Episode Transcript
Prepare yourself for the terror the prison of madness.
We have few inter and Nonritter.
Speaker 2Welcome to Unsung Horrus with LUNs.
Speaker 3And Deerica.
Speaker 2Leave all your sanity behind.
Speaker 3It can't help you.
Speaker 1Now.
Speaker 4Welcome to another episode of Unsung Horrors, the podcast where we discuss underseen horror films, specifically those which have fewer than one thousand views on letterboxed.
Speaker 2I'm Erica, I'm Lance.
Speaker 4And today we are getting into a director whom we have never covered before.
I'm sure there are a few films that he's done that are under a thousand, mostly the TV films, and that's what we're going to be covering today is one of those.
We're going to be talking about the House of Lost Souls from nineteen eighty nine aka La Casa de le anime Eranti.
Speaker 2I tried very good.
Speaker 4So this is in the Cauldron box set Houses of Doom, along with three other films which we'll talk about, and it currently has seven hundred and eighteen views on letterboxed.
Now.
If you don't have the box set as of this recording, the movie is also on YouTube.
I am bad at comparing versions.
I know that the YouTube version was five minutes short, so just know that going in you're going to be missing out on some stuff.
If you watch the YouTube version, we're going to be talking about the full version from the Cauldron box set.
So House of Lost Souls is this film in particular.
It follows a group of young archaeologists, one psychic and a young boy, who are on their way home when they are forced to stay at an old hotel in the mountains.
Unbeknownst to them, the former owners would kill the guests in order to rob them, and now the ghosts of those victims haunt the hotel, as well as the hotel owner, serial killer Guy.
The group finds themselves unable to leave except for a quick trip to town and the cemetery to get some exposition, and one by one they fall victim to the ghost wrath.
As I mentioned, this is in the Cauldron Houses of Doom box set.
I didn't bring the whole box and duh, all right, it's okay.
It's one of four television films produced by ray Atalia in the late eighties for a series called Lecasa Maladette or Houses of Doom, which is the name of the box set.
In the boxet, there are two films by Luccio Fulci, The House of Clocks and The Sweet House of Horrors, and then two by Lenzi this one and the House of Witchcraft.
Now none of these were because of the gore.
I'm not sure why the producers were surprised given who they hired for this.
Speaker 2Seriously, Yeah, even the umberto Lindsay.
He even said he was wrong for the job because they wanted thrillers, and this is they him and Fulci delivered what they knew, that they know what to do.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean they I feel like ful Cheese are definitely toned down from there.
They're certainly not the Gates of Hell trilogy by any means, but there is still some gore in there.
And I don't know what they expected by hiring them for that, and they're I don't know, there's.
Speaker 2More sex in ful Cheese than there is in Lindsay's, and I guess that's more.
I don't know.
Accepted for Italian television.
Speaker 4I think I think I read Lindsay's like cut his out on purposefully because it was for television.
But I think full Chi just didn't care.
Speaker 2Yeah, he was like, I got a job, so I'll cut the gore and not cut the sex scenes out.
Speaker 4Uh yeah, so since they were never aired, he's lived on bootlegs for years before getting released on physical media.
I think at two thousand was the first time they were released in Italy.
But now we have this box set with a lot of great features for the whole set, so hard recommend to pick these up.
I mean, personally, this is just like my sort of comfort zone.
So I did want to talk briefly about the series before getting into cast and crew, and I want to read from Roberto Curti's Italian Gothic horror films, the nineteen eighty to nineteen eighty nine version.
So one of the most interesting things to me that he said was Originally the series was to comprise six titles, to be directed by Fulchi, Lenzi and Lomberto Bava, but due to other working commitments, Bava was replaced by Marcello Avalone.
Bulchi approached the project enthusiastically and asked to substitute two of his own stories for the ones he had been assigned, and Lenzai did the same with one of his own invention, which was this film La Cosa del anime Erante.
But a last minute budget cut on the part of Raysalia and Avaloni's commitments had the series re size to four titles, only the two titles that were to be directed by Avalone.
And this is where I'm like super bummed.
It's like the what could have been The first one by Avlone was to be La Casa del nano Deforme The House of the Deformed Dwarf.
Oh yeah, it was retitled to La Cosa dela nico de cire The best Friend's House, which whatever.
And the second one was La Casa dele bambola con kapoli.
Kind I suck it.
That's a long ass title, all right.
The second one was La Cosa dele bambola cone cappelli a cRIO Jesus Christy.
Speaker 2That's a great dish.
Speaker 4Yeah, the House of the doll with growing hair.
That sounds creepy, I know, right, So these two were left in the drawer.
Speaker 2Quote.
Speaker 4It's a real shame because the two films Marcello Avalone would direct were really good.
Stropa recalled he was one of the script writers or one of the people working on the on the films.
