Tony Tenser Movies

Tony Tenser was, for most of the '60s and '70s, among the most inventive and ambitious of England's exploitation movie distributors and producers, responsible for films at every level from inexpensive nudie flicks to major, multi-million dollar international releases. In the process, he also gave directors such as Roman Polanski and Michael Reeves their starts as commercial filmmakers. Born Samuel Anthony Tenser in London in 1920 to a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant family, he grew up in poverty in the city's East End, his family eking out a living at the lower end of the garment trade. According to author John Hamilton in his book Beasts in the Cellar: The Exploitation Film Career of Tony Tenser (2005), one of Tenser's most vivid memories as a boy was seeing Bela Lugosi in Dracula (1931), whence began his lifelong appreciation of the horror genre. He was a very intelligent boy and won a grammar school scholarship, but by age 16 he had to begin working at a regular job to help support the family. Tenser spent World War II as a repair technician with the Royal Air Force, and after the war returned to work in the clothing trade. By then, however, he did have a goal of somehow joining the film industry. Tenser got a boost toward his objective when he learned that the ABC theater chain was looking for managers. He was clever and articulate enough to get put on as a management trainee and was soon running his own theater, where he excelled at generating the kind of excitement -- referred to in the trade as "ballyhoo" -- that filled screenings regularly. By the early '50s, he had moved on to doing publicity work with International Film Distributors, essentially giving theater managers pointers in what he'd done previously at ABC. From there it was on to Miracle Films, a distributor specializing in exhibiting European movies in England. He enjoyed huge success with Brigitte Bardot's early starring films, and -- according to Hamilton -- in the process of devising publicity, coined the term "sex kitten" in connection with the French movie starlet.

In the course of his generating ballyhoo in support of one Bardot feature, Tenser made the acquaintance of Michael Klinger, a strip club owner whose contingent of entertainers Tenser wanted to borrow for a press event. The two would become friends as Tenser began regularly using Klinger's striptease artists for his press events, and each served the purpose of the other -- Tenser got his movies promoted, and the dancers in Klinger's stable at his two clubs, the Gargoyle and the Nell Gwynne, got their pictures in the papers and their names mentioned. The two business associates eventually became business partners, their first venture together the Compton Street Cinema Club, a private club seating up to 200 people and offering uncensored -- and not even screen-by-the-censors -- movies and a bar, all for an annual membership fee of 10 shillings (the equivalent of about a dollar and forty cents) for those 21 and older, plus the admission fee to the showing itself. By the end of the '50s, Tenser and Klinger were ready to start challenging the censors in other ways, with publicly distributed films that pushed the envelope as far as nudity was concerned -- under the guise of "art cinema" and art films, they brought in films dealing with nudist colonies and other, similar enclaves of a provocative nature. This, in turn, led them to a one-time associate of Klinger's, a photographer named George Harrison Marks, who had previously used some of his strippers as subjects. Tenser and Klinger became the producers and distributors of the Marks-directed feature As Nature Intended. Thus began a venture into the movie business that would end up occupying Tenser for decades. Initially using the name Compton Cameo Films, they began bringing in European-made movies of all kinds, from sword-and-sandal costume adventure films to some of the more sexually provocative titles coming out of northern Europe. But by the early '60s they'd also begun producing their own movies, with That Kind of Girl, which dealt with rape and its repercussions, The Yellow Teddybears, which was about teenage schoolgirls "advertising" their virginity as available for the taking, and Saturday Night Out, a slice-of-life drama about sailors on leave that reportedly came very close to having the Beatles in it in a small part, but instead featured their Liverpool rivals the Searchers. Also notable at the time was a period melodrama entitled The Black Torment, which established the costume drama as a vehicle for exploitation cinema in England, in ways that it hadn't been since the brief heyday of Leslie Arliss' Gainsborough melodramas of the '40s. Amid these lurid exploitation titles, there also sneaked in the occasional seriously respectable movie, such as Roman Polanski's Repulsion and Cul-de-Sac, which were also Compton releases.

