Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.
Ralph Richardson
- The Crypt Keeper
- (as Sir Ralph Richardson)
Angela Grant
- Susan (segment "Reflection of Death")
- (as Angie Grant)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPeter Cushing is said to "act as himself" in this movie. Cushing's wife had died recently, and he was very depressed. His character is a widower who uses an ouija board to talk with his dead wife. The dead wife is said to have been called "Helen" - the name of Cushing's real wife.
- GoofsIn the "Wish You Were Here" segment, Enid wishes her husband to back to life forever, but at the end it is revealed that he and the others have gone to a place where those who have died without repenting go.
- Alternate versionsThe 2007 Region 1 DVD from Twentieth Century-Fox contains some extra scenes when compared to the original theatrical and previous home video releases. At the conclusion of the story "Poetic Justice," previous releases showed the man beginning to open the bottom part of the Valentine's letter, it then cuts to him screaming and covering his face with his hands, and then cuts back to the letter to reveal a still beating, severed heart inside the paper. The 2007 release actually shows the heart when he opens the letter, his scream is heard off-screen, then it cuts to him covering his face, then cuts back to the shot of the heart as in previous releases except, the shot is slightly longer. In the story "Wish You Were Here," when Enid chops up Ralph with the saber, there is a shot of Ralph's exposed intestines which was not present in previous releases.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Stephen King's World of Horror (1986)
Featured review
Five people wander off on a tour and come upon the crypt-keeper. Each tells his or her last memory. Each one confesses to doing something wrong. The crypt-keeper listens to each before telling the five what has happened to them and where they are. Easily this is one of the best Amicus horror anthologies. It is well-crafted, well-acted, and suitably directed by genre stalwart Freddie Francis. All of the stories are pretty good, with three standing out. The first story about Christmas and a loose killer is well-done and shocking for its day. The best story stars Peter Cushing as a genial old man suffering desolation and humiliation from a heart-less(no pun intended) neighbor. Cushing does a wonderful job here, and in a way it is a sad performance as it was made shortly after the death of his long-time wife Helen. The last story is almost as good about a group of blind residents who stop taking being treated poorly and give out punishment to a military man with razor-sharp justice. Patrick Magee and Nigel Patrick both excel in this little vignette. The frame story is also well-executed and Sir Ralph Richardson hams it up amicably as the keeper of the crypt. A great group of frightening stories...each with a moral of sorts.
- BaronBl00d
- Jul 9, 2000
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Geschichten aus der Gruft
- Filming locations
- Highgate Cemetery, Swain's Lane, Highgate, London, England, UK(opening credits)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- £170,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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