Let’s start with a fact: The Monster Club is technically a movie. It has a beginning, a middle, and an end. People speak, things happen, credits roll. But beyond that, calling this thing a “film” is like calling a tax audit a romantic getaway. It’s a ghastly relic from the dying gasp of British horror anthologies—a horror-comedy-musical-what-the-hell-is-this directed by Roy Ward Baker, who once helmed respectable genre fare like Quatermass and the Pit and A Night to Remember. In The Monster Club, however, he hits creative rock bottom and then starts digging with a soup spoon.
Vincent Price and John Carradine star, or rather shuffle through scenes like two wax figures on loan from Madame Tussauds, and even they can’t save this cinematic mausoleum from collapsing into rubble. The whole thing feels like a Halloween party thrown by your uncle who just discovered The Damned and wants to prove he’s “with it,” despite wearing a cardigan and smelling like mothballs and Old Spice.