Later on, Tenser and Klinger would take on the corporate name Tigon, through which, in the later '60s and '70s, they became one of the English-speaking world's top makers of action-adventure, horror, and other exploitation genre movies. Indeed, for a time they were serious challengers to Hammer Films -- Hammer may have had the Dracula and Frankenstein franchises, but Tigon had some genuinely clever and unusual scripts, and was able to obtain top onscreen talent such as Boris Karloff, Vincent Price, and Ian Bannen to star in its releases. In the bargain, they kept discovering new talent, most notably the tragically short-lived Michael Reeves, who made The Sorcerers and Witchfinder General (aka The Conqueror Worm) for Tigon. They were increasingly partnered up with other companies overseas, usually fellow exploitation producers American International Pictures in the '60s, but by the '70s Tenser and Tigon were working with American giants such as Paramount on international productions like Hannie Caulder. Tenser's distinctive output declined in the '70s, with the relaxing of most censorship laws, and he turned to more ambitious projects in the thriller mode, such as Doomwatch and The Beast in the Cellar -- these were movies that were good enough to get wide prominent showings in America, both theatrically and later on television. He continued to distribute movies into the '80s, including some of the so-called Emmanuelle sequels and Russ Meyer's movies, but his own output as a producer had ceased by then. Ironically, after decades of challenging the majors by distributing movies that they wouldn't (or couldn't) touch, and working exploitation cinema into a fine art, Tony Tenser in the '90s became a respected elder statesman of England's cinema community, much as his American counterpart Samuel Z. Arkoff of American International had on the other side of the Atlantic. Tenser died at age 87 in December 2007. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1975  
 
Lewis Flander and Carol Hawkins star in the hectic British farce Not Now Comrade. Flander plays a Russian ballet dancer who decides to defect. Unable to reach the British embassy, Flander hides out with London stripteaser Hawkins. There's an abundance of female flesh in this one, a fact that necessitated numerous snips in the TV version that made the UHF rounds in the 1980s. Watch for Not Now Comrade codirector Ray Cooney and veteran British funster Roy Kinnear in cameo roles. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1974  
R  
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With minimalist production values and little dialog, this romantic fantasy takes place on the barren Isle of Jersey where a troubled wife has come to sort out the tumult of her life. She encounters a lighthouse-keeper there and they quickly become lovers. Together they flee to Scotland. One day they are making love on a beach when the lighthouse keeper dies. Things don't get better when he returns from the dead to haunt her. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1974  
R  
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This ghoulishly fun Grand Guignol horror piece from director Pete Walker features a tour-de-force performance by Sheila Keith as Dorothy Yates, who was committed to a mental hospital in 1957 for a series of cannibal-killings along with her devoted husband Edmund (Rupert Davies). They are judged sane and released 18 years later, whereupon they take up residence at an old farm. Edmund's daughter Jackie lives in the city, where she tries to take care of her wild sister Debbie (Kim Butcher), visiting only occasionally and not suspecting a thing. It isn't until Jackie's new psychiatrist boyfriend Graham (Paul Greenwood) starts poking around that she learns the truth. The truth is that Dorothy, far from cured, is drawing people to her home -- through classified ads promising Tarot readings -- and murdering them with metal pokers, electric drills and pitchforks. Not only that, but young Debbie turns out to be a chip off the old butcher-block herself, leading to a gory and harrowing finale. Sheila Keith is outstanding as the crazed Dorothy, and Davies is similarly terrific in a low-key turn as her doting husband, turning a blind eye to his beloved's homicidal lunacy until it is far too late to stop it. A creepy, entertaining bloodbath, Frightmare is highly recommended for horror fans. This 1974 film was rereleased on video in the U.S. during the early 80s and named 'Frightmare II' to advertise it as the sequel to an unrelated film, the 1983 Frightmare directed by Norman Thaddeus Vane. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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1972  
 
