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The Forgotten (1973 film)

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The Forgotten
Directed byS. F. Brownrigg
Written byTim Pope
Produced byS. F. Brownrigg
Walter L. Krusz (executive producer)
StarringBill McGhee
Rosie Holotik
Anne MacAdams
Gene Ross
Hugh Feagin
Camilla Carr
CinematographyRobert B. Alcott
Edited byJerry Caraway
Music byRobert Farrar
Production
company
Hallmark Releasing Corp.
Distributed byAIP
Release date
  • September 1973 (1973-09)
Running time
89 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100,000 USD

The Forgotten (also known as Don't Look in the Basement and Death Ward #13) is a 1973 independent horror film directed by S. F. Brownrigg, written by Tim Pope and starring Bill McGhee, former Playboy model Rosie Holotik, and Anne MacAdams about homicidal patients at an insane asylum.

Plot

The film is set in Stephens Sanitarium, a secluded rural mental health institute whose chief doctor believes that the best way to deal with insanity is to allow the patients to freely act out their realities in the hopes that they will snap out of it, so to speak. The film begins with an elderly nurse in Stephens Sanitorium making her rounds. After a troubling incident in which a patient threatens her life, she decides to retire, and goes out to visit the chief doctor, Dr. Stephens, to inform him of the decision. Unfortunately, in the process of therapy (which involves chopping wood with an axe), the crazed former magistrate known as Judge (Gene Ross) accidentally lands the axe in Dr. Stephens' back, apparently killing him. The shaken nurse returns inside to finish packing, where she is attacked by Harriet (Camilla Carr), a patient who accuses her of stealing her "baby" (actually a plastic doll). The patient kills her by crushing her head in the nurse's suitcase.

The only remaining doctor appears to be Dr. Geraldine Masters (Anne MacAdams), who is greeted by Charlotte Beale (Rosie Holotik), a pretty young nurse who informs Dr. Masters that Dr. Stephens had hired her a week ago. Dr. Masters begrudgingly allows her to settle in. The young nurse meets the patients, including a lobotomized and childish man named Sam (Bill McGhee) who enjoys popsicles and his plastic toy boat, a nymphomaniac and schizophrenic named Allyson (Betty Chandler), an emotionally dependent woman named Jennifer (Harryette Warren), an octogenarian woman named Mrs. Callingham (Rhea MacAdams) who spouts bizarre poetry and mistakes flowers in the garden to be her own children, a juvenile prankster named Danny (Jessie Kirby), a shellshocked Sergeant (Hugh Feagin) who lost his mind after accidentally killing his men in Vietnam, and the crazed judge who seems incapable of speaking in anything other than courtroom jargon and the repeated phrase "My name... is... Oliver... W... Cameron..."

Dr. Masters becomes disturbed when a telephone man comes to investigate the faulty phone system at the institution. Mrs. Callingham's tongue is ripped out of her mouth during her sleep, although Dr. Masters tells Charlotte that Mrs. Callingham did it to herself. The audience later discovers that Dr. Masters is actually a patient at the institute, and that Dr. Stephens had allowed her to pretend to be a doctor. Dr. Masters burns the Sergeant's hand after he disobeys her, and murders Jennifer for stealing medicine. After a frantic conversation with Allyson, Charlotte discovers Dr. Masters' secret. Mrs. Callingham indicates to Charlotte that it was Masters who cut out her tongue, apparently to prevent the elderly woman from disclosing the secret. Charlotte then discovers the body of the telephone man in the kitchen closet, presumably murdered by Masters to make sure he would not report the institution's location to anyone on the outside. Allyson is distraught, as she thought the man was going to marry her, but she convinces herself that the man is still alive and drags his body to her room so she can have sex with it.

