent as the stuffy, seemingly nice but cruelly evil husband, and even the dashing male lead is likable. The special effects are simple and effective; the only failure is a cheap-looking electrocution. Besides, when we have such classic moments as a man wiring up a bath to electrocute an enemy and an impaled heart being thrown in a fire, thereby dispelling the ghosts, it's easy to overlook these minor flaws. An excellent addition to your collection if you're a fan of Gothic cinema.
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3/10
No forgiveness for unfaithful wives or murdering husbands.
mark.waltz1 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
It's the same old horror set-up; A cheating wife is caught by her supposedly out of town husband and both the wife and her lover are tortured and murdered. The husband takes a new wife (with an agenda, of course) and the spirits of the restless undead return to make their lives a living hell. Paul Muller is the evil scientist who ruthlessly tortures his wife and her lover then gives the wife's blood to the embittered housekeeper (Helga Liné) who is suddenly youthful again. She's extremely jealous when Muller marries the dead wife's half sister (a blonde wigged Barbara Steele, also present as the brunette first wife) with the intention of getting his hands on the estate that sister left sister. But the spirits of the not completely dead want their revenge and the blonde Steele begins to have nightmares which fits completely in plan with Muller's motives of having her declared insane so he can get his hands on the entire estate. Not if the ghosts have their way, and this is where the real nightmare comes into play.

Not for the squeamish, "Nightmare Castle" features torture through acid and electrocution, and the victims must suffer greatly before they go off into the restless spirit world of the still wandering undead. Steele has played this type of role many times before, most notably in the cult classic "Black Sunday", and while her part is fun to watch (as always), the technical flaws of this badly dubbed film are sometimes difficult to stand. The characters for the most part are all one-dimensional but the execution (pardon the pun) is exceptional and the macabre elements of the story truly gripping if one is strong enough to stomach it. Helga Liné goes from hunchbacked servant to still embittered beauty so rapidly that it takes a minute to figure out what transpired. Still, there's a lot of fun to be found in this Z-grade Gothic thriller if you can get past the poor photography, extremely tinny sound and sometimes maudlin acting.
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Excellent Gothic chiller. One of Barbara Steele's best.
Infofreak31 July 2002
'Night Of The Doomed' is an excellent Gothic thriller, full of mystery, atmosphere and chills. The stunning Barbara Steele, arguably the most beautiful Scream Queen of all, plays a duel role as an unfaithful wife, who is tortured and murdered by her scientist husband (Jess Franco regular Paul Muller), and the wife's mentally fragile sister. Muller marries the sister in an attempt to keep his hands on his late wife's fortune, needing the money to help finance his experiments. His new bride finds herself going through some increasingly strange experiences, which unbeknown to her seem to be caused by her dead sister's attempts at revenge from beyond the grave. This is a first rate example of a melodramatic supernatural thriller. Steele and Muller are both excellent and well cast, and their performances added to the stylish black and white photography, and an above average Morricone score, make this is a real treat for fans of Italian horror and giallo.
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7/10
Steele Eel Deal Keel Meal Teal Veal
Bezenby4 May 2017
Muriel (Steele) is all excited about her husband Steven leaving their creepy Scottish Mansion for business, because that means she can get busy with the gardener David! Sadly, Steven has watched a copy of previous Steele film The Ghost and knows that Steele + Lover + Greenhouse = Infidelity. So it's spousal revenge time! I'd say that chaining them up, torturing them, then removing their hearts might be just a tad too far to be honest, but that's what Steven does. His old woman sidekick Solange is also there to help out, as every murderous cuckold can't get all the heart removing done by himself.

Some time later, Steven is now married to Jenny, Muriel's twin sister (Steele, only with blonde hair this time). Now Jenny seems to have spent some time in a mental institution and Steven's had to marry her because he needs get a hold of all her and Muriel's money. Solange (who is also Steven's lover, I should have said) is a bit concerned that the whole stealing money plan isn't moving forward so fast. Also, Solange looks at least twenty years younger in this scene. What have they done to Solange? Being mentally unstable and living in a giant creepy mansion, Jenny at once starts to see things, hear things, and act like her dead sister. So it's up to you - are Steven and Solange trying to drive her mad to have her committed and gain her fortune? Have Muriel and David returned from the dead to get revenge? Is the visiting doctor in league with Jenny for some reason. You'll have to watch to find out.

