Hammer continues their series of ‘Hammer Presents’ releases, showcasing British horror movies of the period that weren’t actually made by Hammer themselves, with this decidedly peculiar entry from 1970.
CRUCIBLE OF HORROR (US title) aka THE CORPSE (UK title) aka THE VELVET HOUSE (shooting title and the one it went out under in its public domain form on budget release DVD in the US) is the story of the Eastwood family. Father Walter (Michael Gough) is domineering and controlling and is backed up by his son Rupert (Simon Gough). Subjected to Walter’s tyranny are his wife Edith (Yvonne Mitchell from another recent Hammer release, DEMONS OF THE MIND) and daughter Jane (Sharon Gurney who would also appear in Gary Sherman’s DEATH LINE).
Eventually Walter’s abuse reaches such a degree that Edith and Jane decide to kill him. Or at least they think they've killed him, because then his body disappears only for it to turn up in a crate they then have to dispose of. But that’s not the end of the story by any means.
Viewed as a piece of early 1970s BritHorror CRUCIBLE OF HORROR is a rather strange, stilted (at least in its first act) piece that ultimately makes little sense. Viewed through a more arthouse, EuroHorror lens, it comes across more as a slice of endearingly perverse lurid eccentricity. The script is vaguely Pinteresque, if Harold Pinter’s obsessions had included bicycle seat fetishism, incest, flogging, and the ‘compulsory conscription of all young ladies between 18 and 20 into domestic service’.
The direction (by Viktor Ritelis) is a bit rough in places, with some of the performances reminiscent of characters in Spike Milligan’s ‘Q’ sketches. If you’re at all familiar with them then you too may expect at several points a voice over to announce “Come in Film No.7 your time is up” and for everyone to face the screen and ask “What are we going to do now?” It's all very much in the MUMSY, SONNY, NANNY AND GIRLY genre of ‘Mad British Families Doing Mad Things Because They’re Mad’ and let’s face it, there aren’t enough of those.
Hammer’s new 2K restoration Blu-ray transfer offers a brighter, crisper image than the Region A Shout Factory disc from 2018 but the extras are different so collectors may want to hold onto their Shout disc anyway. UK and US versions of the film are present on the disc but there’s very little difference between the two other than the title card. Extras on Hammer’s disc consist of an erudite commentary track from BFI Flipside boys William Fowler and Vic Pratt who do a fine job of providing analysis of what we’re seeing on screen as well as providing background info. The film’s Pinteresque style is dealt with in greater depth by Jonathan Rigby in an excellent 32 minute piece in which he picks choice scenes and lines of dialogue to illustrate his point, comparing the entire piece to a three act play. You also get a trailer and image gallery.
CRUCIBLE OF HORROR is out on Blu-ray from Hammer on Monday 20th April 2026