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Blood Creature / Werewolf in a Girl's Dormitor (1961)
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In the late 1950's and 1960's a motley crew of independent film producers pumped up double bills with sinister mayhem and horror. Whether the venue was a run-down movie palace, a musty neighborhood theatre, or a drive-in under the stars, kids, teenagers on dates, and outcasts found themselves receptive to the promise of witnessing the unveiling of macabre secrets, nearly forbidden it seemed, because of the bloody gruesomeness or lascivious sexuality hinted at by the colorful posters and ballyhoo. For the young, horror films were a psychic, if bizarre glimpse into the still-mysterious world of adulthood; for the rest of the audience, these films provided a jolting break from the predictable and the mundane.
Blood Creature: On a secluded island a mad scientist's experiments to turn a panther into a man are thwarted by a survivor of a shipwreck.
Inspired by H.G. Well's "The Island of Dr. Moreau", Blood Creature makes an impassionate plea against immoral scientific experiments.
Werewolf In A Girls' Dormitory: A reform school for wayward girls is plagued by monstrous attacks. Suspicion falls on several dubious character when a death is caused from what appears to be an animal slaying.
The police investigate as to whether the attacks are caused by a beast or a vicious werewolf on the prowl. In the dormitory the girls are in a state of panic and terror.
A nightmare of fiendish horrors! Unbelievable until you see it with your own horror-stricken eyes.
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