Rent Revenge in the House of Usher (1988)

1.9 of 5 from 47 ratings
1h 30min
Rent Revenge in the House of Usher (aka Los crímenes de Usher) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Dr. Alan Marker receives a letter written in great distress and rides to the crumbling castle of his former university professor, Dr. Eric Usher, to offer his services. He finds the old man caught in the grip of paranoia, his mind eroded by his ongoing attempts to resurrect his comatose daughter Melissa with the blood of abducted women. As he nears inevitable death. Usher enters a twilight world that exists between life and death.
There, he is taunted by the blood-drinking ghost of his dead wife, by his faithless housekeeper, and by the various women he has bled to death over the years in the service of his daughter! As the castle begins to crumble in mockery of Usher's moral decay, Harker is forced to flee for his life - but is he too late?
Actors:
, , , , Ana Galán, Antonio Marín, , , , , , Analía Ivars, , Valerie Russel, Jean Tolzac
Directors:
Producers:
Jesús Franco, Marius Lesoeur
Writers:
Jesús Franco, Edgar Allan Poe
Aka:
Los crímenes de Usher
Studio:
Arrow Films
Genres:
Horror
Countries:
Spain
BBFC:
Release Date:
17/10/2004
Run Time:
90 minutes
Languages:
English Dubbed Dolby Digital 2.0
Subtitles:
English
DVD Regions:
Region 0 (All)
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour

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Reviews (1) of Revenge in the House of Usher

SPOILERS follow ... - Revenge in the House of Usher review by NP

Spoiler Alert
30/03/2017

Apparently there are several versions of this Jess Franco directed project. This appears to be the French version, dubbed into English, and featuring ‘The Living Dead Girl’ herself, Françoise Blanchard (as Melissa). Amidst the candle-lit wailings, darkened, crumbling passages and overwhelming architecture are Franco veterans Lina Romay (the housekeeper, Maria) and Howard Vernon (Eric Vladimir Usher).

Whilst clearly out of the hands of Franco, it has to be noted the dubbing for this is pretty appalling. Whether the voice artists are actors at all, is debatable – the exception is Usher’s voice-over, which sounds like an impression of James Mason.

The story, twisting and meandering and far too thin, involves Doctor Alan Harker (echoes of Dracula? There is also a Doctor Seward, who has in times gone by – played by a different actor – featured with Dracula, Frankenstein’s Monster and fleetingly, a werewolf under Franco’s direction) who visits the house/castle of his former Professor Usher. Usher is clearly insane and looked after by his housekeeper. His daughter (Blanchard) died years before, but can apparently be reanimated by the blood of prostitutes, who are kept imprisoned within the castle.

Despite the effective (and beautifully shot) locale, this is clearly one of the less budgeted Franco productions. Whether an artistic decision or a financial one, there is a lot of stock-footage from the earlier, far more acclaimed ‘The Awful Doctor Orloff (1962)’. There is far too much of this, although these flashbacks are far superior to the film they are supporting. Although it features a younger Vernon as Orloff/Usher, the actress playing Melissa is noticeably different. The story of Orloff has been changed to fit the narrative of ‘Revenge in the House of Usher.’

When this was released, audiences weren’t as privy to recordings of earlier films as we are these days, so the use of such footage is possibly justified. Seen now though, it seems like a way of backing up a weak story and padding out the running time. As a result, this is a patchwork affair. It isn’t, as has been suggested, Franco’s worst production – the locations alone are incredibly atmospheric and really promotes Usher’s magnificent isolation, as does the minimalist soundtrack. And yet whilst saturating the viewer in its macabre mood-scapes, it remains an often ponderous exercise, with Franco’s two trademarks – sex and gore – almost entirely absent.

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