I'm impressed by how clear this film is for being as old as it is. I wish some more modern movies shown on UA-cam could have as sharp images. A short suspenseful story which I enjoyed.
This was great and new to me, which is a rarity since I've been a fan of this type of fare for more decades than I care to count. Heather Angel is always a delight and she did not disappoint here, thanks for uploading!
superb work by a director of comparable talent to other German exiles of much greater fame, as the critics say in the final commentary. Thanks for the film from Argentina
Extremely high quality for such an old film! I thoroughly enjoyed it, I'm glad it is preserved for future watchers, they just don't make em like they used to. How this is possible is a mystery, just think, it's 82 yrs. old, quite an accomplishment in it's time. Not exactly scary by today's standard, but entertaining. Thanks for this unique one.
Even though both made by FOX, there are similarities between this and 'The Hound of the Baskervilles''. Then a touch of 'The Musgrave Ritual' and quite a bit of 'The Wolf Man' and they made a film that I enjoy watching very much.
I think two of the actors appeared in the Sherlock Holmes movies. The maid in the Hound of the Baskervilles as a maid whose brother was the escaped confict. And, the butler "I think" was the butler in the Musgrave Manor.
I love these old movies. Anyone notice that in the old horror movies that the characters are adults? A well told story, great imagine, no sex, no graphic violence makes it an enjoyable movie to watch. I want to live in that wonderful dusty huge house. :)
Ditto. Well said. I am Soooo SICK of the gore and over the top screams & violence. Gone are the days of classy, skilled direction, set design, lighting, music score, ...and ACTING! UNPLUG the computer already. Use some movie making skills and talents. End of rant. 😇💖✝️
Thank you for sharing this little jewel. I love old horror movies from England, and I think they made the best werewolf movies too. Would it be possible to find and share some more of them?
Having just watched this last night I was amazed at the technical feat of both the Direction and Cinematography. I am honestly surprised to have discovered such early film making mastery. Thank you for making this discovery possible. ❤
This is a great movie! The blend of science and the supernatural, with the mystery genre added by the detectives, is just perfect. I especially like the character of Christie; she's so much fun and holds her own with the male characters!
This has the look and feel and casting of a Universal horror flick--in fact, some of the actors here are from the awesome Basil Rathbone-Sherlock Holmes flicks.
Absolutely amazing you guys top media as good as my DVD ! John Braum directed very few classic horror films ! incredible camera work as well, 100% top rare 40's movie !
I love these old horror movies they remind me of my childhood, Growing up we had a local television station that showed old horror movies on Saturday nights and we loved it, That old lady in this movie is so creepy-looking
This is a great movie to watch when stars are bright on a frosty night. It really is a great little horror/ mystery film that is fast - paced, well written, well acted, with great atmosphere! I enjoyed it.
Rather entertaining, a combination of the old dark house and hound of the Baskervilles. A pretty good re-creation of the atmosphere of older British movies and Heather Angel was an angel.
Very good old style movie! A murder, a theft, a missing person, a monster, an ancestral home, a dark and stormy night, all the good ingredients needed.
This is a nice, sharp print! Not many old movies on UA-cam look this good! I'm kind of surprised Fox gave this an A budget, although there is a noticeable lack of stars.
This was so well made at the time... the story made sense, there wasn't that overload of drama or overacting, the facts and knowledge appropriate for the time and the story of the werewolf was one of the better ones. Thanks for sharing with us.
I recently saw this and had always felt like I had a good knowledge of movies like this. I was proven wrong with this one. Why have I never heard of this? It's has a competent story and decent acting, but these sets are mind blowing and imaginative camera set ups throughout. And that ending (no spoilers here)...I don't I have ever seen 'it' performed that way. All around surprise. It was 1942. A world at war. Where did they get this budget???
One of three very good movies directed by John Brahm for Fox; the other two are THE LODGER and HANGOVER SQUARE. He also did THE MAD MAGICIAN with Vincent Price for Columbia in the 50s.
Overall, a mixed bag, with good direction, solid cast, but script that goes off in too many different directions simultaneously. This was the era of the wolfman films, and critics regarded this one as a bit of a quickie knock-off. But kudos to Heather Thatcher, who lightens things up!
