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The Skull Poster

The Skull

When the Skull strikes you'll scream!
1965 | 83m | English

(3936 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

An occult investigator buys the 150-year-old skull of the Marquis de Sade, which turns out to be possessed by evil spirits.
Release Date: Aug 25, 1965
Director: Freddie Francis
Writer: Robert Bloch, Milton Subotsky
Genres: Horror, Thriller
Keywords london, england, auction, possession, murder, evil spirit, statuette, grave robber, based on short story, demonic possession, skull
Production Companies Amicus Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Peter Cushing Dr. Christopher Maitland
Christopher Lee Sir Matthew Phillips
Patrick Wymark Anthony Marco
Jill Bennett Jane Maitland
Peter Woodthorpe Bert Travers, Marco's Landlord
Nigel Green Inspector Wilson
April Olrich French Girl
George Coulouris Dr. Londe
Maurice Good Pierre, Phrenologist
Patrick Magee Police Surgeon
Frank Forsyth Judge
Michael Gough Auctioneer
Anna Palk Maid
Paul Stockman First Guard
Geoffrey Cheshire Second Guard
George Hilsdon Policeman
Jack Silk Driver
Paul Beradi Auction Attendee (uncredited)
Ernest Blyth Auction Attendee (uncredited)
Aileen Lewis Auction Attendee (uncredited)
Eric Kent Auction Attendant (uncredited)
Jack Armstrong Auction Bidder (uncredited)
Joe Beckett Auction Bidder (uncredited)
Arthur Goodman Auction Bidder (uncredited)
Harold Sanderson Auction Bidder (uncredited)
Name Job
Elisabeth Lutyens Original Music Composer
John Wilcox Director of Photography
Oswald Hafenrichter Editor
Bill Constable Art Direction
Scott Slimon Set Decoration
Jill Carpenter Makeup Artist
Henry Montsash Hairdresser
Ted Lloyd Production Manager
Ted Samuels Special Effects
Philip Martell Conductor
Kenneth Ryan Assistant Art Director
Buster Ambler Sound Recordist
John Cox Sound Supervisor
Tom Priestley Sound Editor
Jackie Cummins Wardrobe Supervisor
Freddie Francis Director
Robert Bloch Writer, Story
Milton Subotsky Screenplay
Name Title
Max Rosenberg Producer
Milton Subotsky Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 11 21 7
2024 5 13 16 9
2024 6 16 44 4
2024 7 11 17 7
2024 8 10 17 6
2024 9 6 9 4
2024 10 7 11 4
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2024 12 7 11 4
2025 1 8 14 5
2025 2 5 9 3
2025 3 5 11 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 4 5 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 1 697 715

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Reviews

Wuchak
4.0

**_Features Peter Cushing & Christopher Lee, but way too much filler_** A researcher of the occult and esoterica (Peter Cushing) apprehends the skull of the nefarious Marquis de Sade and learns that something evil is attached to it, which negatively influences its owners. Patrick Wymark plays his ... source for artifacts while Christopher Lee plays a rival collector. Patrick Magee is on hand as an inspector. “The Skull” (1965) is worth checking out for fans of British horror featuring Cushing and/or Lee, but it places with the least of their works. There’s just way too much filler. The runtime could’ve been cut in half and it would’ve been a compelling mini-movie. As it is, it’s just too drawn out for the material to maintain interest. However, the theme is interesting: Can articles have evil spirits attached to them? During the days of the early Church, articles that Paul touched, like handkerchiefs and aprons, “were taken to the sick, and their illnesses were cured and the evil spirits left them” (Acts 19:11-12). It was the same thing with Peter’s shadow. These things had the anointing of God on them and thus physically or mentally ill people exposed to them were healed and demons fled! A good example from the Old Testament would be Elisha’s bones noted in 2 Kings 13. These various items were blessed as conduits of God’s power. Could the inverse also be true? Could certain items be cursed with a demonic non-anointing? If the former is true with the kingdom of light, isn’t it possible that the reverse is also true with the kingdom of darkness in some cases, particular items like idols? The movie runs 1 hour, 23 minutes and was shot at Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England; as well as Great Cumberland Place, Marylebone, London (Maitland's home). GRADE: C-

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

When Christopher Lee tells you to leave well alone, well you should - even if you are Peter Cushing! The latter is "Maitland" who is offered a gruesome artefact by his rather dubious supplier "Marco" (Patrick Wymark) and when he mentions it to his collecting rival "Sir Matthew" (Lee) he is told that ... this was recently pinched from him and well, he decides to ignore the advice. It doesn't take him very long before he rues that decision. This skull belongs to the Marquis de Sade and his spirit is looking to continue to cause as much mischief as he can! To those ends, it can take over the minds of those close to it and manipulate their behaviour to do his will. Can the sceptical "Maitland" do what generations of his forebears have failed to do and thwart this malevolent force? This is one of my favourite Hammer horrors with plenty of accumulating menace; some clever photography - often from the skull's POV, it's hauntingly scored and the denouement isn't what I ever remember to expect after a fun eighty minutes of pure cinematic evil. It spares us the usual ketchup gimmickry and uses a little more psychology to fo the scaring, and I think it works quite well.

Jan 18, 2025