But to be honest you'll be better watching the version that's twenty minutes shorter, because I don't think the 1h 44m version I watched really improves things somewhat. Compared to the other 600 or so Italian Gothic horror films I've watched recently, this one drags a bit, but then again the talents of Steele and Muller and the music of Morricone save this from being a total bore-fest. There are moments of suspense too, and please note I did try to watch this while trying to get two kids into bed and while my wife was watching TV too loud in the background.
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6/10
A Pretty Good Horror Movie
Uriah4314 February 2013
Caught having an affair, "Muriel Arrowsmith" (Barbara Steele) and her lover "David" (Rik Battaglia) are tortured and killed by her angry and sadistic husband "Dr. Stephen Arrowsmith" (Paul Muller). Further, as it so happens Dr. Arrowsmith is also a scientist who is working on a project which rejuvenates the elderly housemaid "Solange" (Helga Line) into something young and beautiful. After killing Muriel, Dr. Arrowsmith then marries her half-sister, "Jenny" (also Barbara Steele) and because of her frail mental condition tries to push her over the edge so that he can claim the family inheritance from both her and Muriel. What he doesn't count on is the fact that the hallucinations that Jenny sees may be real. At any rate, rather than spoil the movie for those who haven't seen it I will just say that this is a pretty good horror movie for this particular time period. Not only is the acting good by everyone involved but along with that both Barbara Steele and Helga Line are also quite pleasing to the eyes. It is filmed in black and white which may be a turn-off for some folks. Likewise, the story has several developments at the end which might be hard to figure out if you're not paying attention. But all things considered I enjoyed this film and I think most people who like movies of this sort will appreciate it as well.
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3/10
A true nightmare if you watch
jcholguin14 May 2001
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** ***SPOILERS*** The premise of a mad doctor, faithless wife and strange maid should make a film of this sort, fun for those that enjoy gothic horror but once the film starts, it slowly becomes unforgettable. A black & white background adds to the demeanor of the film but the dialog is the downfall. The doctor torturing his unfaithful wife and her lover fits the persona of a mad doctor which gets this film off to a good start. Taking their hearts, fits perfectly but then the trouble starts. Why would the doctor give his old maid the blood to make her young? Why marry the identical twin sister after killing his wife? Doesn't make sense to me. The dialog is simply awful. Doctor killing his butler in the electrified bath water (why do they use candles in the rooms if there is electricity) tells the physician of his new wife "only 10 minutes ago that man was the picture of health and now he is ready for the worm" is truly laughable. What is the only reason for seeing this film - if you like Barbara Steele then you get to see her twice playing twins.
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7/10
Steele is great throughout in both her roles
christopher-underwood10 January 2016
I'm sure I have seen this before but it would have been the shorter public domain version and not this splendid full length and splendid condition Severin print. Now it is possible to enjoy this super creepy, Gothic horror in all its splendour. Morricone music is a bonus, apparently his first horror score, the cinematography is also good and the very best is made of the splendid mansion that forms the set for most of the movie. Needless to say, Barbara Steele is great throughout in both her roles although she looks better with her natural dark hair than the blond. Full tilt beginning and although some feel this gets a bit wordy in the middle, it was fine by me and didn't seem to let up at all. I was a bit dismayed when it seemed the was going to turn into one of those, 'drive the wife mad movies' but it is much more than that and indeed is surprisingly graphic with electrolysis and blood transfusions. Helga Line also does well but has tough opposition with Steele taking most scenes.
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2/10
A cult favorite of some, though I can't see why
planktonrules25 February 2007
This is a lousy film--whether or not it stars 60s cult movie favorite Barbara Steele or not. If you want to see a good movie done by Ms. Steele, see "Black Sunday" and not this confusing mess of a film.

I think the biggest problem with this movie is that the plot and continuity of the characters was totally irrelevant to the writers. Instead, it seemed that every so often they tossed scary scenes into the film and made no effort to integrate them into the plot or have the characters' actions make sense. The randomness of the scares and the randomness of the behaviors of the actors just betrayed bad writing. Now as for the gross scenes, they really weren't THAT bad (especially by today's standards) but they just seemed like a cheap attempt to scare the audience. Hearts get ripped out and stuck inside statues (why?), ghosts become alive at the end and go on killing sprees (why?) and the bodies of the first wife and her lover are cremated and an empty coffin is buried (again, why?). None of these behaviors have been set up or explained in any way. The worst example was probably the sociopathic husband--one minute he seemed to love and genuinely care for his new wife and the next he's draining out her blood to give to his lady friend (whose character never really is explained or hashed out). The bottom line is that people reacted in the film instead of had a chance to act--making them seem cardboard and like people working in a carnival spook house.