Enjoyed the perfectly spooky gothic sets of the mansion and surrounding sea, and so nicely lit. I like this movie almost as much as Universal's The Wolf Man. The director here, Brahm, was good. His work sort of has that Val Lewton vibe and look; classy and macabre and dramatic. I wasn't familiar with him until watching this cozy film today (and the little documentary after this movie here). Oh, that last line in the movie is so insulting, LOL, the guy is throwing shade at the comedy relief character. Fun way to end the story.
I know this movie. Great choice! RECOMMENDED! John Brahm's first thriller as a director and the atmosphere is terrific even if the male lead is pretty corny. But it paved the way for two of the very finest thrillers of the 1940's: the sublime The Lodger, and the near-equal and sometimes alarming Hangover Square. Brahma hand is later unmistakable in several of the very best Twilight zone episodes. The script is weak borrowing too much from Universal's The Wolfman right down to the foreboding poem of legend. The last scenes is weak. But it's a pretty bloody good ride, and again, the atmosphere if terrific.
Love these b/w movies. Maybe you could help me. There was an old b/w horror movie I saw when I was about 8 yrs old, that scared the crap out of me and have always wanted to see it again. The story is about two elderly spinster sisters who had a younger brother. Their mother died giving birth to him and their father put the kid in either the attic or basement to die. The sisters would sneak food to him by putting it under the door but one day he stopped taking it. They thought he died. Decades later a creature was attacking people at night. People who wear some kind of uniform. Postal, police and military. At the end, one of the sisters put on her father's military uniform and the creature went after her. I don't want to give the ending away but it scared me so much that I wouldn't leave the safety of my bedroom even to go to the bathroom. The bathroom in the house I grew up in didn't have windows and so was pitch black, even with the hall light on. At one point of the night I had to pee so bad that I popped the screen out of my bedroom window to pee out the window. No way was I going to enter that bathroom. 😅 if you know of this old horror movie, I would love to see it again. Thanks
That's it !! Growing up, we only had a b/w tv, just assumed it was 1940's or 50's. I've bought about a dozen b/w horror movie box sets looking for it. Before youtube. Thanks !!! Gonna get me some popcorn and enjoy
@@stevemcg1129 It is so nice that you can enjoy these old movies. Today's films are all right, but the old ones, especially black and white, are what I go for when I want interesting entertainment and not just splat on screen stuff.
This movie I would put with the rest of the classics, The Wolfman, The Mummy, Dracula. A mystery to the end, with great atmosphere. Always referred to as the monster, the word Werewolf never comes in to play. And I will probably watch it 10 more times.😊
I love these old movies, my grandma loved these so much. She would let me watch with her as long as it did not give me night mare's 😅 which I'm did . - miss u grandma 👵 ❤
Good film by a director you should pay more attention to. I should say that I liked this film a lot. The guy who directed it was John Brahm, a very interesting fellow and one who, I think, used music very well to evoke tension. Stay to the end of the movie for there are some people interviewed about Brahm and his work. I wonder whether he knew Schoenberg. **** "Tonality, he said, “is not a necessity for a piece of music, but rather a possibility.” "That radical expansion of the harmonic field had a sweeping influence on all subsequent composers, whether or not they followed Schoenberg explicitly. Hollywood composers paid particularly close attention to Schoenberg’s music, and some studied with him directly. The great man was not displeased to receive these genuflections, although he appeared to resent the idea that his non-tonal vocabulary was useful primarily as an expressive crutch for scenes of tension and terror. Years ago, David Raksin, who wrote music for “Laura” and other classic films, told me that he once asked Schoenberg how he should score an airplane sequence. Schoenberg archly replied, “Like big bees, only louder.” "At the final Jacaranda concert, the pianist and conductor Scott Dunn illustrated the Schoenberg-Hollywood relationship by playing three pieces by Leonard Rosenman, who took private lessons with Schoenberg in 1947. Rosenman wasn’t writing for the movies at the time; that transition came about when one of his piano students, James Dean, was cast in “East of Eden” and got his teacher hired along with him. (Dean, a modern-music fan, liked to tell an anecdote about Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto: after Jascha Heifetz complained that he would need to grow a sixth finger to master the piece, Schoenberg supposedly said, “I can wait.”) Rosenman began employing twelve-tone methods in his film scores. During the planetarium scene in “Rebel Without a Cause,” the orchestra dissolves into a magnificent Schoenbergian melee. It’s hard to imagine how Hollywood could have functioned without the language of dissonance. The horror genre wouldn’t even exist." Alex Ross in "The New Yorker".
yes, John Brahm went on to direct a successful film trilogy known as 'Star Wars'. George Lucas was just his under-study. An incredible director that should be more known, if only hollywood hadn't blacklisted him!
