House of Horrors (1946)

  • Year: 1946
  • Released: 29 Mar 1946
  • Country: United States
  • Adwords: N/A
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0038621/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/house_of_horrors
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English
  • MPA Rating: Passed
  • Genre: Adventure, Crime, Horror
  • Runtime: 65 min
  • Writer: George Bricker, Dwight V. Babcock
  • Director: Jean Yarbrough
  • Cast: Robert Lowery, Virginia Grey, Bill Goodwin
  • Keywords: new york city, revenge, murder, serial killer, black and white, sculptor,
6.1/10
26% – Critics
26% – Audience

House of Horrors Storyline

Marcel De Lange is a struggling sculptor whose work and sanity are derided by the New York art critics. After waspishly officious critic F. Holmes Harmon ruins a sale for De Lange by dismissing his expressionistic cubist work as “tripe” and later gloating about it in his column, the distraught artist goes to the river to drown himself. There he discovers the half-drowned body of the notorious serial killer, the Creeper, and takes him back to his studio to recover. Feeling empowered by the friendship of the acromegalic sociopath, De Lange tasks him with murdering the critics who have pilloried him in print. When successful commercial artist Steve Morrow is wrongly suspected of the crimes, his art critic girlfriend Joan Medford decides to follow her instinct about a mysterious bust De Lange has suspiciously covered in his studio, and she decides to snoop around.—duke1029@aol.com

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House of Horrors Movie Reviews

Bitter artist uses The Creeper to take murderous revenge on his critics

House of Horrors is a creepy little shocker film that is quite well done. Interestingly it’s working title was “The Sinister Shadow” before it was released. House Of Horrors was another Ben Pivar production and Ben could put this kind of horror film out in his sleep.Director Jean Yarbrough cut his teeth directing these kind of B thrillers and he went on to have a very successful career in television. I always considered Rondo Hatton to be sort of a walking prop. He’s a bit more animated in this story then usual but here he’s not so much the monster as he is the real monsters tool. Virginia Grey wasn’t one of Universal’s Screen Queens”. She was loaned out for “House” from M-G-M. She’s very good as the spirited reporter trying to get the story.Robert Lowery was a handsome and talented leading man but you could aways tell when he was really into his role or just picking up a paycheck.The dependable Alan Napier has a turn as an egotistical and sarcastic art critic. He so good in the role that the audience cheers when he gets his.

Martin Kosleck was, as my dad used to say,the poor man’s Peter Lorre He could play sinister capably enough but he was a bit too subdued to play out and out crazy. In this story he is the real monster, however, creeping around in the shadows and letting Rondo do his dirty work.This is one of Koslecks biggest roles and his weaselly Marcel De Lange is one of his best characterizations

Its a shame that Rondo Hatton passed on just as his star was beginning to rise in the horror film Pantheon so to speak. Whether or not he could have lasted as a horror star nobody can say. The second horror cycle was beginning to dry out in 1946 so he could have slid back into obscurity had he lived.The American Horror Film Board presents the Rondo Award every year to deserving horror films and actors since 2002. Film fans vote on the recipients. So Rondo Hatton has achieved some degree of movie immortality.

Martin Kosleck’s finest hour in Hollywood

1946’s “House of Horrors” was a staple of Pittsburgh’s Chiller Theater, hosted by Bill ‘Chilly Billy’ Cardille, no doubt because of its inclusion in the popular SHOCK! package of vintage Universal titles first released to television in the late 50s. It was also Bill Cardille who introduced me to Martin Kosleck’s “The Flesh Eaters,” his ability to play cold blooded Nazi villainy on full display, although the actor himself fled the Hitler regime for America by the late 30s. He achieved a kind of lasting stardom only at Universal, from 1944 to 1946, with this film in particular standing out as his finest hour in Hollywood. The so-called house of horrors (shooting title “Murder Mansion”) is the dimly lit studio of starving sculptor/artist Marcel De Lange, so poor that he must borrow bread and cheese from a neighbor. When a potential sale of $1000 (for a statue called “Circes from Troy”) is dashed by smug, self satisfied critic F. Holmes Harmon (Alan Napier), Marcel decides to end his life at the waterfront, only to rescue a drowning man later identified as The Creeper (the immortal Rondo Hatton), a dull witted fiend notorious for snapping the spines of his victims (usually pretty girls). Unconcerned about his newfound model’s true identity, Marcel begins what he fittingly describes as his ‘deathless masterpiece,’ certain that the long overdue acclaim denied him will finally come his way. The morning after the Creeper stalks out into the night and murders a streetwalker (Virginia Christine), Marcel hardly bats an eye, surreptitiously planting the seeds of vengeance in the killer’s mind, against the critics who routinely mock him as the laughingstock of New York art circles, with even the insufferable, smarmy girl newshound (Virginia Grey) referring to Marcel as a ‘harmless little screwball.’ This fairly decent buildup pretty much falls to the wayside a third of the way in, as the film shifts its focus from the ‘villains’ to the ‘heroes,’ about as thoroughly nasty a bunch of detestables as any viewer is likely to find. We soon start rooting for the bad guys to kill off as many of them as possible, surely not the intention of the filmmakers! The credits ‘introduce’ Hatton as The Creeper (September 1945), but the character had made one prior appearance in the 1944 Sherlock Holmes feature “The Pearl of Death,” and would make a third in “The Brute Man,” Hatton’s final film, a prequel to “House of Horrors,” completed in November 1945 (the actor died February 2 1946, before either saw release). His physical presence is certainly impressive, but his delivery of dialogue far less so, but it must be said that the cringe worthy lines scripted here must rank with some of the all time worst. Listening to the nominal leads discuss thumb twiddling may perhaps be the absolute nadir, but Kosleck’s Marcel is fortunately spared the indignity. Director Jean Yarbrough, best remembered for 1940’s “The Devil Bat,” and helming all 52 episodes of the Abbott and Costello TV series, does what may be his finest genre work, especially in regards to Marcel’s pet cat, ever faithfully following him from kitchen to studio in scene after scene (quite an achievement considering what was probably no more than the usual 12 day shooting schedule). The climactic tussle has the artist trying to stop the killer from destroying his likeness, framed before the staircase, from which the cat comes charging down the steps, nestling in the hand of its now dead master (cat fanciers rejoice!). Martin Kolseck fondly recalled his work on the picture (and his happy times at Universal), never once crossing the line that would lose the audience’s sympathy, and the touching opening between man and pet sets the proper tone for the duration of the film. A nice tribute to an actor who made a career out of playing Goebbels and other menacing Nazis on screen, airing an impressive seven times on Pittsburgh’s Chiller Theater.

Surprisingly fun

Maybe it was because my expectations were low, but saw this on “Svenghoulie’s” show and enjoyed it as an old black and white creepy movie from the late 1940s just as a Saturday night sort of thing. Not great but had some especially bright spots and a pretty decent cast and storyline, and kept you wondering what the outcome would be right up to the end. I kept expecting the story to fall apart at some point as it usually does in the ones shown on this show, but it kept continuing to be fairly engaging and had some cultural references to the art world that kept it fun to watch. I liked the portrayal of art critics and the art theme, and fun to see the actor who played “Big Jim Champion” on “Circus Boy” in a lead role, along with the monster dude who was an interesting character and had an interesting life story outside of the movie. All in all, fun to watch if you like old movies from the ’40s and just want to see something not too deep or demanding that might remind you of a past era you find yourself able to get lost in.