Wikipedia
Chamber of Horrors is a 1966 horror film directed by Hy Averback and starring Patrick O'Neal, Cesare Danova, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Wayne Rogers and Laura Devon.
The film was released to theatres but was originally shot as a television movie and a pilot film for a proposed series called House of Wax.
Chamber of Horrors may refer to:
- The Door with Seven Locks (1940 film), a 1940 black-and-white British film, released in the United States as Chamber of Horrors
- Chamber of Horrors (1966 film), a 1966 horror film directed by Hy Averback
- Chamber of Horrors (1929 film), a 1929 British silent film directed by Walter Summers
- Chamber of Horrors (Madame Tussauds), famous for its waxworks of executed criminals and notorious persons
The Chamber of Horrors is one of the attractions at Madame Tussauds in London, being an exhibition of waxworks of notorious murderers and other infamous historical figures. The gallery first opened as a 'Separate Room' in Marie Tussaud's 1802 exhibition in London and quickly became a success as it showed historical personalities and artifacts rather than the freaks of nature popular in other waxworks of the day. Today it continues to be a popular feature of the London attraction.
Chamber of Horrors is a 1929 British silent horror film directed by Walter Summers and starring Frank Stanmore. It was made at Welwyn Studios. A man spends the night in the Chamber of Horrors of Madame Tussauds.
Usage examples of "chamber of horrors".
Some of the womenTrelig has a Chamber of Horrors in mind-control devices here.
It was the chamber of horrors in which the Jed of Ghasta was creating abnormal deformities for his cruel dance of the cripples.
I answered, as I hastily sought and found the keys upon the carcass of the dead custodian of this grim chamber of horrors.
Locked in his own private chamber of horrors, Ahab resolved that his only escape was through hunting down and killing Moby Dick: “.
Like a magician pulling rabbits from a hat, the way she hauls things out of that chamber of horrors called History.
It looked like a cross between a birdbath and one of those damned tables in Pohn's chamber of horrors.
No exit, except the one that leads through to the chamber of horrors there.
It was, nevertheless, less a chamber of horrors than a lunatic's view of World -- no, every lunatic's view of World, all at once.