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The Haunted Strangler

The Haunted Strangler
Posterhauntedstrangler.jpg
The Haunted Strangler movie poster
Directed by Robert Day
Produced by John Croydon
executive
Richard Gordon
Written by John Croydon (as "John C. Cooper")
Jan Read
Based on an original story by Jan Read
Starring Boris Karloff
Jean Kent
Elizabeth Allan
Anthony Dawson
Edited by Peter Mayhew
Production
company
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (US)
Eros Films (UK)
Release date
  • 3 July 1958 (1958-07-03) (US)
Running time
80 minutes
Language English
Budget £80,000
Box office $650,000 (on double bill)

The Haunted Strangler (also known as Grip of the Strangler and originally titled The Judas Hole) is a 1958 British horror film directed by Robert Day. It was adapted from "Stranglehold", a story which screenwriter Jan Read had written specially for Boris Karloff, and was shot back to back with producer Richard Gordon's Fiend Without a Face, with both later being released as a double bill by MGM.

In Victorian London, Edward Styles is accused of being the notorious Haymarket Strangler, the brutal killer of five women. Twenty years after he is tried and executed for these crimes James Rankin (Karloff), a novelist and social reformer, launches an investigation to prove that Styles is innocent. His search for clues leads him first to the sleazy Judas Hole music hall, where the Strangler picked his victims from the resident can-can dancers and loose women, and then to the prison cemetery of Newgate where Styles was buried - in order to exhume his body. When the killings start again, Rankin's theory seems to be vindicated. However his growing obsession with the case signals a most unwelcome revelation as to the true identity of the murderer.

The film was originally to be called Stranglehold and was written by Jan Read, a friend of Boris Karloff's. He gave the script to producer Richard Gordon, who was looking to make a horror movie in the UK. Gordon set up Amalgamated Productions with Charles Vetters and had started providing US funding and talent for B pictures shot in Britain.

Amalgamated went into partnership with British producer John Croydon and negotiated a deal with distributor Eros Films who agreed to guarantee 70% of the film's budget after delivery of the final product. The remaining 30% of the budget was provided by the National Film Finance Corporation.

The agreement with Eros was conditional on Amalgamated providing a second film, so Gordon arranged to make Fiend Without a Face back to back with a different cast and director. MGM picked up the film for release. Gordon later estimated the cost of the two movies together was approximately £80,000 exclusive of the costs of imported American stars.


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