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A man stands by a gate.
Behind forbidding walls the venomous seed of tormented desires goes to a nightmare of unspeakable horror.
A woman walks down a dark corridor.
Irene eats an apple making eye contact with Teresa who looks away.
A red headed woman cries out as a group of woman surround her.
Senora Fourneau, a matronly dressed woman looks on emotionless.
Fourneau hands a whip to one of the women.
I must run this establishment with a firm hand
Scary music plays.
The red-headed woman is held down and whipped across her bare back. She screams in pain.
A caption reads: The House That Screamed.
The girls all sit in the dining room eating when they suddenly all stand up.
Irene talks to Fourneau who has her back to her and approaches a window.
Everything seems very strange Madame. Five girls have disappeared in less than four months. We've never heard from any of these girls again.
Music crescendos.
A hand appears in the transom above a door.
The girls look anxious in a sewing class.
Five have died, who will be the sixth. Who will be the sixth?
Teresa talks excitedly to another girl.
Every three weeks a young man comes to visit here, each time one of us has a chance to meet him.
A man on a horse and cart is seen through a window.
Next time it'll be my turn.
The man and Teresa are playing in a stable. He throws her towards a pile of hay as she laughs.
A woman watches intently from a window.
Close-ups on woman wetting a piece of thread and threading a needle. She bites her lip.
This is the house that screamed filled with distorted desires and explosive frustrations.
Fourneau kisses a young man on the cheek.
Hands stroke each other.
Sensual music plays.
Fourneau supervises the girls as they each shower with white robes on.
The young man is crawling through a tight space.
One of the girls, Catalina, smiles as she begins to take her robe off.
We see the young man is watching her from his hiding space.
She laughs in the shower.
A sinister man with a moustache appears at a window.
Sensuous sinister terror.
The music becomes tenser.
A door handle goes up and down.
The foot of a door.
A woman is in a garden and a male figure appears behind her watching.
A hand tries to reach a door and climb up.
Making life more to be feared than death.
We see two faded shots of a woman struggling with a hand over her mouth and a bloodied dagger.
A caption reads: Starring Lilli Palmer. Co-starring Cristina Galbo. John Moulder Brown. Mary Maude.
We zoom into a skull with blue eyes and long red hair.
A caption reads: The House That Screamed. An American International Release.
Arrow Video
Spain's first major horror film production, The House that Screamed is a stylish gothic tale of tortured passions and bloody murder that bridges the bloody gap between Psycho and Suspiria.
Thérèse (Cristina Galbó) is the latest arrival at the boarding school for wayward girls run under the stern, authoritarian eye of Mme Fourneau (Lilli Palmer). As the newcomer becomes accustomed to the strict routines, the whip-hand hierarchies among the girls and their furtive extra-curricular methods of release from within the forbidding walls of institutional life, she learns that several of her fellow students have recently vanished mysteriously. Meanwhile, tensions grow within this isolated hothouse environment as Mme Fourneau's callow but curious 15-year-old son Louis (John Moulder-Brown) ignores his mother's strict orders not to get close to the "tainted" ladies under her ward.
Directed by Narciso Ibáñez Serrador (Who Can Kill a Child?), this landmark title in Spanish genre cinema has been restored to its director's original full-length vision for the first time.
Product Features
- Brand new 2K restoration from the original negative by Arrow Films
- High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of the 105-minute uncut version titled The Finishing School (La Residencia), and the 94-minute US theatrical version titled The House That Screamed, via seamless branching
- Original lossless English mono audio on both versions, and lossless Spanish audio on the uncut version
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing on both versions, and optional English subtitles for the Spanish audio
- Brand new audio commentary by critic Anna Bogutskaya
- This Boy's Innocence, a previously unreleased interview with actor John Moulder-Brown
- Archive interview with Mary Maude, from the 2012 edition of the Festival of Fantastic Films
- All About My "Mama", a brand new interview with Juan Tébar, author of the original story
- The Legacy of Terror, a brand new interview with the director's son, Alejandro Ibáñez
- Screaming the House Down, a brand new interview with Spanish horror expert Dr Antonio Lázaro-Reboll, discussing the history of the film and its director
- Alternative footage from the original Spanish theatrical version
- Original trailers, TV and radio spots
- Image gallery
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Colin Murdoch
- FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Shelagh Rowan-Legg and double-sided fold-out poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Colin Murdoch
- Arrow Video
- 105 mins approx
- 15
- 2.39:1
- Spanish
- 1
- Arrow Video
- Narciso Ibáñez Serrador
English
- Christina Galbó
- Lilli Palmer
- John Moulder-Brown
English, English SDH
- 1969
- B
The House That Screamed | Original Artwork Slipcover | Limited Edition Blu-ray
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A man stands by a gate.
