
Color, 1971, 88 mins. 53 secs.
Directed by James Kelley
Starring Beryl Reid, Flora Robson, John Hamill, Tessa Wyatt, T.P. McKenna, John Kelland
Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC), Anchor Bay (DVD) (UK R0 PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
overlooked in the
wake of the same year's The Blood on Satan's Claw (due to the fact that both were the handiwork of U.K. horror company Tigon and released in the U.S. by the earliest incarnation of Cannon Films, frequently as a double bill together), this eerie and melancholy little chamber piece sits somewhere between the "horror hag" trend of the 1960s and the grisly kitchen sink thrills starting to be unleashed from Pete Walker.
screen
veteran with films like Black Narcissus and The Sea Hawk to her credit, Robson is an intense presence here with some unexpected costume choices really giving her a lot to play off in the second half of the film. Reid was mostly known for TV work at the time, but she had enjoyed a major surge on the big screen at the time with high profile roles in films like The Killing of Sister George, The Assassination Bureau, and a particularly juicy turn in Entertaining Mr. Sloane. Both of them are quite generous to their costars and give them room to have a few standout moments, particularly T.P. McKenna (Straw Dogs) as the officer investigating the attacks. Also on hand are John Hamill (from Tower of Evil and a lot of softcore sex films) and TV staple Tessa Wyatt as a nurse and potential love interest, though they mostly function as window dressing around the central drama. This would mark the first of only two directorial credits for TV writer James Kelley (or Kelly, depending on where he's credited), who followed this with the genuinely perverse and shocking What the Peeper Saw the following year.
title, Are You Dying, Young Man?, and the various actors on display even in tiny roles. 
SEVERIN (Blu-ray)
ANCHOR BAY (DVD)
Reviewed on November 28, 2019.