We had written those scripts with lots of passion and interest, trying to blend the fantastic and contemporary issues.
In fact, Lacassa del my god.
I love these episodes when we do Italian, when we try to pronounce and we sound so anything.
Speaker 2Yeah, anything that's not American made.
We're just terrible.
Anyway.
Speaker 4The Dwarf One was written by me and Clarice treated the issue of organ transplants in an original way.
Speaker 2I mean, come on, dude, I know.
I mean, the script is still out there.
Who's going to make it?
Speaker 4Someone find that someone make it?
Please.
Martine is still alive, right, he could do it.
Speaker 2Yeah, so is Kotzi.
Speaker 4He could do it.
I would love to see Katzi make the house lambird.
Speaker 2I give it to Bava, like, give it to young Baba.
Speaker 4I feel like I feel like I want an unhinged version of Yeah, I don't know that that's true.
Well, no, he's got a cup anyway.
Speaker 2I digress.
Speaker 4So one other thing I wanted to point out that was in Curtie's book was about the setting.
So he said, it is a story of six students on vacation who stopped by an old, abandoned hotel in the Alps where a massacre happened many years earlier.
The ghosts of the victim still haunt the place where they seek revenge on the on the teenagers who find out they cannot leave the building.
So, despite the attempt at making a ghost story in an Italian setting, Lenzi bluntly described the result as quote downright crap and complained but he hadn't found the right setting for the movie, which was shot in the region of marsh in central Italy with a fascist summer camp made to pass as an old hotel.
So I thought that was interesting given like Lindsay's political background, like very very political, very anti fascist, very anti government, religion, all of those things, And so I think he was probably just upset with like the location in general, and like working within a much smaller budget than he was used to.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's what I think.
The commentary i'd listened to on one of the one of the commentaries on the House of Lust Souls, not the Sam Degan one, the one with Rod Barnett and Adrian Smith.
Speaker 4Oh yeah, they're great.
Speaker 2Yeah, they were good.
They had some good information on the location, saying that obviously Lindsay was not happy or pleased with this location.
Most of the interior shots throughout our studio settings they're created, but the outside shots obviously, is this fascist summer camp, this like brutalist architecture like a hotel.
Speaker 4No, not at all.
Speaker 2But yeah, these things were constructed all over through the twenties and forties, mainly to what is it, to quote, improve the health and mind of the young teenagers in Italy.
Not only to like mold or political ideological views.
But tuberculosis was like running rampant and it was to pretty much keep the vitology of the Italian race safe and these young boys.
Yeah, terrible stuff.
But yeah, I think the guy that found I think I'm assuming it's a man.
I could have been a woman.
But the production designer and the person who found these little location scout, Lindsay was butting heads with this person and they were they left the project, but they were stuck with this, and Lindsay was very unhappy with it, which makes sense.
Speaker 4Yeah, I think the end product is still great.
It's always a shame when you find out, like the directors aren't happy with the final product.
Speaker 2And especially when you enjoy it, like I'm like, oh, come on, that bad umberto come on.
Speaker 4I know it's in a you know, fascist location, but that's it.
It's fine.
Everything else is great.
Come on, so let's get into the crew so I mentioned already directed by Emberto Lensi.
He also wrote the screenplay from a original story by him Lance, I'll have you pull up your letterboxed here.
What is your Lensi percentage watched?
Speaker 5Oh?
Speaker 2I don't see here.
Okay, I'm at twenty percent.
You need to pick it up, sir, I do.
I've only watched.
Oh, I've only logged thirteen of his sixty five.
Speaker 4Letterboxed I am that forty one percent.
Speaker 2Well, hey, hey, look at me.
Now.
Speaker 4There's a few that I am saving for a rainy day, like Spasmo from nineteen seventy four, which has I think the greatest poster ever.
Personal favorites include almost Human, you know, I think one of the most like unh hinge nihilistic Policio Tacchi movies out there.
Thomas Milan is perfection in that cannibal fareroks aka make them die slowly.
John has the one sheet for this, and that one rarely comes down when we do our poster rotation, Like we have a few like the ones in here, like they stay up because I'm lazy, But like out in like the living room area, that one, that one stays up.
It's got like the great little yellow splash on.
It's banned in thirty one countries.
Speaker 2Yeah, it's a great posting.
Speaker 4Nightmare City another favorite.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 4Do you have any personal favorites besides those?
Speaker 2No, I mean, I love Violent Naples.
I actually always enjoyed a lot of his Carol Baker stuff too, so sweet Soaperverse, Quiet Place to Kill.
Nightmare City obviously is a huge or Nightmare Beach is a huge Yeah, he did do Nightmare City.
Yeah, the Nightmare Beach.
Speaker 4That one has one of the greatest dummy drops of all time off the Ferris Wheel.
I think it's at the amusement park, but it's fucking yea.