So if you think that random scares, cheesy special effects and a totally convoluted plot make for a great film, give this one a try. But as for me, these factors plus sloppy dubbing (instead of subtitles) make this one eminently worth skipping.
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6/10
Great start, solid ending but boring in between Warning: Spoilers
Seems there is a short version and a longer version floating around. Not wanting to miss any important information I went for the longest version and that might have been a mistake as it really dragged after a great first 20 minutes. Once Muriel and her lover are killed of and half sister Jenny comes into play it becomes basically a movie with a long slow burning build-up to a good albeit unsurprising climax. However it's all pretty unspectacular, the grim and dark atmosphere of the start scenes cannot be repeated any more. Furthermore are the characters of both doctors rather dull as is Solange. I don't know what Stephen actually saw in her. And of course there is the obligatory attraction between doctor and patient. Even though the ending was way better than Castle of Blood I kept behind with too many questions, with such duration that is not very good. Black Sunday remains the best movie with Barbara Steele so far.
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5/10
slow "castle"
lee_eisenberg24 June 2012
Usually I like Barbara Steele's movies, but Mario Caiano's "Amanti d'oltretomba" ("Nightmare Castle" in English) is a little too slow-moving. Steele plays the wife of a scientist who looks like a cross between Christopher Plummer, Donald Sutherland and Benjamin Netanyahu. He kills her after discovering that she's having an affair, only to learn that she left her money to her sister. More shocks follow.

The cinematography and setting create a very eerie feeling, and I can forgive the lousy dubbing, but the movie is just too slow-moving. This isn't a terrible movie, but I wish that it had gotten to the main story quicker than it did. Still, Barbara Steele looks great, as always.
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8/10
Badly written, beautifully executed
barugon25 March 1999
Laughable dialogue doesn't detract too much from this moody, sometimes disturbing Italian Gothic. The story seems to be loosely adapted from an M.R. James ghost story called "Lost Hearts". Although the torture scenes in the uncut version are remarkably strong for their time, there are other things that are more disquieting. Most hideous of all is the character of Solange, the maid, whose youth has been restored by a dead woman's blood. When she speaks of how the blood grows cold and heavy in her veins, it's a very unsettling moment. The black-and-white photography is beautifully atmospheric. Ennio Morricone's music is more conventional than usual -- especially the mazurka that represents Muriel, which is too simple and sentimental for a Barbara Steele character... but the tremendous Fugue for organ which dominates the soundtrack deserves special mention. In spite of its lapses, and with apologies to Mario Bava, this is still my favorite Italian Gothic horror film!
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7/10
Atmospheric and Macabre Italian Gothic Horror Movie
claudio_carvalho11 October 2022
In the Nineteenth Century, In Italy, the wealthy Muriel Arrowsmith (Barbara Steele) is married to Dr. Stephen Arrowsmith (Paul Muller) in a loveless marriage. They live in an ancient castle and Stephen spends most of his time researching in his laboratory in the basement. When Stephen tells that he would travel during the night, Muriel meets her lover David (Rik Battaglia) in the greenhouse. However, the servant Solange (Helga Liné) warns Stephen that returns unexpectedly and sees them both making love. He locks them in chains in the dungeon and tortures them to death, keeping their hearts in a tank and cremating their bodies. Stephen expects to inherit Muriel's fortune, but she had changed her will in favor of her half-sister, Jenny that is interned in a mental institution under the treatment of Dr. Dereck Joyce (Marino Masé). However, Stephen plots a scheme to marry Jenny, drive her crazy and keep Muriel's fortune for him, with the support of his lover Solange.

"Amanti d'oltretomba", a.k.a. "Nightmare Castle", is an atmospheric and macabre Italian gothic horror movie. The first point to highlight is Barbara Steele in two lead roles, great as usual. Paul Muller is also scary in his sadistic and evil role of an ambitious scientist. The black-and-white cinematography with shadows is another plus in this film. The location, costumes and scenarios are also magnificent. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Amor de Vampiros" ("Love of Vampires")
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5/10
Rawr! Barbara Steele!
Spuzzlightyear21 September 2005
Barbara Steele has two roles in this somewhat ridiculous thriller that takes the plot of, of all things, The Corpse Vanishes and mixes it up with, of all things, Gaslight, to form a mishmash of different styles, some of it works, some of it doesn't.

After killing his newlywed wife after finding her with the Gardner, Dr. Arrowsmith (played quite chillingly by Paul Miller), almost the next day, weds her lookalike sister, just to have a hold on the huge estate his ex-newlywed had. You see, her sister has just come out of the loony bin, and the doctor feels he can make her mad and have her committed, that way she's out of the picture, and he can frolic with his true love, Solange, a woman who needs solution so that she can remain eternally young, otherwise she'll revert back to being an old lady (why on earth did the doctor fall in love with her in the first place?). So the doctor and Solange put on the haunted house show to freak out the twin sister, and soon a doctor from the hospital is called. But soon, the doctor and the sister realize some strange things about the doctor, and if the house is truly haunted or not.

Although the plot is somewhat ridiculous, and the dubbing atrocious, Barbara Steele IS easy on the eyes, and Paul Miller is quite fun to watch. So a passing mark on those two alone! The rest, and yes, that includes the plot, you're on your own.
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