Torture Garden

Do You Dare See What Dr. Diabolo Sees?

6.1
19671h 40m

Five people visit a fairground sideshow run by the sinister Dr. Diabolo. Having shown them a handful of haunted-house-style attractions, he promises them a genuinely scary experience if they will pay extra.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Torture Garden (1967) Original Trailer [FHD]

Torture Garden (1967) Original Trailer [FHD]

Thumbnail for video: TORTURE GARDEN - (1967) HD Trailer

TORTURE GARDEN - (1967) HD Trailer

Cast

Photo of Burgess Meredith

Burgess Meredith

Dr. Diabolo (Framing Story)

Photo of Jack Palance

Jack Palance

Ronald Wyatt (segment 4 "The Man Who Collected Poe")

Photo of Beverly Adams

Beverly Adams

Carla Hayes (segment 2 "Terror Over Hollywood")

Photo of Peter Cushing

Peter Cushing

Lancelot Canning (segment 4 "The Man Who Collected Poe")

Photo of Maurice Denham

Maurice Denham

Uncle Roger (segment 1 "Enoch")

Photo of Barbara Ewing

Barbara Ewing

Dorothy Endicott (segment 3 "Mr. Steinway")

Photo of Michael Bryant

Michael Bryant

Colin Williams (segment 1 "Enoch")

Photo of John Standing

John Standing

Leo Winston (segment 3 "Mr. Steinway")

Photo of Robert Hutton

Robert Hutton

Bruce Benton (segment 2 "Terror Over Hollywood")

Photo of John Phillips

John Phillips

Eddie Storm (segment 2 "Terror Over Hollywood")

Photo of Michael Ripper

Michael Ripper

Gordon Roberts (Framing Story)

Photo of Bernard Kay

Bernard Kay

Dr. Heim (segment 2 "Terror Over Hollywood")

Photo of Ursula Howells

Ursula Howells

Miss Maxine Chambers (segment 3 "Mr. Steinway")

Photo of David Bauer

David Bauer

Mike Charles (segment 2 "Terror Over Hollywood")

Photo of Niall MacGinnis

Niall MacGinnis

Dr. Silversmith (segment 1 "Enoch")

Photo of Hedger Wallace

Hedger Wallace

Edgar Allan Poe(segment "4 "The Man Who Collected Poe"")

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

This time it's Burgess Meredith's turn to compere a compendium of four horror stories set around his fairground attraction. He charges each of four people £5 for entry to a secret part of his exhibit where he promises them something portentous that they will never forget. Behind the curtain lies what appears to be a life-size doll - the Fate Atropos - and each learns of a tale that tears down their façade of respectability that these two men and two women have hitherto presented. The segments themselves are short, sweet and though maybe all just a bit predicable (usually the way when there's some moralising afoot) there are still some decent performances from the likes of Peter Cushing, Jack Palance and John Standing to keep these character assessments - and just desserts - interesting. My favourite was the first segment with a brief appearance from Maurice Denham's "Uncle Roger" and an "Azazel" style, malevolent, cat - but the others all have their foreboding messages to deliver too. The production is all standard fayre, it's a bit over-scored and there is certainly a surfeit of dialogue at times, but it's still quite a fun 'Tales of the Unexpected" style series of mysteries that I did quite enjoy.

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