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Virgin Witch

Virgin Witch
Virgin witch poster.jpg
Promotional film poster
Directed by Ray Austin
Produced by "Ralph Solomons"
Written by Klaus Vogel (novel)
Starring Ann Michelle
Vicki Michelle
Patricia Haines
Music by Ted Dicks
Cinematography Gerald Moss
Edited by Phillip Barnikel
Distributed by Tigon Film Distributors Ltd.
Release date
Running time
88 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Virgin Witch is a 1971 British horror exploitation film about a prospective model who ends up joining a coven of witches. The film was directed by Ray Austin, and stars sisters Ann Michelle and Vicki Michelle.

Betty (Vicki Michelle) and her sister Christine (Ann Michelle) are two young models who are lured by a lecherous lesbian to spend a weekend at a country house being photographed by a trendy photographer. In reality, Christine is being set up for a virgin sacrifice and induction into a witch's coven.

The producer was "Ralph Solomons" (a pseudonym of Kent Walton), whose other producing credits include The Green Shoes, It's the Only Way to Go, and A Persian Fairy Tale. While Hazel Adair’s name appears on the credits (as co-writer of the song "You Go Your Way"), she did not admit to co- producing the film until 1975, when she featured in an episode of the BBC's Man Alive concerning sex films. The revelation that prompted Cinema X magazine (Vol 4. No. 4) to remark that her films "are far removed from Miss Adair’s more cozy world of Crossroads, Hazel Adair’s other films include Clinic Exclusive (1971), Can You Keep It Up For a Week? (1974), Keep It Up Downstairs (1976), and the more mainstream Game for Vultures (1979).

"Klaus Vogel", who wrote the script and the film's tie-in novelisation, was in fact Crossroads producer Beryl Vertue.

Virgin Witch was filmed in Surrey during 1970 and previewed in the December editions of Mayfair and Continental Film Review (in which the title was referred to as "The Virgin Witch"). However, the film is copyrighted as a 1971 production, and censorship problems would mean it was not widely seen until 1972. The country house location, Pirbright, Admiral's Walk would be later used in Satan's Slave (1976) and Terror (1978), which were both directed by Norman J. Warren.


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