Curse of the Stone Hand

Curse of the Stone Hand
Directed by Jerry Warren
Carlos Hugo Christensen
Carlos Schlieper[1]
Produced by Andrew Edwards
Carlos Gallart
Jerry Warren
Screenplay by Marie Laurent
F. Amos Powell
Starring John Carradine
Chela Bon
Carlos Cores
Katherine Victor
Music by George Andreani
Cinematography Ricardo Younis
Alfredo Traverso
Edited by Jerry Warren
Production
company
A.D.P. Pictures
Chile Films S.A.
Distributed by A.D.P. Pictures Inc.
Release date
Running time
72 minutes[2]
Country United States
Language English

Curse of the Stone Hand is a 1965[3][4] horror film created by movie producer Jerry Warren by editing together two 1940s Chilean films, La casa está vacía (The House is Empty), a 1945 film directed by Carlos Schlieper[5], and La dama de la muerte[6] (The Lady of Death), a 1946 film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen[7] (based on Robert Louis Stevenson's The Suicide Club).[8]

Warren combined sections of each film, and padded out the running time with newly filmed footage he shot with actors John Carradine[9] and Katherine Victor.

It was released theatrically in 1965 on a double-bill with Warren's similarly constructed Face of the Screaming Werewolf.[4]

Plot

The film is a two-story anthology sandwiched by a framing story that attempts to place the events of the two shorter stories as having all happened in the same house. An avid gambler moves into a cursed house in which he discovers a set of sculpted stone hands in a wall niche in the basement. The hands somehow put a curse on the occupant of the house, and the gambler comes to a bad end financially. The gambler joins what he thinks is a gambling club, only to learn it is actually a suicide club.

The house passes down to a different family in time, and the new owner's son becomes obsessed with the stone hands in the basement. He begins acting sadistically and develops hypnotic abilities, which he uses to control his brother's fiancee. She manages to free herself from the spell, and the hypnotist is killed.

Cast

Reception

Critical reception for the film has been mostly negative. Author and film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film a BOMB, his lowest rating, calling it "incoherent".[11] On his website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings, Dave Sindelar panned the film, criticizing the film's direction, writing and cutting; the latter he criticized as making the film incomprehensible.[12] TV Guide noted that the film was worth seeing "if only to get a look at a Chilean horror film".[13]

References

  1. Rist, Peter H. Historical Dictionary of South American Cinema. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. Page 143
  2. Lee, Walter W. (1973). "Reference Guide to Fantastic Films". Chelsea-Lee Books. ISBN 978-0913974025. Page 84
  3. Lee, Walter W. (1973). "Reference Guide to Fantastic Films". Chelsea-Lee Books. ISBN 978-0913974025. Page 86
  4. 1 2 Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN 0-7864-0120-6. Page 148
  5. Rist, Peter H. Historical Dictionary of South American Cinema. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. Page 143
  6. Lee, Walter W. (1973). "Reference Guide to Fantastic Films". Chelsea-Lee Books. ISBN 978-0913974025. Page 86
  7. Lee, Walter W. (1973). "Reference Guide to Fantastic Films". Chelsea-Lee Books. ISBN 978-0913974025. Page 86
  8. Lee, Walter W. (1973). "Reference Guide to Fantastic Films". Chelsea-Lee Books. ISBN 978-0913974025. Page 86
  9. "Curse Of The Stone Hand". TVGuide.com.
  10. "Curse of the Stone Hand - Memorable TV". Memorable TV.
  11. Leonard Maltin; Spencer Green; Rob Edelman (January 2010). Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide. Plume. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-452-29577-3.
  12. Sindelar, Dave. "Curse of the Stone Hand (1964)". FantasticMovieMusings.com. Dave Sindelar. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  13. "Curse Of The Stone Hand - Movie Reviews and Movie Ratings". TV Guide.com. TV Guide. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
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