Frankie Avalon & The Haunted House of Horror – Pop Screen 106

Rob Simpson

Oh god, Graham’s shining the spooky light under his face again – sounds like time for a Halloween special. And it is, with Mark Cunliffe of We Are Cult joining the show once again to talk about The Haunted House of Horror, a 1960s British horror movie with an all-bases-covered title. It’s the familiar tale of a group of horny and stupid teens who go to an old house for a seance and end up beset by entities even older and more sinister than Frankie Avalon, the Beach Blanket Bingo star who plays a character described as the essence of Swinging London.

So, not entirely persuasive casting in the lead role, but there’s an impressive supporting cast including Jill Haworth and Get Carter’s George Sewell, who does not play one of the teens, as he was never young. Aside from exploring the varied CVs of cast and crew, Graham and Mark also appreciate the movie’s surprisingly nasty kills, the reshoots that led to the ending making no sense at all, and the time when Mark accidentally went to a Chesney Hawkes concert.

If you want to keep us buying clothes at the Men’s Shop, you can donate to our Patreon where Mark and Graham are about to reteam and tackle Taylor Swift’s Eras concert film in a Pop Screen exclusive. You’ll also find regular written reviews of classic British sci-fi television and our favourite Asian genre movies, the monthly movie miscellany podcast Last Night…, and cult franchises reviewed in From the Video Aisle. Follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook for more news.

Subscribe to Pop Screen on Apple PodcastsGoogle Podcasts & Spotify

Episode 106: Frankie Avalon & The Haunted House of Horror

Next Post

It Lives Inside (2023): comfortingly uncomfortable horror with a twist (Review)

Spare a thought for the horror pseuds, folks like me who live to make strained sociopolitical interpretations of horror trends. The 21st century started off well for us, with the zombie revival and the torture wave mapping neatly onto post-9/11 anxieties. Why, though, is everything about exorcisms and possession all […]
It Lives Inside

You Might Like