This theatrically-released feature represents a spinoff of the popular British television series of the same name, which screened on ITV to enthusiastic audience response from 1970 to 1971. The narrative concerns Walter Bingley (Wilfred Pickles) and Ada Bingley (Irene Handl), a middle-aged couple preparing to celebrate their first wedding anniversary, sans the knowledge that their loved ones are currently preparing a surprise party for them. The day starts to go awry when Arthur (Arthur English), one of Walter's colleagues, nearly ruins the surprise; the couple then lapse into a never ending series of catastrophes, including a quarrel over a blonde wig, Walter's discovery that he's lost the money for Ada's present, an accident that finds Walter being struck down by an automobile, and much more. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Irene HandlWilfred Pickles, (more)
1972  
R  
In this comedy, a married man in the fur business gets in trouble after he finds himself attracted to a gangster's moll. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Leslie PhillipsMoira Lister, (more)
1972  
PG  
Peter Cushing delivers one of his finest hand-wringing performances as Emmanuel Hildern, a Victorian man of science who relates a mad tale of horror to his half-brother and professional rival James (Christopher Lee). His tale begins with the discovery of the weird skeletal remains of a large unknown humanoid in Papua, new Guinea, which he carts back to England for study. Even more unusual than the skeleton's ghastly appearance is its ability to grow new flesh when moistened with water. Further research reveals that the creature may actually be instilled with the very essence of malevolence (basically freeze-dried, instant evil), indicating that it would be best kept out of the rain. Despite an incongruous subplot involving the doctor's insane daughter, whom he believes can be cured by injections of serum derived from the creature's reanimated tissue, this is an effectively creepy period piece with heady Gothic atmosphere (and a neat twist ending) that ranks among director Freddie Francis's finest work. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

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1972  
 
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Based on the BBC television series, this sci-fi film follows the investigation of a scientist (George Sanders) when he is sent to discover the cause behind the deformities of the residents of a small island. When the scientist discovers that illegal radioactive pollutants are responsible, he must struggle to bring the company at fault to justice. ~ Iotis Erlewine, All Movie Guide

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1972  
 
Based upon the play by August Strindberg, Miss Julie is concerned with the torturous relationship between the aristocratic title character and Jean (Donal McCann), a mere servant of her father's house. As the play opens, most of the servants are outside celebrating midsummer's eve with dancing, singing, and laughter. Christine (Heather Canning), a cook, is waiting for Jean to arrive so that they may join the revelers, but the imperious Miss Julie (Helen Mirren) comes between them and uses her power and status to change their plans. Julie delights in humiliating Jean, treating him with disdain and mocking his dreams; she even goes so far as ask that he kiss her shoe. Because she is technically his employer, Jean cannot directly express his anger, but he does begin playing a manipulative game of his own that results in an exchange of secrets. They disappear into a secluded room of the house, and when they re-emerge, Jean has gained the upper hand, and they find themselves in an untenable situation which they must still somehow resolve. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

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1971  
R  
It's hard to discern the filmmakers' true point of view on Hannie Caulder. On one hand, you've got the heavily somber story of Raquel Welch's efforts to exact vengeance on the men who raped her and killed her husband. On the other hand, you've got the leisurely-paced, lightly amusing sequences in which saddle-tramp Robert Culp tries to teach Welch how to be a gunslinger in her own right. And on the third hand (and who's got one of those?), you are offered the goofy Three-Stooges-like antics of the principle villains: Ernest Borgnine, Strother Martin and Jack Elam. This British-financed western features one-time sexpot Diana Dors as a zoftic madam and an uncredited Stephen Boyd as an ineffectual preacher. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Raquel WelchRobert Culp, (more)
1971  
 
A collection of English humor in the form of sketch film are provided on this film which was assisted by comedians Feldman and Chapman. ~ All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bruce ForsythJoan Sims, (more)
1971  
 
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This internationally produced adaptation of Anna Sewell's Black Beauty is essentially a vehicle for Oliver star Mark Lester. The young Lester spends most of the film trying to reclaim his beautiful black horse, which passes through several hands over the course of 90 minutes. All the setpieces of the Sewell original are in attendance, including the showstopping "burning barn" sequence. Walter Slezak is the only truly recognizable actor in the film outside of Lester. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Mark LesterUschi Glas, (more)
1970  
 