Speaker 2And I love the House of Lossholes.
Yeah, it's a good one.
Speaker 4I mean, the great thing about Lindsay is how prolific he is.
Like, I haven't seen either of his Westerns, which I'm going to make a point to do.
I think he only I checked the tags on Letterbox and he only had two, so I definitely want to check those out.
But you know, he worked in you know, so many different genres.
He started as an assistant director, mostly doing like adventure films which were popular in that time, like the sixties.
Until he started working on his own, he did a lot of early jolly like you said with Carol Baker.
But I do think a lot of people will first associate him with euro Crime or Policotecci films like Almost Human, Violent Naples, Cenec, The Rat and the Fists, Syndic and Sadists.
But we also can't forget that he has contributed to the d CU, the Demons Cinematic Universe.
Oh yes, with Black Demons from nineteen ninety one.
Oh good lord, I've seen them all and I can tell you it's a Lensai film.
So we don't bring this credit up often, but I think it's worth mentioning, and it was something that Sam and possibly Rod and Adrian pointed out as well.
But there's a legacy credit for the assistant director.
We have his daughter, Alessandra Lenzi, like her father Romberto, who got to start as an assistant director.
His daughter is here following in his footsteps.
And I love that about.
You know, some of the greats in Italian you had that with the Bava's obviously you had Mario and Lamberto, and I think grandfather I can't remember his name offhand, the Argento's you know, you have Dario his daughter Azia, for whatever that's worth.
And even Folchi's daughter.
You know, she was on set with aspirations to get into film and has some credits on a few as well.
So it's nice to see a woman in there.
It is.
Speaker 2Yeah, that wasn't discussed on their commentary, by the way, but that's that's really interesting.
Speaker 4Well, I see you, Rod and Adrian.
I'm just kidding.
They're great.
Speaker 2They are.
Speaker 4So the score here is by Claudio Semonetti here as Claude King.
Speaker 2Though, great, that's a good Claude King rolls off the top.
Speaker 4So it doesn't seem, though, like he did anything original for this though.
Speaker 2Yeah, this is all repurpose from previous films for sure.
Speaker 4Yeah, there's I think both Troy Howarth and his book Make Them Die Slowly The Kinetic Cinema of Romberto Lenzi.
He and Roberto Curti both pointed out that he basically just took the work that he did from Demon's Opera and body Count from nineteen eighty six.
Speaker 2Yeah, Doodaughter's body Count and then the song that's playing on the radio when the kids are in the basement just hanging out that they turn on the radio is actually a track from opera titled Crows.
Yeah, so i'll repurpose stuff.
I don't know if it was like a cost issue or what, but it doesn't matter.
It's great.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean I would I would assume it was definitely a cost issue.
Yeah, but yeah, I love it as well, and it I think it's also something I'll talk about later.
Is as much as I love Fabio Frizzi and Dinaggio and so many other you know composers, Semonetti has a very much punk rock sensibility, so I think it works really well, especially for this era in Italian horror, where it's like we're on a limited budget.
We need we're having a few moments to get unhinged, and we need to really sort of punch it up a bit.
Speaker 2Yeah.
I'm such a fan of his Demons soundtrack.
I think it's the best Italian horror soundtrack.
That it wouldn't bother me at all if it popped up in every Italian horror movie.
So when I heard that, I was like, you had mentioned when he made this pick that this is a comfort movie.
Yes, and as soon as the as soon as the first shot opens up with the hazy you know landscape, you have that Hermit hotel, so you know it's some sort of haunted location.
And then Simonetti's like demon starts playing.
I'm like, okay, settle in.
This is this is the Italian whore I love and watch?
Yeah for sure perfect.
Speaker 4So effects here.
There's a two people I want to mention.
The first is there's an interview on the disc for this with eli Otero Billy, and he tells a hilarious story about the quote unquote haunted washing machine death and honestly, like the major dry or the dryer, yeah, whatever it is, appliance it kills.
Speaker 2It could be a washing machine.
Speaker 4Maybe I have a front loading No, I don't have a.
Speaker 2Front loading washing we do, yeah.
Speaker 4Okay, anyway, whatever works when you want to decapitate a kid, you know, either one.
So he tells this hilarious story about the haunted washing machine or dryer death, and honestly, the majority of him interview is spent talking about that, and I'm here for it.
I'm so glad that like all that time was spent on it because it's one of the best parts of the movie well be best for me.
Speaker 2Yeah, obviously that's another reason that this pick was made.
Speaker 3Probably.
Speaker 4Yeah, So Terri Billy has lots of credits, including Hands of Steel, and he has an active Instagram it's ele eos fx E l io s f X, So go follow him people, he only has like two hundred and something followers.
You guys, if you know him.
And who's the guy who did like.
Speaker 2The animatronics stuff catures from the abyss AlSi?
Yeah, does he have Does he have an Instagram?
