Some horror films are scary. Some are camp. And then there’s Bloody Pit of Horror, which looks like it was directed by Dracula’s unemployed cousin during a particularly long weekend at the castle Airbnb.
This Italian Gothic “thriller” features Mickey Hargitay — Mr. Jayne Mansfield himself — prancing around in red tights as the Crimson Executioner, murdering a group of models and hacks who came to his castle to shoot a horror photo novel. If that sentence sounds ridiculous, congratulations — you’ve already grasped the entire film.
The Plot: Scooby‑Doo with More Cleavage
A photographer, a writer, a secretary, and five models break into a castle to snap some horror glamour shots. Naturally, the castle belongs to a brooding ex‑actor who decides he’s actually the reincarnation of a medieval executioner. Instead of calling the cops or at least slapping these trespassers with a fine, he dusts off the torture chamber and starts picking them off one by one.
Think Scooby‑Doo, except everyone’s half‑naked and instead of unmasking the villain, he impales you on a spiky love machine.
Mickey Hargitay: From Mr. Universe to Mr. Overacting
Mickey Hargitay flexes his pecs and chews the scenery in equal measure. As Travis Anderson, he sulks. As the Crimson Executioner, he transforms into a camp icon, strutting around in a bright red executioner outfit that looks like it was sewn out of leftover yoga pants.
He rants about “purity” and “corruption” while tying women to racks, sounding less like a terrifying villain and more like a very angry Pilates instructor. He claimed he “wasn’t any more of an accomplished actor than a taxi driver,” and boy, the taxi driver probably would’ve brought more nuance.
The Torture Devices: Dungeon or Gym?
The castle is loaded with elaborate medieval torture devices. Spiked cages, racks, wheels, even something called the “Lover‑of‑Death” machine. They’re supposed to look menacing. Instead, they resemble a collection of malfunctioning exercise machines.
At one point, the Executioner hoists a woman up in a net, pokes her half‑heartedly, and proclaims justice has been served. It’s less “blood‑soaked Gothic terror” and more “awkward improv at a Renaissance Faire.”
The Victims: Models Who Can’t Model Fear
The victims include models who apparently auditioned by screaming badly while wearing questionable wigs. Their deaths are delivered with the energy of someone pretending to faint in a high school play. When a boulder trap finally crushes one poor soul, you almost envy her for escaping the runtime.
The “Marquis de Sade” Marketing Scam
When the movie limped into the U.S., the promoters claimed it was “based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade.” Which is like saying Gilligan’s Island was inspired by Moby-Dick. If the Marquis de Sade had seen this movie, he would’ve whipped himself just to forget it.
The Ending: Killed by His Own Fitness Regime
Naturally, the Crimson Executioner dies by his own ridiculous contraption — the “Lover‑of‑Death” machine, complete with poisoned barbs. Basically, he gets killed by his own medieval Bowflex.
Our two surviving heroes escape, presumably to a modeling agency that screens their locations better.
Final Thoughts
Bloody Pit of Horror (1965) is gothic horror stripped of subtlety, suspense, or sense — a carnival of red tights, cheap torture props, and dialogue that makes daytime soap operas sound like Shakespeare. It’s not scary. It’s not sexy. It’s just silly.
And yet, it has that perfect trash‑cinema flavor: bad acting, ludicrous costumes, overwrought monologues, and a villain who looks like he’s about to break into jazzercise.
The only true torture here is watching it sober.