After a plowboy accidentally unearths the skeletal remains of a demonic creature, a cult of teenage devil-worshippers emerges in a 17th-century Cornwall farming community, led by the gorgeous temptress Angel (Linda Hayden, who positively smolders). Together, the children begin performing blood sacrifices in order to bring the skeletal demon back to life. The film eventually steers into witch-hunt territory -- in the vein of Michael Reeves' Witchfinder General -- as the superstitious locals use inquisition-style practices to put a stop to Hayden's cult. This lush, moody horror piece is superbly written, though the plot becomes a bit dense at times; the film was originally intended as a three-part series, but was eventually edited down to one feature. Still, Piers Haggard's assured direction keeps the threads together and provides just enough shock value to keep viewers on their toes. Watch for Peter Ustinov's daughter Tamara as one of the children. The Blood on Satan's Claw was also released as Satan's Claw and Satan's Skin. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

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1970  
PG  
The most horrifying part of this British spooker is seeing former clean-cut teen idol Frankie Avalon cast as Chris, a London hooligan who with his druggie friends decides to spend the night in a supposedly haunted house and hold a seance. The seance is a bust, so the buddies decide to do a little exploration and split up. Unfortunately, one of them gets brutally killed, leaving Chris and his surviving pals to wonder who did the deed. Was it one of them, or was it a monstrous demon? Not wanting to attract undue attention, the punks decide to hide the body, zip their lips, and split from the house. Unfortunately, the cops find out and begin questioning everyone, causing Chris and his friend to return to the house and look for clues. For poor Chris, it is a fatal mistake. Just for the record, though he plays a teen, Avalon was 30 years old when this film was made. In Britain the film was released as The Haunted House of Horror. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Frankie AvalonJill Haworth, (more)
1970  
R  
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Monique (Sibylla Kay) is the French maid who goes to work for Jean (Joan Alcorn) and her husband Bill (David Summer). She takes time to care for the children before getting to know husband and wife intimately. Bill soon notices his previously unresponsive wife has becomes more sexually aroused. After Bill sleeps with Monique, he comes home one day to discover the two women in bed together in this flesh feature. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Sibylla KayJoan Alcorn, (more)
1970  
 
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Set in the British Isles in the 1930s, this film involves two old-maid sisters who lock their deranged brother in a cellar to keep him out of the war. He's there for thirty years, and when he finally gets loose he's a little irritated. Enough so, that he plagues the local countryside with a rash of very nasty murders. Maybe they needed a stronger lock. ~ All Movie Guide

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1969  
R  
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Timothy Bartlett (Norman Wisdom) is a middle-aged banker who is sent to a seaside resort for a banker's convention. He fears the meetings will be frightfully dull, but things change when two amorous hippie girls take Timothy for a sail on the sea of love. Timothy goes middle-aged crazy, making a spectacle of himself in hippie clothes as he tries to fit into the swinging scene. Nude dips in the ocean are followed and preceded by wild parties as he tries to recapture the days of his flaming youth. After he feels remorse and embarrassment over his behavior, he calls on his wife to join him at the convention to rekindle their love in this lowbrow comedy. The British rock group The Pretty Things provides the music. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Norman WisdomSally Geeson, (more)
1969  
 
British babes are plentiful in this light British sci-fi film most likely shot in warmer climes, because the girls sure aren't wearing much clothing. ~ All Movie Guide

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1968  
NR  
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A corrupt opportunist commits brutal crimes in the name of God and country in this atmospheric period horror tale. In 17th century England, as a people's uprising threatens Lord Cromwell's rule, superstition still rules the land, and the Royalists use this to their advantage by inaugurating a reign of terror in the name of wiping out alleged witches and agents of the dark arts. Matthew Hopkins (Vincent Price) has been appointed "witchfinder" by Puritan Royalists, and with the help of his thuggish assistant Stearne (Robert Russell), Hopkins travels from town to town, brutally interrogating those accused of witchcraft and using fire, drowning, and torture to extract "confessions" from the accused. Of course, Hopkins' opinions can be swayed with money and other considerations, and when Father Lowes (Rupert Davies), a priest whose sympathies do not lie with the Royalists, is arrested and tortured by Hopkins and Stearne, his devoted niece Sarah (Hilary Dwyer) is able to stay his punishment by sleeping with Hopkins. Sarah, however, is engaged to marry Marshall (Ian Ogilvy), a soldier in Cromwell's army, and once Marshall learns that the woman he loves has been seduced by Hopkins -- and raped by Stearne -- he becomes determined to expose the witchfinder and punish him for his misdeeds. Witchfinder General was released in the United States by American International Pictures, who in addition to arranging for Vincent Price to play Matthew Hopkins, changed the North American title to The Conqueror Worm, after a poem by Edgar Allan Poe which was read over the credits by Price, though the story bears no real relation to Poe's work. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Vincent PriceIan Ogilvy, (more)
1968  
 
