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#Izabella Telezynska
weirdlookindog · 1 year
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Izabella Telezynska in To the Devil a Daughter (1976)
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Films Watched in 2023:
54. The Music Lovers (1971) - Dir. Ken Russell
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docrotten · 5 months
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TO THE DEVIL… A DAUGHTER (1976) – Episode 214 – Decades Of Horror 1970s
“It is not heresy … and I will not recant!” But if you don’t recant, you can’t have any pudding. Join your faithful Grue Crew – Doc Rotten, Bill Mulligan, Chad Hunt, and Jeff Mohr along with guest host Gregory Crosby – as they take a trip to Hammer-land for To the Devil… a Daughter (1976), the last horror film from the original incarnation of Hammer.
Decades of Horror 1970s Episode 214 – To the Devil… a Daughter (1976)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
Decades of Horror 1970s is partnering with the WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL (https://wickedhorrortv.com/) which now includes video episodes of the podcast and is available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, and its online website across all OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop.
An American occult novelist battles to save the soul of a young girl from a group of Satanists – led by an excommunicated priest – who plan on using her as the representative of the Devil on Earth.
  Directed by: Peter Sykes
Writing Credits: Christopher Wicking (screenplay by) (as Chris Wicking); John Peacock (adaptation); Dennis Wheatley (from the novel by); Gerald Vaughan-Hughes (additional material) (uncredited)
Produced by: Roy Skeggs (producer)
Music by: Paul Glass
Cinematography by: David Watkin (director of photography)
Special Effects by: Les Bowie
Selected Cast:
Richard Widmark as John Verney
Christopher Lee as Father Michael Raynor
Honor Blackman as Anna Fountain
Denholm Elliott as Henry Beddows
Michael Goodliffe as George de Grass
Nastassja Kinski as Catherine Beddows
Eva Maria Meineke as Eveline de Grass
Anthony Valentine as David Kennedy
Derek Francis as Bishop
Izabella Telezynska as Margaret (as Isabella Telezynska)
Constantine Gregory as Kollde (as Constantin de Goguel)
Anna Bentinck as Isabel
Irene Prador as German Matron
Brian Wilde as Black Room Attendant
Petra Peters as Sister Helle
William Ridoutt as Airport Porter
Howard Goorney as Critic
Frances de la Tour as Salvation Army Major
Zoe Hendry as 1st Girl
Lindy Benson as 2nd Girl
Jo Peters as 3rd Girl
Bobby Sparrow as 4th Girl
Ed Devereaux as Reporter (uncredited)
Bill Horsley as Curator (uncredited)
Juba Kennerley as Man Entering Art Gallery (uncredited)
Alan Meacham as Guest at Book Launch (uncredited)
Peter Sykes as Man at Airport (uncredited)
It’s time to explore the final Hammer Horror film of the 1970s, To the Devil… a Daughter (1976). [Note: The mystery comedy film The Lady Vanishes (1979) would drop and… vanish… in 1979.] To the Devil… a Daughter has the reputation of putting the final nail into Hammer’s filmmaking coffin. The quality and success of Hammer productions spiraled throughout the decade as the landscape of horror films changed – especially after The Exorcist (1973). Surprisingly, the film is much better than how the Grue Crew remembers it and how its reputation proceeds it. That is, up until its abrupt and head-scratching ending and that strange devil puppet. If you know, you know. Check out what the Grue Crew thinks of the film directed by Peter Sykes and featuring Christopher Lee, Richard Widmark, and Nastassja Kinski.
At the time of this writing, To the Devil… a Daughter is available to stream from Peacock and PlutoTV as well as various PPV from Amazon and Fandango At Home. To the Devil… a Daughter is also available on physical media as a Blu-ray from SCREAM Factory.
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1970s is part of the Decades of Horror two-week rotation with The Classic Era and the 1980s. In two weeks, the next episode, chosen by Jeff, will be Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark (1973), an ABC Movie of the Week starring Kim Darby, Jim Hutton, William Demarest, and Barbara Anderson. Grue Believer Lone Wolf suggested this flick. Woot!
We want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: comment on the site or email the Decades of Horror 1970s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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amatesura · 3 years
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Dante’s Inferno (1967) | dir. Ken Russell
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mariocki · 3 years
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Monitor: The Debussy Film: Impressions of the French Composer (BBC, 1965)
"There's Monsieur Vanier. He liked Debussy, but he doesn't seem to have known all that was going on between the young composer and his wife."
"And before he could find out, I met Gaby."
"Gabrielle Dupont."
"Gaby."
"They met when Debussy was twenty-six. He lived with her for ten years. He was back from the Prix de Rome - he'd won this great scholarship from the Conservatoire in Paris."
"Forced labour, I hated it."
#the debussy film#claude debussy#monitor#ken russell#classic tv#bbc#documentary#1965#melvyn bragg#oliver reed#vladek sheybal#annette robertson#izabella telezynska#penny service#vernon dobtcheff#stephanie randall#jane lumb#verity edmett#a development (perhaps perfecting would be a better choice of word) of the experiment Russell had begun with his Elgar documentary‚ also#for Monitor. the mould was fully broken now‚ as Russell delivers what is essentially a feature length art film where once 15 minute shorts#had sufficed. the result is... breathtaking. one of the most beautiful things the bbc ever produced (and thank god those masters survive so#it might look still so beautiful today). a true blending of narrative with documentary‚ as a film crew set about making a film based on the#life of Claude Debussy; what follows is clips from the film within the film‚ artistic discussions‚ spirited debate between performers‚ and#very slowly the emergence of another narrative around the principal cast which weirdly mirrors the tale they are telling. the strongest#scenes are undoubtedly the lengthy wordless sequences set to the composer's music: Russell leaning into his instinct for impressionism and#the avant garde. Reed is wonderful‚ very subtle and controlled (this was long before he fell off the rails); this was to be the beginning#of a fruitful collaboration between Reed and Russell that would last a decade. a beautiful‚ mesmerising study of a difficult‚ complicated#man; something that perhaps both Reed and Russell could find some relevance in. utterly beautiful and transcending of its bbc docu origins
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justfilms · 9 years
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To the Devil a Daughter - Peter Sykes 1976
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fripperiesandfobs · 10 years
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Costume designed by Piero Tosi for Izabella Telezynska in Ludwig (1972)
From Tirelli Costumi via Il Sole 24 Ore
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