Speaker 4I don't remember if al Pasari had an instagram, but he had a website.
But anyway, we need to like make sure that they know we love them.
So give give el eo Terribilia follow what's this?
Speaker 2I guess he was at back to the beginning the Black Sabbath Ozzy Osbourne show because he's got a picture of James he Ffield hugging Ozzy Osworren.
Speaker 4We'll go follow him.
Speaker 2Unsung Horrorce follows him.
Yeah, come on, guys, be cool.
Speaker 4So the other person on effects is Giuseppe Pino for Antie.
He's he was on the Hands of Steel, also Devilfish, the Church, the sect.
He's worked on some Argento films, including Bird with the Crystal Plumage, Argento's World of Horror.
He also worked on The Murder Sect, which is a Mario Bianci film.
This one has a write up in the book, the first book because this one has an even better child decapitation than this movie, and so he's got a specialty.
He knows how to decapitate a child.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's that's the thing with this crew.
Like I know, Lindsay and a lot of interviews says he was unhappy with how this some of these came out.
Yeah, but it's a skilled crew.
They had like a matter of weeks to shoot each each film.
Yeah, so you have all handling everything and like doing all this in a matter of weeks is just kind of really impressive.
Yeah, So you hire the best, and when it becomes when the whole movie is based on decapitation desk, you got to get the best.
Speaker 4Yeah, of course.
So Ferranti also has credits with Fulci including Cat and the Brain, Enigma and Hansel and Gretel which is a later full Chi TV movie.
And then finally for crew at least that I want to touch on is the cinematographer, which is John Carla Ferrando also worked on Hands of Steel, so I think a lot of them were in that film.
He worked with Sergio Martino on Your Vices, The Locked Room and Only I Have the Key, All the Colors of the Dark, The Great Alligator.
He also worked on Troll two, Lendzi's other House of Doom film, House of Witchcraft, and an unsung Horrors favorite, not one that we've covered, but we've talked about often.
Speaker 2Torso Torso.
I was waiting for that.
Torso we had already talked about.
Lindsay said that he wasn't experienced in television.
He's only done feature films at this point.
None of his crew members had actually worked in television, and he thinks that the producers watched the entire series hiring him and you know, offering selling the series as a thriller, knowing what Fulci and Lindsay are capable of.
So the producers, we didn't cover them, but Lindsay's not happy with you.
Speaker 4Yeah, sorry, guys.
So some of the cast, we don't have any recognizable faces here, except for maybe one for Lance.
These are mostly TV actors, so there's not a lot, so there's not a lot to point out as far as their filmography goes.
The main guy in this, Kevin, is played by Joseph Allen Johnson.
He is in a Chuck Vincent film, Hollywood Hot Tubs, So I point that out for Lance interesting.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean he has a lot of great eighties horror and I guess sexploitation films.
Speaker 4Yeah.
The final girl, Carlos Stefania or Sola Grillo.
I think, you know, she didn't really have anything notable as far as her films go, but was in a lot of TV.
I think did she say in this film her character that she learned how to be a psychic psychic from a doctor?
I feel like that.
Speaker 2Yeah, it was like a general practitioner just diagnosed.
Speaker 4I'm like, I all right, cool, that's uh, that's how that happens anyway.
Speaker 3Uh.
Speaker 4The young boy John Luca, Yeah whatever, we'll just talk about his death, but when you talk about his life.
I guess the character that actually has the most notable film credits is how Yamauchi, who plays the monk ghost in this.
He has credits ranging from Emmanuel and The Last Cannibals to Zulander two.
Speaker 2So I guess this was just lifted from Donna the Dead like, that's this care So.
Speaker 4It's very much the Hia Krishna zombie, which fine, I don't care.
Like.
There's something that Troy mentioned in his write up about this that I think perfectly you know, summarizes that.
So he said, Lenzi is clearly making use of popular models to ensure positive audience response, but that shouldn't suggest that he's simply copying bigger and better models.
It was always the approach of the Italian popular film industry to ride the coattails of box office hits, the Feloni or streamlit principle whereby films are influenced by ever changing trends among cinema goers, and as a commercial craftsman, that was always Lensi's lot as a filmmaker.
There's absolutely no shame in this, especially when one considers how successful he was for much of the time in offering up, entertaining and well crafted variations on familiar themes, such as the case here.
As the film proceeds along fairly conventional lines, only to become perggressively more deranged in the second half, which allows the director to end things on a positive note.
Speaker 2Yeah, start starts very shining, which we'll probably talk about and then and I mean, yeah, it's all dream logic, which I love about this these type of movies.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's it's very much just it leans so heavily into that.
That's one of the things that you know, I love about this era is they never lose that sense of logic.
You know, you have that so much in like Full tiese.
Gates of Health trilogy, and that is still present here.