Behind forbidding walls the venomous seed of tormented desires goes to a nightmare of unspeakable horror.
A woman walks down a dark corridor.
Irene eats an apple making eye contact with Teresa who looks away.
A red headed woman cries out as a group of woman surround her.
Senora Fourneau, a matronly dressed woman looks on emotionless.
Fourneau hands a whip to one of the women.
I must run this establishment with a firm hand
Scary music plays.
The red-headed woman is held down and whipped across her bare back. She screams in pain.
A caption reads: The House That Screamed.
The girls all sit in the dining room eating when they suddenly all stand up.
Irene talks to Fourneau who has her back to her and approaches a window.
Everything seems very strange Madame. Five girls have disappeared in less than four months. We've never heard from any of these girls again.
Music crescendos.
A hand appears in the transom above a door.
The girls look anxious in a sewing class.
Five have died, who will be the sixth. Who will be the sixth?
Teresa talks excitedly to another girl.
Every three weeks a young man comes to visit here, each time one of us has a chance to meet him.
A man on a horse and cart is seen through a window.
Next time it'll be my turn.
The man and Teresa are playing in a stable. He throws her towards a pile of hay as she laughs.
A woman watches intently from a window.
Close-ups on woman wetting a piece of thread and threading a needle. She bites her lip.
This is the house that screamed filled with distorted desires and explosive frustrations.
Fourneau kisses a young man on the cheek.
Hands stroke each other.
Sensual music plays.
Fourneau supervises the girls as they each shower with white robes on.
The young man is crawling through a tight space.
One of the girls, Catalina, smiles as she begins to take her robe off.
We see the young man is watching her from his hiding space.
She laughs in the shower.
A sinister man with a moustache appears at a window.
Sensuous sinister terror.
The music becomes tenser.
A door handle goes up and down.
The foot of a door.
A woman is in a garden and a male figure appears behind her watching.
A hand tries to reach a door and climb up.
Making life more to be feared than death.
We see two faded shots of a woman struggling with a hand over her mouth and a bloodied dagger.
A caption reads: Starring Lilli Palmer. Co-starring Cristina Galbo. John Moulder Brown. Mary Maude.
We zoom into a skull with blue eyes and long red hair.
A caption reads: The House That Screamed. An American International Release.
Arrow Video
Spain's first major horror film production, The House that Screamed is a stylish gothic tale of tortured passions and bloody murder that bridges the bloody gap between Psycho and Suspiria.
Thérèse (Cristina Galbó) is the latest arrival at the boarding school for wayward girls run under the stern, authoritarian eye of Mme Fourneau (Lilli Palmer). As the newcomer becomes accustomed to the strict routines, the whip-hand hierarchies among the girls and their furtive extra-curricular methods of release from within the forbidding walls of institutional life, she learns that several of her fellow students have recently vanished mysteriously. Meanwhile, tensions grow within this isolated hothouse environment as Mme Fourneau's callow but curious 15-year-old son Louis (John Moulder-Brown) ignores his mother's strict orders not to get close to the "tainted" ladies under her ward.
Directed by Narciso Ibáñez Serrador (Who Can Kill a Child?), this landmark title in Spanish genre cinema has been restored to its director's original full-length vision for the first time.
Product Features
- Brand new 2K restoration from the original negative by Arrow Films
- High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of the 105-minute uncut version titled The Finishing School (La Residencia), and the 94-minute US theatrical version titled The House That Screamed, via seamless branching
- Original lossless English mono audio on both versions, and lossless Spanish audio on the uncut version
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing on both versions, and optional English subtitles for the Spanish audio
- Brand new audio commentary by critic Anna Bogutskaya
- This Boy's Innocence, a previously unreleased interview with actor John Moulder-Brown
- Archive interview with Mary Maude, from the 2012 edition of the Festival of Fantastic Films
- All About My "Mama", a brand new interview with Juan Tébar, author of the original story
- The Legacy of Terror, a brand new interview with the director's son, Alejandro Ibáñez
- Screaming the House Down, a brand new interview with Spanish horror expert Dr Antonio Lázaro-Reboll, discussing the history of the film and its director
- Alternative footage from the original Spanish theatrical version
- Original trailers, TV and radio spots
- Image gallery
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Colin Murdoch
- FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Shelagh Rowan-Legg and double-sided fold-out poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Colin Murdoch
- Arrow Video
- 105 mins approx
- 15
- 2.39:1
- Spanish
- 1
- Arrow Video
- Narciso Ibáñez Serrador
English
- Christina Galbó
- Lilli Palmer
- John Moulder-Brown
English, English SDH
- 1969
- B
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