Are you afraid of death by drowning? Have you ever attempted suicide? Have you ever thought of committing murder?
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Writer: Francis Ford Coppola
Producer: Roger Corman
A widow deceives her late husband's mother and brothers into thinking he's still alive when she attends the yearly memorial to his drowned sister, hoping to secure his inheritance, but her cunning is no match for the demented, axe-wielding thing roaming the grounds of the family's Irish estate.
75 min
Rating: 5.6/10
Released
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Top Cast

William Campbell
Richard Haloran

Luana Anders
Louise Haloran

Bart Patton
Billy Haloran

Mary Mitchel
Kane

Patrick Magee
Justin Caleb

Eithne Dunne
Lady Haloran
Movie Info
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Writer: Francis Ford Coppola
Producer: Roger Corman
Production Companies: The Filmgroup, Roger Corman Productions, American International Pictures
Countries: Ireland, United States of America
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What Others Said
talisencrw:
This was a tad eccentric but proved to me a very delightfully surreal horror film. In watching this, you immediately get the feeling the director has both interesting, out-of-the-ordinary ideas plus the balls to do things his own way. It's flawed, but definitely shows plenty of directing chops and potential for brilliance, just a few years down the road. A bona-fide, low-budget, American classic.
Wuchak:
***Coppolaâs version of âPsycho,â sort of***
After the sudden death of her husband, an American woman (Luana Anders) keeps it secret and tries to ingratiate herself to the matriarch at the familyâs manor in Ireland in order to extort part of the inheritance. But thereâs a dark pall over the family after an accidental drowning seven years earlier, not to mention the specter of a psycho with an axe! William Campbell plays the strange brother and Mary Mitchel his fiancĂŠe.
Shot in B&W, âDementia 13â (1963), aka âThe Haunted and the Hunted,â was the theatrical debut for writer/director Francis Ford Coppola after producer Roger Corman offered him to do a low-budget imitation of âPsychoâ (1960) in Ireland with funds left over from his movie âThe Young Racers,â on which Coppola worked as a sound technician. Actually, this wasnât technically Coppolaâs first film as he did eleven days shooting of Cormanâs superior âThe Terrorâ in Big Sur, California.
The story and setting are very different from âPsychoâ and its sister English film âHorror Hotelâ (aka âThe City of the Deadâ), which was produced/released at the same time as âPsycho,â although it wasnât released in America until two years later. Nevertheless, âDementia 13â is cut from the same B&W horror cloth and shares an infamous plot twist that originated with those two films. Like âPsycho,â thereâs a psycho madman, although he prefers an axe to a butcher knife.
Unfortunately, âDementia 13â isnât great like âPsychoâ or formidable like âHorror Hotel,â mainly because the story is sorta befuddling (like the two bodies of water that arenât properly differentiated), although most everythingâs explained at the end. Thereâs a good gothic ambiance, but the bewildering storytelling prevents the flick from taking off. And Luana Anders, while okay, is second rate compared to the breathtaking Venetia Stevenson in âHorror Hotelâ and Janet Leigh in âPsycho.â
Corman wasnât happy with what Coppola brought home to California. He (rightly) insisted that certain scenes needed simplified and that more violence was necessary, to which Jack Hill was hired to shoot the additional poacher scenes. A useless prologue was also tacked on to beef-up the runtime, which wasnât featured on the version I watched. If youâre familiar with Coppolaâs later work, like âYouth Without Youthâ (2007) and âTwixtâ (2011), you know that he has the tendency to overcomplicate scripts. Thatâs the problem with âDementia 13.â Still, it definitely upped the slasher ante and influenced that particular horror genre.
The film runs 1 hour, 15 minutes and was shot in Ireland (Howth Castle, Howth, and Ardmore Studios in Bray). It was remade and improved in color in 2017.
GRADE: C