In this spooky thriller, an evil sorcerer invites an innocent young man and his girl friend to his dark and scary mansion. The two have no idea that the black magician is planning to sacrifice the young man to atone for the evil misdeeds of his ancestors who 200 years ago burned the wizard's relative, a witch, at the stake. A crazy party precedes the gruesome ritual. Fortunately for the young couple the sage Professor March (80-year-old Boris Karloff in one of his final films) is also a skilled magic maker and is there to save them. The film is also titled Curse of the Crimson Altar and The Crimson Altar. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Boris KarloffChristopher Lee, (more)
1968  
 
The "tomcat" in this British programmer is Anthony Trent. Though engaged to Veronica Lang, Trent can't help but fantasize about other women. Hoping for a quickie, he lounges around London in search of "birds". Nothing much happens in real life--but in his dream world, Trent scores on an average of once every other minute. This mod, mod movie was also released as Mini Weekend. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1967  
 
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Set during the Victorian era, the film stars Peter Cushing as a Holmeslike detective on the trail of a serial killer. The mystery angle is minimal, since we know virtually from the beginning that the killer is a gigantic....moth! It seems that Wanda Ventham, daughter of addled scientist Robert Flemyng, has spent too much time in her dad's lab, and can turn herself into a malevolent moth at will. Flemyng tries to mollify Ventham by creating a playmate for her-and the result is two murderous moths. Blood Beast Terror was also released as The Vampire-Beast Craves Blood. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1967  
 
Made by the then 23-year-old director Michael Reeves, who died after making only one more movie, the notable Witchfinder General (1968), this is an unusual horror film concerning an elderly couple who conduct experiments with mind control, hoping to experience the lost excitements of youth through their subject, a young man whom they have persuaded to become a guinea-pig in the name of science. Once the process has begun however, a conflict ensues between the couple, the woman urging their subject to commit crimes in the pursuit of even greater thrills against the wishes of her husband, which in turn results in a horrific comeuppance for both, the price exacted for meddling in things beyond the province of humanity. With the casting of veteran actor, Boris Karloff in this swinging sixties setting, this is a rare example of the merging of two styles of horror movie-making, the old school which Karloff represented almost gone by the late sixties, a new, grittier contemporary genre waiting to succeed it. ~ Mark Hockley, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Boris KarloffCatherine Lacey, (more)
1967  
 
An experiment gone wrong gives new meaning to the saying "you can't get there from here" in this sci-fi drama. Professor Steiner (Bryant Halliday) is a scientist working on a machine that will "project" matter from one place to another; while he's making considerable progress, the device is not yet perfect. Steiner believes that he's close to a breakthrough, but his superior Dr. Blanchard (Norman Wooland) doesn't believe in the project and cuts off Steiner's funding. Not willing to give up on his invention, Steiner learns that visiting researcher Prof. Lembach (Gerard Heinz) might be willing to back him, so with the help of his assistant Shelia (Tracey Crisp), he attempts to "project" himself into Lembach's hotel room with his experimental machine. However, the equipment goes awry, and Steiner emerges as a hideous electrically charged mutant whose touch can kill, sending him on a spree of revenge against those who tried to stop him. The Projected Man was the sole directorial credit for TV writer Ian Curteis. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Mary PeachBryant Halliday, (more)
1967  
 
Tom (Anthony Trent) is a teen from London's East End who is obsessed with sex in this adolescent fantasy. Like many testosterone-charged young men, all he has to do is look at a female and he imagines having sex. The thin storyline provides ample opportunity for many young attractive women to turn down Tom in his quest for satisfaction. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anthony TrentVeronica Lang, (more)

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