Charlotte realizes that her life is in grave danger, and she tries to escape. Judge informs her that they all know Masters is a patient, but that they think Charlotte is a patient also. Charlotte finds that all the windows and doors have been boarded by Masters, preventing an escape. Sam then leads Charlotte to the basement, where she is startled by a man grabbing her ankle and beats him to death with a toy boat. She realizes that it is Dr. Stephens, but not before finishing him off. Sam, at the direction of Masters, leads Charlotte upstairs, apparently so Judge can axe her to death. Sam thinks Charlotte murdered Dr. Stephens on purpose, so he helps restrain her. However, he has a flashback from his lobotomy (which Masters had assisted with), and lets Charlotte go. He then leaves the room as Masters cowers in a corner. As Sam leaves, the other inmates enter with weapons, and the Judge brutally axes Masters to death. Sam is deeply disturbed, and grabs the axe and proceeds to kill all the other inmates except Ms. Callingham, who is not in the room. Charlotte is already outside, having been told of a secret exit in the basement by Sam. She wanders around outside as the camera goes back to Sam, who, while eating a popsicle and viewing the carnage, cries to himself.

Cast

  • Bill McGhee as Sam
  • Rosie Holotik as Nurse Charlotte Beale
  • Annabelle Weenick (as Anne MacAdams) as Dr. Geraldine S. Masters
  • Gene Ross as Judge Oliver W. Cameron
  • Camilla Carr as Harriet
  • Hugh Feagin as Sgt. Jaffee
  • Betty Chandler as Allyson King
  • Jessie Kirby as Danny
  • Jessie Lee Fulton as Jane St. Claire
  • Rhea MacAdams as Mrs. Callingham
  • Robert Dracup as Ray Daniels
  • Harryette Warren as Jennifer D.
  • Michael Harvey as Dr. Stephens

Release

Filming took place at the site of Westminster College in Tehuacana, Texas.[citation needed]

This was a very low-budget film widely released to drive-in theatres in the early 1970s on a double-bill with Wes Craven's film debut, The Last House on the Left.[citation needed] The films shared the tagline, "To avoid fainting, keep repeating to yourself: 'It's only a movie.. it's only a movie.. it's only a movie.."

Reception

Cavett Binion of AllMovie gave it a generally favourable review, writing, "somehow the intrinsic sleaziness generated by the threadbare production manages to lend it a remarkably suitable ambience."[1] The movie currently holds an audience approval rating of 26% on movie review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.[2]

Remake

In May 2008, it was announced that a remake of the film was being planned by directors Alan Rowe Kelly and Anthony G. Sumner. Filming was scheduled for October 2008 in Indiana with a planned 2009 release.[3] However, this version never came into fruition.

In March, 2017, it was announced that former horror punk guitarist from the Misfits, Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein,[4] will star in Death Ward 13, a remake and continuation of Don't Look in the Basement. Directed by Todd Nunes (All Through The House) and produced by The Readmond Company, Death Ward 13 is currently in pre-production in Los Angeles.[5]

Sequel

In December 2013, a sequel titled Id: Don't Look in the Basement 2 was announced with Anthony Brownrigg, son of S.F. Brownrigg, directing. The film was shot in Texas in March/April 2014 and used several of the same locations from the original film.[6] A trailer debuted in early May 2014 with a promised release in the fall of 2014.

Inspiration

This film is a reimaging of the Edgar Allan Poe story The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether.

References

  1. ^ Binion, Cavett. "Don't Look in the Basement! (1973) – S. F. Brownrigg | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related | AllMovie". AllMovie. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  2. ^ "Don't Look in the Basement (1973) – Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  3. ^ Steve Barton (2008-05-12). "Don't Look in the Basement Remake a Go!". dreadcentral.com. Retrieved 2014-05-02.
  4. ^ "Misfits' Doyle to Play Killer in Horror Film 'Death Ward 13'". Loudwire. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  5. ^ "Exclusive Q&A: Filmmaker Todd Nunes on "ALL THROUGH THE HOUSE", "DEATH WARD 13"". FANGORIA®. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  6. ^ Roxanne McKnight (2014-04-04). "Horror movie filming under way in Tehuacana". mexiadailynews.com. Retrieved 2014-05-02.