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The Penthouse Poster

The Penthouse

If what happened in "The Penthouse" happened to you . . . you wouldn't want to talk about it, either.
1967 | 96m | English

(298 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

A married man and his young mistress suffer sadistic torture when Tom, Dick and Harry invade their penthouse.
Release Date: Oct 03, 1967
Director: Peter Collinson
Writer: Peter Collinson, Scott Forbes
Genres: Drama, Thriller
Keywords rape, mistress, thug, criminal, penthouse
Production Companies Tahiti Films Limited
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 25, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Suzy Kendall Barbara Willason
Terence Morgan Bruce Victor
Tony Beckley Tom
Martine Beswick Harry
Norman Rodway Dick
Name Job
Peter Collinson Director, Screenplay
Scott Forbes Writer
Johnny Hawksworth Original Music Composer
Arthur Lavis Cinematography
John Trumper Editor
Peter Mullins Art Direction
George Partleton Makeup Artist
Mary Gibson Wardrobe Master
Laurie Clarkson Sound Designer
Stephen Dalby Sound Supervisor
Gerry Humphreys Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Name Title
Harry Fine Producer
Guido Coen Executive Producer
Michael Klinger Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

Penthouse Pandemonium. The Penthouse is written and directed by Peter Collinson and is an adaptation from the play The Meter Man by Scott Forbes. It stars Suzy Kendall, Terence Morgan, Tony Beckley, Norman Rodway and Martine Beswick. Music is by John Hawksworth and cinematography by Arthur Lavis. ... Alligators and Sharks Home invasion 1960s style. Story finds Kendall and Morgan as illicit lovers tormented by two deranged intruders in the penthouse apartment they use for their nights of passion. It's a five person play, well for the majority it's a four person production, and it's 99% set in a dimly lighted apartment. Narrative subjects our two hapless lovers to an hour and half of mental cruelty and sexual humiliation. The two main perpetrators, Tom (Beckley) and Dick (Rodway), are fascinating nutters, they are childlike in a chilling way, yet always they exude a sense of intelligence. They feed off of each other like some double-take twins, and always they have handy a deep meaning monologue or a philosophical justification for the black heart of the human being. Collinson does a grand job of keeping things claustrophobic, making sure the emotional discord and sense of menace haunts every frame. The camera zooms in and out of focus, something which proves to be a masterstroke for the sex scenes, while the various angles that the camera looks through during the course are suitably nightmarish. Originally Collinson was at pains to say his movie didn't have a message, but over the years the only thing consistent was his inconsistent viewpoint on the film. It's nigh on impossible not to seek out a message here, the film is just too odd-ball and unsavoury to not court a deeper meaning than the lazy "it's just a thriller" statement that Collinson trundled out upon pic's release. Pretentious? Absolutely, but this film has the ability to get under your skin, either in a good way to make you ponder, or to utterly irritate you. If someone said to me it's the worst film they have ever sat through, I would understand. Yet for me I felt challenged and uncomfortable, that's the medium of film doing a good job as far as I'm concerned. 7/10

May 16, 2024