Welcome to some great downtown programming for the Halloween season: a lineup of crowd-pleasers that's just artful enough and just B-movie-ish enough to satisfy on all the levels that count. In fact, five years ago I did see the Paul Naschy vehicle The Werewolf Versus the Vampire Woman on a big screen a few blocks from the Anthology, and the East Village audience did love it. (By the way, Naschy is also represented here by Count Dracula's Great Love and his own The Craving.)
Another film that needs little endorsement--it's been widely rediscovered during the past decade's zombie craze--is Jorge Grau's Let Sleeping Corpses Lie. Yet while it's clearly a must-see for horror fans, how often do you get to catch it in 35mm, which is how all these films are being presented? And thank goodness for that, as this is exactly the way you want to experience something like Narciso Ibáñez Serrador's utterly exquisite La Residencia (aka The House That Screamed). So gorgeous, so gothic, and so gorgeously gothic, it's a film that one wishes were better known. Its lack of stature may be partly due to the would-be shock ending, which somehow manages to feel both predictable and random. However, there's so much more going on here in terms of cruel atmospherics and institutionalized evil that narrative almost becomes a secondary consideration. In the end the most shocking thing may be how, for a film set in an all-girls boarding school, La Residencia foregoes the exploitation touches one might expect: even a group shower scene takes pains to avoid lewdness.
Finally, in a series noted for its weird grandeur, the surprisingly cosmic ambitions of Horror Express [our headline picture-- ed] are right at home. Featuring both Helga Liné and Silvia Tortosa from Lorelei's Grasp, Eugenio Martín's film has been available on the Internet Archive and elsewhere online for some time now. So it could be that we now take it for granted, perhaps viewing it as a "lesser" Cushing-and-Lee effort. Such an assessment, though, would tend to obscure its unique and deceptively profound charms. As much sci-fi and mystery as it is horror, it's a film whose grand themes bring to mind Conan Doyle's timeless Professor Challenger stories. Simply not to be missed for connoisseurs of the fantastic.
For more info and to purchase tickets to The Golden Age Of Spanish Horror at AFA, click right here.