Color, 1967, 100 mins. 18 secs. / 93 mins. 12 secs.
Directed by Freddie Francis
Starring Burgess Meredith, Jack Palance, Peter Cushing, Beverly Adams, Michael Bryant, John Standing, Robert Hutton, John Phillips, Michael Ripper, Maurice Denham, Niall MacGinnis, Clytie Jessop
Indicator (Blu-ray) (UK R0 HD), Sony (DVD) (US R0 NTSC) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9), Mill Creek (Blu-ray) (US RA HD) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
the success of
the horror omnibus film Dr. Terror's House of Horrors, Hammer competitor Amicus Productions realized it had found a niche in the British scary movie sweepstakes. The second of its seven much-loved anthology horror films was quickly put into motion and proved to be its only one released by Columbia Pictures: Torture Garden, a colorful variation on the formula of a group of strangers whose stories are told under sinister, possibly supernatural circumstances.
(Ewing) sabotaged by his sentient grand piano. Finally, Ronald (Palance) aspires to be the greatest collector of Edgar Allan Poe artifacts in the world but finds himself in a deadly
competition with the more low-key and secretive Lancelot (Cushing), who might have the most prized rarity of them all.
Psycho. (This one came after The Deadly Bees and The Psychopath, but before Asylum and The House That Dripped Blood.) As with the other anthologies, the quality dips
up and down a bit from story to story, with the last one being the most memorable as it contrasts Palance's ripe acting style with Cushing's more precise, classical demeanor. The first tale is also amusing as a precursor of sorts for the "Cat from Hell" segment from Tales from the Darkside: The Movie, which takes the same idea to much gorier extremes.
extra here is The Guardian Interview (77m) with Francis and interviewer Alan Jones from 1995 at the National Film Theatre, encompassing his entire career in the British film industry from working as a cameraman expected to "make pretty pictures" through his biggest beef with the current state of moviemaking, as well as discussion of his
work shooting for David Lynch. Production supervisor Ted Wallis (4m15s) briefly notes his enjoyment during the production and admiration for Francis under strict budgetary constraints that entailed some changes to the script, while the great Ramsey Campbell shares his memories of Bloch (16m37s) from his early admiration and glee at seeing his name published in the same short story collection to their friendship among the group of horror writers flourishing in the '70s, with additional notes about the tales in the film and their divergences from the short stories (especially "Enoch"). Amicus co-founder Milton Subotsky is covered in a featurette with Fiona Subotsky (8m19s), with recollections of his affinity for Gothic subjects and additional thoughts on other projects of his like The Birthday Party and The Mind of Mr. Soames. Another horror novelist weighs in as Kim Newman dissects the film (24m53s) at length with observations about the Bloch-Amicus-Francis collaborations, the contributions of Hammer composer James Bernard, and Subotsky's tendency to swipe familiar titles for his own films, though not so successfully in one case involving Harlan Ellison. The disc closes out with the theatrical trailer (featuring some great, very '60s graphics) and separate, mammoth galleries for stills and promotional material from various countries. The limited 3,000-unit edition features an insert booklet featuring a liner notes essay by Laura Mayne and sample critical reviews and press coverage from the film's initial release.