By Steve D. Stones
This 1958 curio employed the gimmick of a process called
“Psycho-Rama” to lure patrons into the theatre. This gimmick may have been
influenced by the many gimmicks director William Castle employed his 50s and
60s films, such as “Percepto” and “Illusion-O.”
The process involves subliminal
images and messages flashed on the screen for less than a second at key points
in the film. Images of skulls, snakes, ghosts and creepy heads were flashed on
the screen. The process was later banned. Rhino Video, who distributed the film on VHS
in the 80s and 90s, inserted their own subliminal message in the film – Buy
Rhino Movies!
Sheila Justin, played by Cathy O’Donnell, is a newly-wed who
lives in Switzerland with her husband, a man approximately twenty years her
senior. She visits a psychiatrist regularly to discuss the fears she has of an
old house and ghosts that haunt her in her dreams. Her husband Phillip, played
by Gerald Mohr, takes her to the United States to live in a big house in
Florida. When the two arrive in Florida, Shelia has a mental breakdown, fearing
the house is the one from her dreams.
Sheila’s biggest fear is the thought of having to go
upstairs in the attic to confront ghosts that haunt her, as they do in her
recurring dreams. Whenever she confronts her fears, the “Psycho-Rama” process
of the film kicks in as quick images flash across the screen.
The couple attempt to leave the house, but discover that
their car is missing an engine distributor. Sheila later finds the distributor
cap in Phillip’s suitcase.
The owner of the home, Mark Snell, arrives to find out why
the couple came to the house. Snell informs Sheila that Phillip is the last of
the “mad Tierneys,” a family that lived in the home for many generations. Sheila also discovers that she had been to the
house before as a child, and that Phillip had carved their initials in a tree in
the front yard because they were in love with each other. Snell insists that
Sheila leave the house.
Snell turns out to be a cousin of Phillip. The two have an
argument in the attic, and Snell is accidentally killed. Sheila and Phillip
leave the house for good. Sheila has confronted the source of her nightmares for
good after having gone to the attic.
Terror In The Haunted House was produced by Howco
International, the same studio that brought movie goers other great 50s cult
classics, such as Attack of The 50 Foot Woman and The Brain From Planet Arous. O’Donnell’s
acting is a bit overly dramatic in places, but the film is fun entertainment.
Happy viewing!
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