Ah, Blood and Lace—the movie that proves the early 1970s would slap a GP rating on literally anything, even if it had corpses in freezers, severed hands in suitcases, and an ending twist so wrong it feels like the script was written by a drunk Oedipus with a typewriter. This “proto-slasher” thinks it’s shocking, but really it’s like watching a soap opera that’s been dunked in formaldehyde and left to congeal in a drive-in parking lot.
We start with poor Ellie, a teenager whose prostitute mom and a client get hammer-smashed in the opening scene—because why not start your movie with blunt force trauma and arson? She’s shipped off to an orphanage run by Gloria Grahame, who by this point in her career looks like she’s doing community theater as Norma Desmond. Her character Mrs. Deere and her handyman Kredge keep dead kids in freezers and pose them in beds for head counts, which sounds like a rejected sketch idea for Weekend at Bernie’s: The Orphanage Years.
And let’s not forget Kredge himself, a creep who spends most of the movie alternately chopping off hands, threatening to rape teenagers, and grunting like a man who’s lost his inhaler. If there was ever an argument against hiring “handymen,” this movie makes it.
But wait, the movie doesn’t stop at “child abuse and corpse puppetry.” Oh no. It’s got to twist itself into a final act so morally rancid it should’ve come with a barf bag. Detective Carruthers, who we think is investigating all this madness, turns out to be the masked hammer psycho AND reveals that Ellie—brace yourself—killed her own mother. Then, as if that isn’t already enough to make Freud sit up in his grave, Carruthers blackmails her into marriage. His reasoning? He’s in love with her. Oh, and by the way: her mom lost her virginity to him. Meaning Ellie just agreed to marry her own dad. And the movie ends with her laughing like it’s the best punchline she’s ever heard.
I swear, this isn’t horror—it’s exploitation cinema trying to one-up itself in sleaze until it collapses under the weight of its own audacity. The real blood and lace here is the nosebleed you’ll get from rolling your eyes and the doily you’ll want to cover the screen with so you don’t have to watch.
Final Verdict:
Blood and Lace is less a movie and more a cry for help from 1970s Hollywood. It’s remembered as a slasher ancestor, but it plays like the black sheep cousin at Thanksgiving: incoherent, creepy, and just waiting for someone to call the cops. Gloria Grahame deserved better. The audience deserved better. Hell, even the corpses deserved better.
Watching Blood and Lace is like getting trapped in a walk-in freezer with a bunch of stiffs—you know you’re supposed to be horrified, but all you can think is, when the hell does this end?

