The Shuttered Room (also known as Blood Island) is a 1967 British horror film directed by David Greene, and starring Gig Young and Carol Lynley.[1] It is based on the 1959 short story of the same name by August Derleth, published as a so-called "posthumous collaboration" with H. P. Lovecraft. A couple move into a house with dark secrets.

The Shuttered Room
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDavid Greene
Written byD. B. Ledrov
Nathaniel Tanchuck
Produced byPhilip Hazelton (as Phillip Hazleton)
StarringGig Young
Carol Lynley
CinematographyKenneth Hodges
Edited byBrian Smedley-Aston
Music byBasil Kirchin
Production
companies
Troy-Schenck Productions
Seven Arts Productions
Distributed byWarner Bros.-Seven Arts (Worldwide)
Release dates
  • 27 June 1967 (1967-06-27)
(United Kingdom)
  • 16 February 1968 (1968-02-16)
(United States)
Running time
99-100 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

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Susannah Kelton, a newly married woman who was raised in foster care in the city, learns that her real parents have died and left their property to her. She and her husband Mike travel to the island of Dunwich off the coast of Massachusetts to inspect the property. They find a local culture that is clannish, backward and ignorant. The few friends whom they make among the locals, including Susannah's aunt Agatha, warn them that the family mill is cursed and urge the Keltons to leave immediately and never look back.

Refusing to bow to superstition, the couple consider rebuilding the abandoned mill. They become the target of a gang of local thugs led by Susannah's lecherous cousin, Ethan. Their reign of terror is ended by something still living in the shuttered attic room of the mill, something that caused Susannah to have nightmares as a child.

Cast

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Production

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Filming began in April 1966.[2] Sam Peckinpah's Straw Dogs (1971) would have many similarities.[3]

Although set in the U.S., the film was shot in England. Hollowshore Boatyard and The Shipwright's Arms in Faversham, Kent feature throughout the film, doubling as the town of Dunwich, Massachusetts. South Foreland Lighthouse in Dover also features as the exterior of Aunt Agatha's home.[4] The film features a large half-brick, half-timber watermill, which is destroyed by fire in the closing scenes. The building used was Hardingham Mill on the River Yare in Norfolk.[5]

Critical reception

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The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote:

Television director David Greene brings enough style to this thriller to suggest that, given a better script, he might produce something really interesting. Particularly striking is the way he uses his camera to suggest the mysterious presence behind the door of the shuttered room. The imaginative opening sequence, with a subjective camera retreating in front of an unseen attacker, creates an atmosphere of tangible but undefined terror. And having established an atmosphere right from the beginning, the film sustains it, watching the visitors as they arrive at the mill from behind its darkened windows, picking up details of a barely remembered childhood (like the cobwebbed abacus, or the battered teddy-bear), and even managing to suggest that the huge, gleaming car is as much an intruder on the island as the visitors themselves. It is a pity that neither the script nor the performances match the film's visual imagination – though Flora Robson is splendid as Aunt Agatha, mistress of the island and keeper of its secret, first seen at the top of her tower, bedraggled, hair streaked with grey, and with a wild-looking bird for company as she looks out over her domain.[6]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "This superior tale of the supernatural was based on a short story by August Derleth and H.P. Lovecraft. Twenty years after she was driven away from her childhood home by a series of sinister happenings, Carol Lynley returns with her new husband, Gig Young. But the old mill is as daunting as ever and deliriously malevolent cousin Oliver Reed and his gang of New England delinquents are far from the ideal welcoming committee. David Greene leaks the secret of the room at the top of the stairs early on, but he still conveys a sense of evil."[7]

Leslie Halliwell said: "Stretched out suspenser which looks good and is carefully made but fails in its effort to combine the menace of teenage yobboes with that of the monster lurking upstairs."[8]

References

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  1. ^ "The Shuttered Room". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  2. ^ Martin, Betty. (14 March 1966). "Schaffner to Direct 'Spy'". Los Angeles Times. p. c19.
  3. ^ Upton, Julian (2022). Offbeat: British Cinema's Curiosities, Obscurities and Forgotten Gems. Oxford: Headpress. ISBN 9781909394940. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  4. ^ Kent Film Office. "Kent Film Office The Shuttered Room (1967) Article".
  5. ^ "Take a walk on location in the steps of the stars". Eastern Daily Press. Norwich. 7 June 2012.
  6. ^ "The Shuttered Room". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 34 (396): 109. 1 January 1967 – via ProQuest.
  7. ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 836. ISBN 9780992936440.
  8. ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 916. ISBN 0586088946.
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