The Haunted Castle

1960
6.2| 1h41m| en| More Info
Released: 15 December 1960 Released
Producted By: Georg Witt Film
Country: Germany
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The ghosts of thieves help a beautiful young countess save her inherited castle from modern developers in this comic horror/musical.

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Director

Producted By

Georg Witt Film

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Reviews

Diagonaldi Very well executed
Laikals The greatest movie ever made..!
Doomtomylo a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.
Tayloriona Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
morrison-dylan-fan Looking for Musicals to see for an ICM challenge,I found a review for a quirky-sounding German flick, but was sadly unable to find it anywhere. Gathering up Musicals to view in the oncoming week, I got very lucky and stumbled on the movie (with Eng Subs!) Which led to me visiting the haunted castle.The plot:Bricked into a castle, a group of thieves die and turn into ghosts. Whilst building work is done on the property 100's of years later, the wall is knocked down,and the ghost are freed. Believing they need to make up for their misdeeds,the ghosts start helping heiress Charlotte to keep the place neat and tidy. Trying to deal with the debt that her dad has left it with, Charlotte soon becomes spooked of losing all she owns.View on the film:Done as a sequel to Das Wirtshaus im Spessart, the screenplay by Günter Neumann & Heinz Pauck gives a few nods to the first movie, but smartly decide to make this a film that can stand on its own. Going for some dark satirical songs from the ghosts about the last remaining Nazis, the writers' strike a fine "Family Friendly" atmosphere, via satirical jokes and raunchy asides for the adults, and wacky ghost action for the kids.Although some of the wires are visible, director Kurt Hoffmann & cinematographer Günther Anders mask the limitations with a cheerful atmosphere, where the towering Gothic castle allowing Hoffmann to send the camera gliding round the corridors, which shake with "ghostly" wire work causing funny slap-stick scenes of everything being pushed around. Showing an eye for style in the Musical numbers, Hoffmann makes the appearances of the ghosts impressive, with neon outlines to their headless state giving the wise-cracking ghosts a spooky edge. Trying to keep the family castle, the pretty Liselotte Pulver gives a very good performance as Charlotte,thanks to Pulver making her a damsel who needs no ones help,and also giving Charlotte a comedic grin, in welcoming ghosts to the haunted castle.
t_atzmueller Perhaps one needed to have grown up with this type of film and, yes, "Spukschloss im Spessart" (Simplified English title: "The Haunted Castle") will appear very dated to a contemporary audience, but for many Germans the mere mention of the "Spessart"-movies will trigger soothing childhood-memories.During the 1950s, 60s and 70s German cinema has produced countless "family-friendly" comedies and musical, which did more than just a little borrowing from contemporary American films. Like the US-versions, these films were squeaky-clean, made the viewers forget the still fresh horrors of the second World War for an hour and a half, and where the "Ozzie and Harriet"-cinema of the US had their Bob Hopes, Doris Days and Rock Hudsons, the German variations had their Liselotte Pulvers and Heinz Baumanns.The story is as simple as it is clean-cut: A group of ghosts that have been walled up in the cellar of the Spessart-Inn during the middle-ages retain their freedom, when the Inn is replaced by the Autobahn. However, they can only find peace if they do one good deed. So they try to help out the beautiful but broke Countess Charlotte (Pulver), whose castle is in danger of being turned into a modern hotel. Needless to say, that the bumbling ghosts at first fail and have to deal with corrupt politicians (Hubert von Meyerinck) and a crazed prince from the middle-east (Hans Clarin). Needless to say: It all ends good & well (and the Americans are 'borrowing' the spirits in order to beat the Russians at the space-race).And since the entire film interludes with numerous song- & dance-numbers, the producers have seen it fit to call "Spukschloss im Spessart" a "spookical" (German: "Grusical"), making it one of the commercially successful German films of this season. The only major difference to the general US-American variation might be, that the German comedies were a tidbit more critical, for example parodying then-capital-city of Bonn, politics and German bureaucracy.Of course, the special-effects are dated (to put it mildly; today most digital student-projects would have more convincing effect), but one cannot deny that the individual songs – despite being kitschy, occasionally put a hook to the ear. Baumann as the countess' love-interest is a little bland, Pulver cute as ever (having the same tom-boyish air of a young Doris Day and Hans Clarin steals every scene he's in with his over-the-top, manic performance.I'm not going to write about all the goodness of the film – from me it gets a solid 7.5 and I never give 10 – but rather focus on what I view as little weaknesses.
flocgn basically a sequel to "Das Wirtshaus I'm Spessart" based on the popular German fairy tale/legend, which came to the big screen 2 years earlier, this movie stars nearly all of Germany's comedians of that time. At first a mixture of comedy and musical, it is also pretty political and aims mostly for post-war short-comings after the German "Wirtschaftswunder", like pensions still paid to former "Wehrmacht"-Officers, but makes fun also of celebrities of that time like the liaison of Onassis and Maria Callas, just to name one. The story is about the ghosts of the robbers from "Wirtshaus I'm Spessart" and how they redeem themselves. As a punishment for their crimes they were locked up in the basement of the "Wirtshaus" (pub) to starve to death, accompanied by a curse that they should rot there as long the walls would be standing. The wall falls when the old pub has to make room for a gas-station and a new motel next to the brand new freeway and the souls of the robbers are freed. Now ghosts they come to the conclusion that they have to do something good, so be released. So they decide to search for the Castle of the Comte, they blackmailed in the first Movie and who resided over the Woods they were thieving in.They find it to be inherited by the last Comtess, played by Lieselotte Pulver, who has no money at all, because her late father lost all the family fortune.(to be continued)
PlanecrazyIkarus This sequel takes place several hundred years after the original movie "Wirthaus im Spessart". The robbers have long been caught and sentenced to death and killed, now their ghosts have returned to the castle of the contessa who once befriended their leader. There, they find her grand-grand-grand..... daughter, and decide to help her out to pay for their sins in their lives.Once again it is a romantic comedy, this time with a few ghost sidekicks thrown in, and lots of slapstick humour that kids like. My favourite part has to be the musical number "Woll'n wir doch mal sehn ob's nicht Gespenster gibt in Bonn" - hillarious!However, I'm not sure how much it would appeal to adults.