DEVIL DOLL
B&W, 1964, 85 mins. 5 secs. / 81 mins. 1 sec.
Directed by Lindsey Shonteff
Starring Bryant Haliday, William Sylvester, Yvonne Romain
Vinegar Syndrome (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD), Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC), Second Sight (DVD) (UK R2 PAL), Umbrella (DVD) (Australia R0 PAL) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9)

CURSE OF THE VOODOO
B&W, 1965, 83 mins. 50 secs.
Directed by Lindsey Shonteff
Starring Bryant Haliday, Dennis Price, Lisa Daniely
Vinegar Syndrome (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9), Elite Entertainment (DVD) (US R0 NTSC)


An avowed lifelong horror and sci-fi fan, Devil DollBritish producer Richard Gordon found great success with his brother Alex producing, importing, and Devil Dolldistributing European fare based out of their U.S. office, ranging from Boris Karloff spook shows like The Haunted Strangler to Norman J. Warren's Inseminoid. Several Gordon films have become part of the Criterion Collection over the years, and especially since the DVD era, virtually everything they handled has had a healthy home video release in various formats. Two of his British horror films with then-new director Lindsay Shonteff collected in a 2025 Blu-ray release from Vinegar Syndrome, Devil Doll and Curse of the Voodoo, were DVD staples in the '00s for a while but fell out of availability for a long time. Here they've been revived with startling 4K scans from the 35mm camera negatives via Vinegar Syndrome on Blu-ray, looking substantially better than ever before with new extras offering more context to appreciate these very different programmers exploiting people's fears of creepy ventriloquist dummies and sinister magic curses.

Originally slated for director Sidney J. Furie, Devil Doll came along two decades after the pioneering dummy horrors of the classic anthology Dead of Night and had to compete with similar ideas freaking out viewers on TV shows like The Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock Presents. This one more than holds its own though as it depicts the popular but very queasy London stage act by The Great Vorelli (Haliday) and his dummy, Hugo, who stays locked in a cage after showtime. Mark English (Sylvester), an expat American reporter, brings his high society girlfriend Marianne (Romain) to one of Vorelli's shows where she participates in a strange hypnosis dance act involving an ambulatory Hugo. More bizarre events unfold including Vorelli's attempts to assault Marianne, a cryptic plea for help from Hugo about Berlin, and a dark secret from the stage Devil Dollperformer's past that points to great danger for everyone involved.

A claustrophobic and weirdly haunting film, Devil Doll largely depends on your willingness to submit to its jagged Devil Dollrhythms and heavily reliance on close-ups for the entire running time. Despite the title, the film reveals early on that the dummy itself isn't the source of evil but rather Vorelli himself, with Haliday giving a weird, woozy performance complete with a facial hair appliance that just makes him seem even stranger. Though mostly dismissed as a routine programmer at the time, the film built up steady word of mouth over the years once it hit VHS from Gorgon Video including an enthusiastic appraisal from Chas Balun back in the day. On the downside, the film's reputation took an undeserved hit in 1997 when it was aired as an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, adding it to the roster of solid genre films whose IMDb ratings plummeted after getting ribbed on the show. A rehabilitation came along though with the DVD from Image Entertainment in 2002 as part of a string of releases with Richard Gordon. During the process of prepping the disc, he uncovered the Continental version of the film primarily intended for French release featuring some extended and alternate topless shots. Both were included on the DVD, with the standard U.K. cut also getting an audio commentary with Gordon and Tom Weaver covering the entire process of mounting the film from its origins as a short story through Furie's involvement to the recruiting of the green Shonteff. The Vinegar Syndrome edition is quite the improvement across the board with better sound quality and significant tweaks in image quality including more detail, a great deal of extra image info mainly at the bottom, and the correct proportions compared to the earlier transfer which was visibly squished. The main viewing option is the Continental version here, actually running a bit longer, presented with the Gordon-Weaver commentary (which is filled with movie audio during the extra bits) and a new commentary by Kim Newman and Barry Forshaw who have fun pointing out the finer points of the city locations including the main theater, the background of the script development from a rather different short story, and the impact of Gordon as a horror fan on the genre as a producer as well as ties to the director and cast. Also included are the alternate clothed scenes (2m39s) and the featurette "Casting a Spell" (25m24s) with Jonathan Rigby covering the film's more eccentric and fascinating Curse of the Voodoopoints including its loose portrayal of London geography and the background involving Gordon, Furie, and Curse of the VoodooShonteff which remains a bit nebulous even to this day.

Sharing space on the same Blu-ray is the Gordon-produced Curse of the Voodoo, which originated as an early script by Brian Clemens (The Avengers, Thriller) called Lion Man and shot as Curse of Simba. Shonteff and Haliday return as director and star for this considerably less-loved outing, an African adventure famously shot in London with the local scenery doing its best to impersonate the jungle. While out on a safari, the wildly unsympathetic Mike Stacey (Haliday) is forced to kill a lion when it's wounded by one of his companions. Also along is Major Lomas (horror vet Price) who warns that the animal is revered by the local tribe, the Simbazi, and sure enough, their chief puts a curse on Mike who seems to drive away everyone close to him including his wife, Janet (Daniely). Mike quickly jumps to a one-night stand that propels him into a delirious nightmare, and when he tried to reconcile with his wife, he finds his sanity quickly diminishing as the tribal curse has him in fear for his life.

A routine voodoo curse story dressed up with loads of jarring stock footage, Curse of the Voodoo is an undemanding second feature with a few Val Lewton-esque scenes of implied big cat stalking and a baffling tendency to side with the Mike character instead of... well, anyone else in the movie. Seen today, one of its Curse of the Voodoostrongest attributes is the chance to the see the striking singer-actress Beryl Cunningham (who later turned up in lots of fun Italian exploitation Curse of the Voodoofilms including Dorian Gray and The Black Decameron) doing a couple of frenzied dance numbers that should have been expanded into a full-fledged character role. Weirdly, this was one of the earliest titles released by Elite Entertainment when the label shifted to DVD in the format's infancy in 1999; the transfer was no great shakes even at the time, but it got repackaged into a couple of their combo packs without generating a lot of fan chatter.

The Vinegar Syndrome release is a lot easier on the eyes compared to the DVD, which was heavily cropped on the sides and looked very unbalanced throughout. Here framed at 1.66:1 it at least looks professional, with the pristine clarity also making it even more obvious when that amusing stock footage turns up. As with the companion film, the DTS-HD MA 2.0 English mono track sounds great and comes with optional English SDH subtitles. A new commentary track by Rod Barnett and Adrian Smith focuses on the positive attributes of the film as "one of the best African films shot in Regent's Park" and contextualizes it with the talent involved and other voodoo narratives turning up around that time. Then "Time for Tommy's Tea" (19m41s) is an interview with editor Barrie Vince about getting his first break with this film, his work with Furie on projects surrounding this, the relative ease of cutting this film, the short running time that had to be tweaked to get it up to commercial length, and the subsequent films that gave him the chops to work on bigger and better films for Furie and others. Finally in "Traditions and Legacies" (22m40s), the always enjoyable Newman tackles the film as part of a horror tradition of colonialist supernatural revenge and dread tales with shadowy powers striking back at English interlopers.

DEVIL DOLL: Vinegar Syndrome (Blu-ray)

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DEVIL DOLL: Image Entertainment (DVD)

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Reviewed on May 19, 2025