The only thing I think that you're seeing the difference in is it's it's clear there's less budget, and that's fine, Like they know how to work with what they have.
They're just going to lean even further into the surrealism, right.
I think what it also does there's this other trend of earlier successful Italian horror films of being trapped in a location, usually ice or sometimes not, like in the case of Demons, they're still trapped inside the threats inside.
You have the Church is Well, Blade in the Dark, tons of other films of that nature.
But again a lot of that is taken from the Shining, which of course we see a heavy influence here.
We're dealing on a much smaller scale of a hotel, but you have all the haunted ghosts terrorizing the people here.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 4Absolutely, Okay, So I would like to talk about Obviously, my favorite death is a child death in this but I think that's really here what stands.
I mean, they're all decapitations, but they're all unique and they're all fun.
Speaker 2Yeah they I mean obviously, I know we your favorite one is John or Jean Luca that's his name, right, yeah, young kid.
Yeah, every decapitation where do I have?
I have the list of them.
One of my favorites is Guido oh standing just I guess they have rats the size of who knows in Italy because he steps on a bear trap.
I mean maybe the ghost laid that out or the proprietor did at some point, but yeah, getting stuck in the bear trap and then is it a floating chainsaw or is it?
Speaker 4I think it's attached to a table, so it's a table saw, but it's like stuck out.
It's not on the table, it's like on the side of the table.
Speaker 2Yeah, and it's like a huge chainsaw blade.
It's like very impressive that.
I love that Mary's scene and my absolutely favorite part of this movie is how she psykes out so many people with her silly head.
Yeah, falling off.
She does it twice.
Speaker 4Yes, it happens in the car.
Speaker 2In the car when Carla gets in.
Well before that, it's like Carla walks into a room and Mary's back is to her and she's like, Carla or Mary, you know, let's get out of here, and her head pops off.
And then later in the car she's sitting there smiling.
She says her in the rear view mirror, and she's like, oh, you survived.
I saw your head fall off and then again.
So Mary is one of my favorites.
And to talk about that.
Actress Laurentina Guidatti, she went on to become an award winning producer apparently won a Golden Globe for a documentary she produced, Ohood for her, and she helped produce our Gento's Dark Glasses, his comeback film of sorts, which I've I had a lot of fun with.
Speaker 4I still have not seen it.
Speaker 2Oh it's good, I'm I'm I think it's great.
I mean compared to his you know, more recent stuff where he started falling off for you, this is like a return.
I feel like it is pretty pretty pretty terrible as far as some of the performances go.
But I had a lot of fun with it.
And she also was executive producer for Verhoven's Benedetta.
Speaker 4Oh I love that movie.
Speaker 2Yeah, so her production company is still active.
It's called Editor Filmer Film.
I don't know if I'm pronouncing that correctly, but I love the Mary character.
She.
I think she went straight to producing right after acting in this.
She had any worlds.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, I mean not to say anything.
Nobody's Yeah, there's no like standout performances here like there, you know, they understood the assignment and they did it.
Speaker 2I had fun watching or listening to the commentary while watching the film without a lot of volume.
Yeah, because I think their performances are better without the dubbing going on.
The hotel proprietor named Charles Borimo.
He was.
He pretty much made his living as a dubbing actor and he's great in it.
He does.
He mainly did a ton of Lindsay and Fulci films for voice dubbing.
Don't Torture a duckling, contraband violent Naples a cynic, they'rerat in the fist.
Speaker 4Yeah, very familiar voice.
Like I heard him and I was like, I know you.
Speaker 2Sah, he did, I think multiple voices.
And then going back to Joseph Allen Johnson, I don't know if he was the only American in this cast.
Thanks so yeah, I had read that.
He you know, he obviously popped up like in What's It?
Slumber Party?
Massacre?
But he was very unhappy in Hollywood and he claimed that he was blackball by agents and casting teams because he was a gay man in Hollywood.
So he moved to Italy to pick up acting, and he himself became a voice dubber as well.
Speaker 4He probably just saw like how successful John Saxon was over there, and he is like, you know what, I'm going to follow daddy.
Speaker 2Yeah, him and him and Henry Silvae.
But this was funny on the commentary that he I think, what the what like with the last straw in Hollywood was he tried out for Fast Times at Richmond High and lost to Eric Stoltz.
So I love Joseph Allen Johnson and everything I've seen him in ICET.
He's in a lot of just great kind of like arguably trash horror or you know people call it that, but I love what he did.
I just want him well he passed away sadly, but I want him to know I loved your career.
Speaker 4I mean, if we follow the logic of this movie, his ghost can hear like.
Speaker 2Knows, yeah, he's he's actually our guest on the podcas Past today.
Speaker 4You can't hear him, but he is here.
Speaker 2We got a bear trap out just in case he trust.
Speaker 4So other decapitations, there's the dumb Waiter, which is fun.