One werewolf movie that doesn't come across as ridiculous. Serious acting, and nothing camp about it. Well, there is the lady detective making toffee in the lab, as if to excuse the break in one stereotype by mocking it with another. And it doesn't take itself seriously enough by the end, having a bob each way in explaining lycanthropy (spoiler alert). The fellow just had an inherited mania about being a wolf, says the doctor, a kink in the brain, and yet the dog didn't recognise the monster as its owner, says the detective, so the fellow was truly physically transformed? Seems we're invited to believe what we want, not just the evidence the film presented. Strange
This Undying Monster goes quite well as a sort of "double feature" with Shadow on the Stairs, which Heather Grace Angel (February 9th, 1909 - December 13th, 1986) costarred in, just one year before. Personally, I'm not sure which of hers I like better.
absolutely incredibly well done!, that too in 1942! Are there mansions like that even now in England? I doubt it. I will watch it agian. Thanks for finding and uploading this.
Don’t know what country you’re from, but you should know that England is full of old houses like this, there called stately homes, and you can pay to look round them, you must have watched Downtown Abbey 😂
I'm impressed by how clear this film is for being as old as it is. I wish some more modern movies shown on UA-cam could have as sharp images.
A short suspenseful story which I enjoyed.
This was great and new to me, which is a rarity since I've been a fan of this type of fare for more decades than I care to count. Heather Angel is always a delight and she did not disappoint here, thanks for uploading!
Ole black and white movies are more creepy n suspenseful to watch. A awesome movie, classic
superb work by a director of comparable talent to other German exiles of much greater fame, as the critics say in the final commentary. Thanks for the film from Argentina
Why have I never seen this before. Love it. Thanks for sharing😊
Extremely high quality for such an old film! I thoroughly enjoyed it, I'm glad it is preserved for future watchers, they just don't make em like they used to. How this is possible is a mystery, just think, it's 82 yrs. old, quite an accomplishment in it's time. Not exactly scary by today's standard, but entertaining. Thanks for this unique one.
A very good horror film,and scary! Thank you,for sharing it.
I love these old films 🍿. Black and white celluloid. Atmospheric and dark. No cgi fakery either.
Brings back so many good memories of curling up on the sofa on a wintery Sunday afternoon with my Grandmother. 🙂
I can watch these and not get bored i miss watching B&W classics late at night
Google : FILM NOIR MOVIES OF THE 30s
and 40s ...
except, substitute MYSTERY or HORROR
instead of Noir.
Even though both made by FOX, there are similarities between this and 'The Hound of the Baskervilles''. Then a touch of 'The Musgrave Ritual' and quite a bit of 'The Wolf Man' and they made a film that I enjoy watching very much.
I think two of the actors appeared in the Sherlock Holmes movies. The maid in the Hound of the Baskervilles as a maid whose brother was the escaped confict. And, the butler "I think" was the butler in the Musgrave Manor.
There are also set similarities to the "Uninvited" with Ray Milland, a great favorite of mine.
@@denmanning3080 Yep. Halliwell Hobbes was the butler in "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death" starring Basil Rathbone.
@@denmanning3080 "Brunton".
Oof the make of this comment 😖
I love these old movies. Anyone notice that in the old horror movies that the characters are adults? A well told story, great imagine, no sex, no graphic violence makes it an enjoyable movie to watch.
I want to live in that wonderful dusty huge house. :)
👍
I'd love to live in that old mansion. It would be so cool.❤
Enjoy the film & stop belly-aching.
@@Rxlrpl Play nice.😂
Ditto. Well said. I am Soooo SICK of the gore and over the top screams & violence. Gone are the days of classy, skilled direction, set design, lighting, music score, ...and ACTING! UNPLUG the computer already. Use some movie making skills and talents. End of rant.
😇💖✝️
Great movie. The shades and darkness and shadows an absolute masterpiece by the lighting artists.
Thank you for sharing this little jewel. I love old horror movies from England, and I think they made the best werewolf movies too. Would it be possible to find and share some more of them?
This was made in Beverly Hills, CA, at the Fox studio. It's an American movie.
Great flick watching for 1st time in the year 2024 no one looking at a monitor/ screen or mobile phone ! Just wonderful .
