Some films age like fine wine. The Leech Woman aged like expired milk in a nursing home sauna.
Here’s a movie that had everything going for it: body horror, ancient rituals, pineal gland extraction (which should be metal as hell), and a tragic, middle-aged woman driven to murder by society’s ageism. That’s a potent brew, right? Right?
Wrong.
What we got instead is a 77-minute creaking corpse of a film, embalmed in B-movie budget restraints, racist jungle tropes, bargain-bin acting, and the kind of script that feels like it was penned on a bar napkin halfway through a gin bender. The Leech Woman doesn’t suck because it’s about a woman who sucks pineal glands to stay young—it sucks because it’s a boring, bungling failure to do anything cool with that premise.
🧪 THE PLOT: IF DEATH BECOMES HER HAD A LOBOTOMY
June Talbot (Coleen Gray) is a middle-aged alcoholic with a philandering endocrinologist husband who looks like he’s just waiting for a martini to fall into his lap. In comes Malla, a decrepit old woman claiming she’s 140 years old thanks to a mysterious African potion that grants youth—at the small cost of a man’s pineal gland juice. The Talbots follow her to deepest, fakest Africa where things go full National Geographic meets After School Special real fast.
June, having finally realized her husband only brought her along as human test meat, does the reasonable thing—murders him, steals the ritual ring and pollen, and goes on a gland-harvesting rampage that eventually leads her back to the States, posing as her own niece. Youth is hers! For about 15 minutes at a time. And then it’s back to sucking more brains and killing more men.
It’s a setup that could’ve been a proto-feminist vampire flick about ageism, gender, and vanity. But instead, it’s a melodramatic faceplant into soap opera territory with the pacing of a funeral and the production value of an Ed Wood B-roll reel.
🎭 PERFORMANCES: DRAGGED KICKING AND SCREAMING TO THE FINISH LINE
Coleen Gray, bless her, gives it her all—cycling between tear-streaked housewife, vengeful sorceress, and desperate cougar with the manic intensity of a woman trapped in a Jell-O mold of misogyny. She acts her liver-spotted heart out, but the script gives her nothing to work with except long stares, longer monologues, and even longer death scenes.
Grant Williams, as her toxic husband Dr. Paul Talbot, plays the kind of unlikable cad who makes you root for ritual disembowelment. His disdain for his wife is so cartoonishly cruel it might as well come with a laugh track. He exists solely to be a misogynist exposition machine, and his demise isn’t just cathartic—it’s the only pulse-raising moment in the whole damn film.
Gloria Talbott, meanwhile, looks confused for most of her screen time—as if she wandered in from another movie and couldn’t find her way out. Her motivation? Plot convenience. Her fate? A pinealectomy via moody lighting.
🔪 THE “HORROR”: PINEAL GARBAGE
Let’s talk about the real star of the show: pineal glands. The film treats this tiny endocrine gland like it’s liquid gold—somewhere between unicorn blood and radioactive Botox. Extracted from the back of the neck with a ring that looks like something from a Cracker Jack box, these precious juices are apparently the key to youth. But only from men, mind you. A woman’s pineal extract? Reverses the effect! Because the patriarchy, I guess?
There’s a grand total of zero actual scary moments in this supposed horror film. The transformations are underwhelming, the kills are tame, and the tribal rituals look like they were lifted from unused Gilligan’s Island B-roll. There’s more terror in a CVS cosmetic aisle than in this movie.
And the climax—where June uses the wrong gland and ages into a raisin with eyes—is a campy whimper instead of the scream it should have been. The filmmakers clearly had no idea how to build tension, pace a scene, or film anything beyond a mid-shot. You could stage a scarier version of this film using sock puppets and a lava lamp.
🌍 THE AFRICAN SETTING: COLONIAL CRINGE
You thought the horror was in the gland-sucking? Think again. Welcome to the wilds of Africa, as interpreted by white men with a handful of stock footage, papier-mâché huts, and a complete disregard for not being offensively reductive. The film leans into racist caricatures like it’s 1932, presenting the Nando tribe as superstitious, murderous, and conveniently exotic for June’s awakening.
It’s cheap, it’s insulting, and it ages the film far worse than any aging serum ever could.
🧓 THEMES: A WRINKLED MESS OF MISOGYNY
For a film about a woman’s fight against aging and societal rejection, The Leech Woman is staggeringly unkind to women. June is painted as hysterical, vain, and pathetic. The film’s message isn’t “society is cruel to aging women,” it’s “aging women are scary and unstable.” Instead of critiquing the culture that devalues older women, the movie makes June a cautionary tale for women who dare to want more than wrinkles and irrelevance.
The ultimate moral? Don’t kill for youth, ladies. And if you do, at least stick to men—other women’s pineal glands are bad for your health.
🎬 DIRECTION AND PRODUCTION: TV-LEVEL TRASH
Director Edward Dein was clearly working with ten bucks and a flashlight, and it shows. Long takes, static shots, cheap studio sets, and that indoorsy, lifeless atmosphere critics love to mention—this is horror at its most lethargic. The makeup effects range from “party store discount bin” to “what if raisins had eyeliner?” and the transitions between young and old are so abrupt it’s less transformation and more bad editing.
As for the soundtrack? Unmemorable, stock library music that could just as easily underscore a toothpaste commercial or a public service announcement about proper shoe storage.
🪦 FINAL VERDICT: THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH HAS DRIED UP
The Leech Woman had potential. A lot of it. But that potential got sucked out quicker than a fresh pineal gland at a sacrificial rave. Instead of delivering the creeps, chills, and existential dread of aging, it slogs through a swamp of dated attitudes, racial stereotypes, and flat filmmaking.
This isn’t body horror. This is boredom horror. A parable on aging turned accidental satire, where the scariest thing isn’t the loss of youth—but the realization that someone thought this script was ready to shoot.
★ Rating: 1 out of 5 Pineal Rings
Let this film shrivel up and rot in peace. Eternal youth is overrated—especially if it means sitting through this again. 💉☠️