Yes, at the very end, you think like, okay, we've got maybe our final three survivors here, like we know Carla is going to make it.
Speaker 2Yeah, Massimo was his name, where he's like, hey, let me go check it out.
Slice.
That's it.
I love it.
Speaker 4I even love like I mean, they don't really show in the flashbacks there is technically another child death in this, like the guy going at him with an axe.
They don't show that child death, but just like the opening sort of surreal, like the flashback dream where it's just sort of like peppered images and events happening that don't make any sense, like a monk taking an axe to a Buddhist statue.
The tranch super rolling like another Tranch was another Italian horror movie staple, which you know you love to see it.
Speaker 2What I think is the most terrifying moment is when Carla first it's not you know, she has visions in the very beginning, but when she goes down they're in the hotel at this point.
She walks down and she sees a television set and it shows that man with the axe and his dead wife.
I think it is.
And she is just terrifying looking she's in the poster, right, Yeah, I think she has that.
I mean her makeup's great with the black eyes and you know, looking kind of zombie ish.
Yeah, but yeah, that whole all the flashbacks are super super effective, especially the Buddha statue being destroyed with an axe in the brain kind of coming out.
Yeah again, Like I'm like, okay, it's just some random Christian a monk that stayed at this random hot the Hermit Hotel, and yeah he's part of the storyline, Okay.
I mean his name was well, think Asha or Asha.
Yes, I pronounced it Asha because we named our we had a golden lab name Asha.
She was the best dog ever, right, pasherl.
Speaker 4The flashbacks, like, obviously in context of the overall plot, makes sense, but I love their their vagueness and just their their haziness.
And we've said it multiple times, it's just it has checks all the boxes for a comfort movie.
It's got Seminetti score that's just banging, even though it's from other movies, but it's already familiar.
It's got that haziness, it's got you know, dumb people running around not knowing what they're doing.
It's missing like having a good lead to sort of like like you need like a Christopher George type character, you know, from Gates of Hell, but like it's a TV movie and so you have to like kind of temper your expectations as far as that goes.
Speaker 2Like it's yeah, yeah, you're right, there is no real because Carla is essentially the lead.
She's a protagonists and she's I think one of the most boring characters in the whole movie.
Yeah yeah, she should have been decapitated.
But there's so many great dubbed lines, the dialogue, the exaggerated reactions of everybody in this they're like overly just happy in the beginning, which is great because it sets up like, okay, it's going to be It's a good way for us to watch these people suffer and die because they're obviously very happy with life, they're young, but they also whine in the most exaggerated way, like they're going to die any minute because it's so cold outside, or when they show up at the hotel and they're pleading for their life to let the proprietor to let them in, and they laugh at the stupidest jokes, and they're all the lines delivered by the young boy.
What do we have here?
We could be stuffy in our faces with bananas and coconuts right now, right and everybody starts laughing like they could be on vacation or a hamburger slathered with pickles mayo and catch up.
Oh what a meal?
Kids.
It's like, this is so dream like.
And that's what I love about it is because it's so absurd.
You have that one character, what was his name, it's Guido, who in a sledgehammer to destroy chairs and stuff outside, Like there's nothing realistic about this movie, which I love.
Speaker 4Yeah, those those lines that the kid is saying, I always read man Jeh John Luca, those lines John Luca is saying, like those are things that I would hear in a dream, kind of like it's just that sort of and I And I know obviously there's you know, a translation type you know, situation happening, but that is what adds to it as well, Just like this dubbing with these ridiculous lines that make zero sense.
It just it adds just another layer to it that I just I I fucking love this stuff.
And you know what's great about this too, is like I love Sam's commentary because it was like this perfect balance of you know, giving some historical context about the film and some background about the cast and crew and all of that, but also just like saying, this is what's so great about these movies, and people who hate on these, especially people who are fans of seventies eighties Italian early eighties Italian horror, that are just shitting on stuff like this, like oh it's trash, it's cheap, it's whatever.
No, it has all the same things.
It's just on a much lower budget and it serves as very much a comfort movie because it still has all of that and there's plenty to love about it.
Speaker 2Yeah.
No, absolutely, Like I've rated this higher than like some Bergman movies, Like I just this is what I love about low budget horror, and I don't think.
I mean, I would argue that this thing doesn't even look low budget, Like this looks legit.
Speaker 4I think you put that Hayes filter on it in that you do.
Speaker 2Yeah, because it was shot in sixteen millimeters, shot in AGFA color, and then transfer to thirty five millimeters.
So I don't know if that translates to some of the washed out look, but I obviously Italian horror, that's what they go for.
They go for this lick and almost all my favorites.
Yeah, so yeah, you could see the budget in some of like the production and the money spent and like if you want to dive into like we just did with the Seminetti score being recycled and repurposed, but it just all works.