Except those watching the film
Having just watched this last night I was amazed at the technical feat of both the Direction and Cinematography. I am honestly surprised to have discovered such early film making mastery. Thank you for making this discovery possible. ❤
It's been quite a while since I've seen this movie. Love the atmosphere in those old(er) movies. 😊
This is one of the best in the 40's era,Thanks😉
Many thanks for a wonderful movie. Fascinating in every way, not like modern garbage.
This is a great movie! The blend of science and the supernatural, with the mystery genre added by the detectives, is just perfect. I especially like the character of Christie; she's so much fun and holds her own with the male characters!
A lot of these old movies have butlers that are older than dirt!
Apparently a safe job. Not gonna kill you like truck driver.
This has the look and feel and casting of a Universal horror flick--in fact, some of the actors here are from the awesome Basil Rathbone-Sherlock Holmes flicks.
Perfect movie for a cold winter night! Thanks so much for taking the time to share this film.
Absolutely amazing you guys top media as good as my DVD ! John Braum directed very few classic horror films ! incredible camera work as well, 100% top rare 40's movie !
I never get tired of these movies.
I love these old horror movies they remind me of my childhood, Growing up we had a local television station that showed old horror movies on Saturday nights and we loved it, That old lady in this movie is so creepy-looking
Thank you! Saves me having to watch Hound of the Baskerville or Rue De Morge by Poe for a 3rd time. I enjoyed!
Also want to mention that the book that this movie is taken from is a great late-night read if you're looking for something spooky.
From Terence Wise in UK.......Wow a really good horror film,never seen it before.
Excellent movie, all it was missing was a spooky thunderstorm
The huge Great Dane in this film reminds me Scooby-Doo for some reason.😅
@user-co4gs3hm8p "Cuddles" from "The Woody Woodpecker Show". Scooby-Doo could talk.
Even though he's very big, that dog seems very sweet.
I love all these old movies
They knew how to produce films back in those days. Really enjoyed the biographic details of John Braum at the end.
Excellent film, thank you for the upload ❤
This is a great movie to watch when stars are bright on a frosty night. It really is a great little horror/ mystery film that is fast - paced, well written, well acted, with great atmosphere! I enjoyed it.
Rather entertaining, a combination of the old dark house and hound of the Baskervilles. A pretty good re-creation of the atmosphere of older British movies and Heather Angel was an angel.
Very good old style movie! A murder, a theft, a missing person, a monster, an ancestral home, a dark and stormy night, all the good ingredients needed.
This was actually REALLY good!
This is a nice, sharp print! Not many old movies on UA-cam look this good! I'm kind of surprised Fox gave this an A budget, although there is a noticeable lack of stars.
Yeah, it's a great script too. Such an interesting movie, and not as well known as many others of this ilk. Glad to see it getting some love.
This was 100% B budget as John Braun never got the chance with FOX to direct a single A film ! to bad !
Excellent film,great cast,well scripted and filmed,thanks for uploading.
I think Walter the butler also was the butler in a S. HOLMES film. Neat.
That is correct
Classic black & white movie 🎦 great to watch
Wow. Fantastic movie!
This was so well made at the time... the story made sense, there wasn't that overload of drama or overacting, the facts and knowledge appropriate for the time and the story of the werewolf was one of the better ones. Thanks for sharing with us.
i loved it first time seeing it
I recently saw this and had always felt like I had a good knowledge of movies like this. I was proven wrong with this one. Why have I never heard of this? It's has a competent story and decent acting, but these sets are mind blowing and imaginative camera set ups throughout. And that ending (no spoilers here)...I don't I have ever seen 'it' performed that way.
All around surprise. It was 1942. A world at war. Where did they get this budget???
One of three very good movies directed by John Brahm for Fox; the other two are THE LODGER and HANGOVER SQUARE. He also did THE MAD MAGICIAN with Vincent Price for Columbia in the 50s.
Overall, a mixed bag, with good direction, solid cast, but script that goes off in too many different directions simultaneously. This was the era of the wolfman films, and critics regarded this one as a bit of a quickie knock-off. But kudos to Heather Thatcher, who lightens things up!
I lov these old movies with atmospheric english houses and moors....of course this was in the war and it was fimed at fox in century city!
Excellent film!
I never saw this flim ,it is good.
That was unexpectedly fun. There are some great movie classics in black and white, but I had never heard of this one. Enjoyed it.
I love this kind of old movie they really have to be creative.
Thanks.
Even as a young man I love these films
Cool.
Thanks For Sharing
A good little mystery. thanks
I noticed a young Charles McGraw at 45 18 in an uncredited role. About ten years before Narrow Margin one of my favorite film noirs.
Lovely film I was born in i953 and I miss these beautiful movies
Me gustan mucho las películas en blanco y negro antiguas de terror son unicas , gracias por compartirla saludos desde Puerto Rico 👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent quality.
Thanks for uploading ❤😊
I'm in love with this little flick. ty for posting.
"Something is very strange."
"Nonsense."
What a great old film. Never heard of ut before. A definite Baskerville vibe about it🐺😮.
Anyone know any others like it ??
Thank You for giving us the commentary at the end! 😍😋😘
Enjoyed the perfectly spooky gothic sets of the mansion and surrounding sea, and so nicely lit. I like this movie almost as much as Universal's The Wolf Man. The director here, Brahm, was good. His work sort of has that Val Lewton vibe and look; classy and macabre and dramatic. I wasn't familiar with him until watching this cozy film today (and the little documentary after this movie here). Oh, that last line in the movie is so insulting, LOL, the guy is throwing shade at the comedy relief character. Fun way to end the story.
Wicked flick! Thanks for pulling this up.
I know this movie. Great choice! RECOMMENDED! John Brahm's first thriller as a director and the atmosphere is terrific even if the male lead is pretty corny. But it paved the way for two of the very finest thrillers of the 1940's: the sublime The Lodger, and the near-equal and sometimes alarming Hangover Square. Brahma hand is later unmistakable in several of the very best Twilight zone episodes. The script is weak borrowing too much from Universal's The Wolfman right down to the foreboding poem of legend. The last scenes is weak. But it's a pretty bloody good ride, and again, the atmosphere if terrific.
A great little documentary at the end of the movie, well worth the watch! The movie was very well choreographed. Nice film noir.
Yes it's from the bluray in which I owned.
Never underestimate the power of font, look at that amazibg font in the credits, like dripping blood pioneer in horror symbolism
I love a good font...
Love these b/w movies. Maybe you could help me. There was an old b/w horror movie I saw when I was about 8 yrs old, that scared the crap out of me and have always wanted to see it again. The story is about two elderly spinster sisters who had a younger brother. Their mother died giving birth to him and their father put the kid in either the attic or basement to die. The sisters would sneak food to him by putting it under the door but one day he stopped taking it. They thought he died. Decades later a creature was attacking people at night. People who wear some kind of uniform. Postal, police and military. At the end, one of the sisters put on her father's military uniform and the creature went after her. I don't want to give the ending away but it scared me so much that I wouldn't leave the safety of my bedroom even to go to the bathroom. The bathroom in the house I grew up in didn't have windows and so was pitch black, even with the hall light on. At one point of the night I had to pee so bad that I popped the screen out of my bedroom window to pee out the window. No way was I going to enter that bathroom. 😅 if you know of this old horror movie, I would love to see it again. Thanks
The Beast in the Cellar? It’s not b/w but it’s the same story, made in 1970. Search for it on UA-cam, I watched it before. Hope this helps?
That's it !! Growing up, we only had a b/w tv, just assumed it was 1940's or 50's. I've bought about a dozen b/w horror movie box sets looking for it. Before youtube. Thanks !!! Gonna get me some popcorn and enjoy
@@stevemcg1129 It is so nice that you can enjoy these old movies. Today's films are all right, but the old ones, especially black and white, are what I go for when I want interesting entertainment and not just splat on screen stuff.
A very good film! Really enjoyed it!
This movie I would put with the rest of the classics, The Wolfman, The Mummy, Dracula. A mystery to the end, with great atmosphere. Always referred to as the monster, the word Werewolf never comes in to play. And I will probably watch it 10 more times.😊
Actor playing the inspector was in HOUSE OF FEAR Basil Rathbone Sherlock Holmes.
And the butler was in Sherlock Holmes faces death
What a fun movie-thanks for postimg it
A fantastic film
A very fine movie, but don't stop watching at the end of it. A great piece on the director John Brahm.
Just to listen to classic English and Beauty
TY for posting
Especially liked the “Concerto Macabre: The Films of John Brahm”.
That spanial is a great actor, I hope.
*spaniel*
Released November 27th,1942
I was five months old!