And to me, I'm like, play this on a big screen, like this deserves to be displayed.
Speaker 4This would be oh okay.
I just had an idea.
So volume two obviously, like Laird had said, like, oh you do volume two, you can come back for a weird Wednesday.
Uh huh, maybe this one would be great for that.
I don't know, but I love this movie.
What you guys did too, those of you who are listening to who watched it.
Speaker 2Yeah, like I said, there's so many great lines, and I have like a list of them.
I'm not going to go through them, but it's the dialogue is so fucking funny and entertaining.
And one of my favorite scenes too, was when the kid has a vision of himself with the trantolas on him.
Yeah, and they run up after he yells he's supposed to be sleeping and he's dead.
They have to do CPR on him to like revive him, and then he wakes up and they're like, hey, relax, just go back to pay, Like you need to calm down, just go back to sleep, all right, you almost died last time you fell asleep.
But give this kid a sedative.
You know.
It's just it's I just it's so much it's so much fun.
Speaker 4Yeah, I love it.
So I want to close out our like just discussion of the film with a final thought.
Not mine, it's from Lenzi himself.
Speaker 2Oh nice, so he said.
Speaker 4Ultimately, Lenzy summed it up best.
I made those films as I would have made them for a theatrical release.
I didn't realize that this way, I was precluding myself from a career on television.
It was the wrong project.
So again like getting back to you know, we talked about it earlier.
Lenzi just doesn't feel like he was right for this.
He doesn't like the final project.
But I think, you know, if he were still with us and he would see just sort of like this box set and us talking about it, maybe he can hear us too.
We didn't invite him his ghost.
Sorry, I didn't think I could get him.
Speaker 2Yeah, he's a hard get.
Yeah, he's a busy guy.
Speaker 4So I feel like he might even give it a reappraisal himself and be able to look at and be like, yeah, you know what, that wasn't so bad.
So I hope that from beyond the grave he maybe understands that this is a great movie.
Yeah, it's not almost human, it's not cannibal fareox, it's nothing at that level.
But for what it is a television movie, is part of a series.
It's fucking great.
Speaker 2It is.
Yeah, And I think I would hope you'd appreciate that so many people that are watching this film are just having fun.
It's like a romantic dinner eating your favorite food.
Yes, it's like it's fun with you know, you can do it with a group of people.
You can do it alone.
Either way, it's just like a candlelit romantic dinner for us like us, where you just love it.
Yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, there's a lot of people who bought this box set are watching these for the first time.
I saw Adam watched it and gave it a review, and like he loved it.
He gave it four stars.
He made some joke about like, you know, what are you waiting for?
So it's cute, But yeah, I love this movie.
Double feature picks.
Speaker 2Yeah, I think obviously any of the other House of Doom films would fit in.
I think the Shining would work too.
But I kept thinking if I watched House the Lost Souls in a pact theater high as fuck, it'd be a four four and a half star rating viewing experience.
I had such a fun time watching it that I continuously was reminded of one of the best viewing experiences I've ever had in a theater.
This was a few years ago, and I was watching Ruben Galindo Junior's Don't Panic from nineteen eighty eight.
Like House of Souls.
I mean, it's all dream logic, it's hazy, it's completely absurd.
It consists of a cast that a lot of people would you know, openly mock or make fun of the entire time.
But I think it's fucking brilliant.
Yeah.
Like I said, it's one of the best times I've ever had in a theater watching it for Terra Tuesday, Josiemba programmed and introduced it.
I was, like a preface, I was very high.
I was just having the best experience ever.
There was so much joy and laughter filling the theater that I think House of Souls still that deserves that type of treatment.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 2So I would smoke a huge bowl a jay take an edible whatever, whatever your cup of tea is to put your mind in a silly state.
Watch don't Panic first, Okay, smoke another big bowl wow, whatever, you're going for it.
Yeah, and then you pop on Loss to Souls and I guarantee you'll wake up the next morning morning thinking I wish every day could be like last night.
Don't panic, House of Lost Souls.
What about yours?
Speaker 4I would add to your double feature that you should do this in the dinosaur pajamas.
Oh yes, comfortable while you're while you're watching.
Speaker 2If you're not, if you have to wear clothes, that's what you.
Speaker 4So.
Yeah, my double feature pick.
Obviously, like you mentioned, the Shining the Beyond would be great to another conded hotel because of you know that sort of teenagers trapped in one place that's haunted.
I think The Evil Dead would work really well with it.
But one of the series, and Sam's calm terry is great because she also goes through like the Lacasa and Ghost House series and all of like the absurd crossover that you know, renaming films and things that happen with that.
But one of the series an American series that she mentioned that also deserves some love and attention, all forty plus entries in them, the Amityville series, And so I think a great double feature with this would be one of those films.
And obviously you got to go with the best one, and that's Amityville two from nineteen eighty two, directed by Domiano Domiani.
It's the Italian unhinged Amityville.
It's got incest, it's got gore, it's got you know, surreal dream logic, absurdity in it.
I don't know.
I don't know that it Matt In this case, it would matter the order.
I'd probably do amity first and then House of loss souls, but I think you'd be fine going with either either way.
Love it all right, Next movie.
Speaker 2Lance, Okay, I always hate admitting to this, but I'll be out of town next week and into the weekend, and you know, I don't think even know if I'll have self service hitting up Glacier National Park Flathead Lake in Montana.
Oh, it's going to be a fun time.
Okay.
Speaker 4So we're doing one with very little work.
Speaker 2Yeah.
I always say that picking like, I mean, every movie always has like a fascinating production story and the cast involved.
So yeah, I mean that's my intention.
And it's a short one, it's seventy three minutes, has an unknown cast for the most part.
I'm sure I'll start going down some crazy like rabbit hole and I'm going to have like eighteen pages of notes when I'm finished with this.
But yeah, possibly very little homework.
I mean, we'll see how that goes.
But this is a movie that I'm picking, a classic egger Allan Poe tale, and its fun.
It's one that we've covered before our second episode actually, the Black Cat.
Speaker 4Yes, oh, okay, we're doing another black Cat.
Speaker 2We're doing another Black Cat.
This one is from nineteen sixty six.
Speaker 4I got a scroll to find it because there's a lot on that thousand black cat.
Okay there.
Speaker 2It is directed by Harold Hoffman.
Okay, filmed right here in Texas.
Yeah, I think in the Fort Worth Dallas area.
But I'll learn all the details, and most listeners know the story of Poe's Black Cats.
I don't really need to share a summary, but this is a black and white swing in sixties rendition of this story.
It does go to some dark places and surprising ways, especially for the for the sixties.
Beware, it has very hateful, annoying characters that some letterbox reviewers just couldn't couldn't get get around.
They couldn't they just couldn't stand.
It's necessary for the story, in my opinion.
And I have to tell you that our friends at Best Friends Animal Society would absolutely hate this film.
Speaker 4I don't think they actually listen.
They just wait for us to know.
Speaker 2They do any every October.
The lead in this is a complete asshole, treats his cat and all his animals like pieces of shit.
It's not like a Campibell Holocaust type thing or anything, but there is some cruel treatment towards these very lovely creatures.
But this is a tale of kra karma, so obviously we have fun to watch it all on ravel Yeah, nineteen sixty six.
The Black Cat currently has six hundred and twelve views on Letterbox.
It's streaming on to Be.
It's also on YouTube.
Speaker 4Starts Robert Franz Wait sixty No, he died in sixty three.
Never mind, I'm thinking of the poet.
Speaker 2Yeah.
No, it's not that Robert Frost.
Okay, Yeah, I don't think you'll recognize many of the names.
When do you start clicking, you know, on some of their movies.
You'll definitely recognize some of the movies are in Yeah, you only.
Speaker 4Directed one other film, Sex and the Animals.
Speaker 2The the fuck you obviously had an infatuation with animals.
Speaker 4Oh, it's a nature documentary, okay, consisting of look for it, there is animals, mate.
Speaker 2Yeah, I've looked for it.
I can't find it.
I'm gonna keep I'm gonna keep searching, please, because I do want to watch this.
Speaker 4It's on legal adjacent.
It is on legal adjacent.
Oh dude, so we will.
I will find a way to procure this and share it in our discord in case any of our listeners are curious if.
Speaker 2You want to watch ninety six minutes of animals fucking.
That's all we're going to talk about this episode.
Speaker 4All right, So next so we're gonna be talking about animals us fucking and the Black Cat from nineteen sixty six.
If you're not already, you can follow this podcast on Instagram.
We are also on YouTube.
We've been getting more subscribers there, so thank you for that, folks.
I'm on letterboxing Instagram at tex Massacre.
Speaker 2I'm on letterboxing Instagram at Elshiby.
Speaker 4Thanks everyone for listening.
We'll see you back next episode.
Speaker 3Bye bye.
Speaker 4Thank you for listening.
Speaker 3To hear more shows from the Someone's Favorite Productions podcast network, please select the link in the description.
Speaker 5I am Adam Lundy, co host of They Live by Film, a podcast dedicated to bringing you film discussion and interviews from around the world.
Every week.
My co hosts Chris Haskell, Zack Bryant, and I discuss a wide range of films, from monumental classics like Vertigo and the Rules of the Game to the craziest schlockiest movies ever made like Deathbed and everything in between.
We are also lucky enough to have sat down with some of the biggest players in the boutique blu ray and film restoration game.
If this is your thing, then come hang out with us every Thursday at seven p m.
Eastern wherever you normally stream your podcasts, and now as part of the Someone's Favorite Productions podcast network