I love these old movies, my grandma loved these so much. She would let me watch with her as long as it did not give me night mare's 😅 which I'm did . - miss u grandma 👵 ❤
Which ( it ) did 😊
The terms "obstructing justice" and "aiding and abetting" come to mind.
Good film by a director you should pay more attention to. I should say that I liked this film a lot. The guy who directed it was John Brahm, a very interesting fellow and one who, I think, used music very well to evoke tension. Stay to the end of the movie for there are some people interviewed about Brahm and his work. I wonder whether he knew Schoenberg.
****
"Tonality, he said, “is not a necessity for a piece of music, but rather a possibility.”
"That radical expansion of the harmonic field had a sweeping influence on all subsequent composers, whether or not they followed Schoenberg explicitly. Hollywood composers paid particularly close attention to Schoenberg’s music, and some studied with him directly. The great man was not displeased to receive these genuflections, although he appeared to resent the idea that his non-tonal vocabulary was useful primarily as an expressive crutch for scenes of tension and terror. Years ago, David Raksin, who wrote music for “Laura” and other classic films, told me that he once asked Schoenberg how he should score an airplane sequence. Schoenberg archly replied, “Like big bees, only louder.”
"At the final Jacaranda concert, the pianist and conductor Scott Dunn illustrated the Schoenberg-Hollywood relationship by playing three pieces by Leonard Rosenman, who took private lessons with Schoenberg in 1947. Rosenman wasn’t writing for the movies at the time; that transition came about when one of his piano students, James Dean, was cast in “East of Eden” and got his teacher hired along with him. (Dean, a modern-music fan, liked to tell an anecdote about Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto: after Jascha Heifetz complained that he would need to grow a sixth finger to master the piece, Schoenberg supposedly said, “I can wait.”) Rosenman began employing twelve-tone methods in his film scores. During the planetarium scene in “Rebel Without a Cause,” the orchestra dissolves into a magnificent Schoenbergian melee. It’s hard to imagine how Hollywood could have functioned without the language of dissonance. The horror genre wouldn’t even exist."
Alex Ross in "The New Yorker".
yes, John Brahm went on to direct a successful film trilogy known as 'Star Wars'. George Lucas was just his under-study. An incredible director that should be more known, if only hollywood hadn't blacklisted him!
I love this movie 😮
Great movie! Thank you sharing.
Thanks for sharing from London Uk 😊
Out chasing some monster and a rabbit scares them lmao, great film.
👍
Superb mystery, great acting, even if there was,nt a real monster. 😮 Great Gothic set and spooky atmosphere also.
Thanks! I much appreciate the bio bit on Brahm that follows.
Great film thanks.👍
What fun! Thank you for posting!!
Great Movie 🙂👍
Heather rocks this!
One werewolf movie that doesn't come across as ridiculous. Serious acting, and nothing camp about it. Well, there is the lady detective making toffee in the lab, as if to excuse the break in one stereotype by mocking it with another. And it doesn't take itself seriously enough by the end, having a bob each way in explaining lycanthropy (spoiler alert). The fellow just had an inherited mania about being a wolf, says the doctor, a kink in the brain, and yet the dog didn't recognise the monster as its owner, says the detective, so the fellow was truly physically transformed? Seems we're invited to believe what we want, not just the evidence the film presented. Strange
This Undying Monster goes quite well as a sort of "double feature" with Shadow on the Stairs, which Heather Grace Angel
(February 9th, 1909 - December 13th, 1986) costarred in, just one year before. Personally, I'm not sure which of hers I like
better.
absolutely incredibly well done!, that too in 1942! Are there mansions like that even now in England? I doubt it. I will watch it agian. Thanks for finding and uploading this.
Don’t know what country you’re from, but you should know that England is full of old houses like this, there called stately homes, and you can pay to look round them, you must have watched Downtown Abbey 😂
Yea of course there are
What a delightful movie 🎬 thank you for uploading this
I enjoyed this movie! Old-time thriller movie. :)
Thank You For This!
Its the same butler from Sherlock Holmes Faces Death😀 but hes changed his name from Alfred to Walton 😀
It seems the actor made a living playing butlers good actor.
I was born on 1979 😂I can’t imagine that the classic movie is better than 2004 movie horror.
Exactly!😂
Thank you most enjoyable 😊
This film just showed up in my feed. I really enjoyed it and am a new sub. Looking forward to watching more of your channel.