The Zombie Walks (1968) Poster

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7/10
Perfectly entertaining.
Boba_Fett11381 December 2010
Basically all of these German movies based on the Edgar Wallace novels are being pretty silly and even bad ones but thing about them it that they are being so (delibertatly) silly that it actually does work out as great entertainment.

The psychedelic '60's was nearing its end, so so was this movie series, featuring the Inspektor Higgins characters. And I'm also glad because of that, since there is no way really that this type of movie would had worked out in any other decade than the '60's. It's perfectly silly and laid back all, as if it simply doesn't seem to worry about the fact that it's being a pretty silly and bad movie.

Germans are not exactly know for their great humor but there are of course some exception here and there. And this movie does really feature some amusing comedy, that is being quite cheap and predictable but it works out thanks to its fine timing and the handling by its actors. The actors all play their roles as straight as possible, which is often something that can strengthen a movie its comedy actually.

As for the movie and story itself; it really is being a very typical crime/mystery movie, in which a murdered needs to be literally unmasked. There is really nothing specular or special about any of it and some moment really don't make that much sense but at least it has a pretty cool killer; a person in a skeleton costume that kills people with his poisonous ring. But really, it just isn't the story that makes this movie such an effective and fun one to watch; it simply is its '60's atmosphere and tone throughout the movie, combined with fine humor and plenty of deliberately silly moments.

Simply effective as some great entertainment.

7/10

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7/10
Back from the crypt
unbrokenmetal14 June 2008
At the burial of Sir Oliver, witnesses hear a terrible laughter, and quickly the rumour spreads that Sir Oliver returned from the dead - as a walking skeleton. His brother Cecil (Wolfgang Kieling) soon suffers from persecution mania, because everybody he knows seems to be the target of an (attempted or successful) assassination. Inspector Higgins (Joachim Fuchsberger) has no clue why, but reporter Peggy Ward (Siw Mattson) pushes the investigation a bit with her reckless curiosity.

The cast also includes Hubert von Meyerinck as Sir Arthur, clearly trying to make a difference from his predecessor Schürenberg with little human touches such as his musical interests, Pinkas Braun in a typical twisted role as a man who could be a bad guy as well as a good guy, and Lil Lindfors who gets to sing a great song whose lines ("I wanna feel my heart beat") seem quite ironic if you consider it's all about a "zombie". The undead may look a bit silly on still photos, but believe me, it's scary enough in the film. It inspired the title character of the comedy "Der Wixxer" (2004). Something that didn't work was the make-up for Ramiro: he looks green like a Martian, not olive like a Creole. Nonetheless, tremendous entertainment!
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7/10
A skeleton costume and scorpion venom in another over the top Edgar Wallace adaptation!
The_Void19 July 2008
You can say what you want about crime writer Edgar Wallace, but one thing you can never fault is his imagination - and here, once again, director Alfred Vohrer has created a brilliantly entertaining film from one of Wallace's over the top novels. This film features all the things that make the Krimi genre great; from the refined atmosphere all the way down to the bizarre plot line. The film's most striking element is undoubtedly the murderer, who wears a skeleton costume and a bowler hat; echoing the lead character in Umberto Lenzi's cool comic book crime flick Kriminal. The plot focuses on the death of a man named Sir Oliver. There is a disruption at his funeral when there are reports of the corpse laughing; and soon after his brother Sir Cecil (apparently quite a noble family) begins to believe that Sir Oliver has come back from the dead and it's not long before several people are being picked off by a skeleton costume-wearing killer with a bizarre murder weapon! Naturally, Scotland Yard looks into the deaths...

The thing I like most about this genre is the style, and director Alfred Vohrer has once again ensured that his film is memorable. The atmosphere on display in this film is simply stunning; the vibrant colour scheme is striking while the lighting is very well used. The plotting, as ever, is slightly confusing; although there is not as many subplots in this film as there have been in other Edgar Wallace outings. The killer is a real masterpiece creation; the suit does look slightly silly, but the way that the killer silently creeps around and the way that the mouth moves on the costume are really great. The murder weapon is another original idea; instead of using a gun or a knife like other murderers, this one uses a ring with a scorpion's tail that delivers the victim with a dose of deadly (and undetectable!) poison. The film plods along nicely for most of its running time and we eventually boil down to the ending; which is completely confusing to say the least. Still, while this is not the best of the genre; it's still a very effective little film and I'm sure Krimi fans will enjoy it!
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Bad, bad. and delightful !
Phroggy31 March 1999
As far as bad movies goes, this one is a gem. Everything, from the killer's skull mask to the cheesy melodrama effects, makes it extremely funny. One extraordinary line shows a mechanism triggering the door to a secret passage opened by. a penny bank! Some wacko characters shows the filmmakers didn't take themselves very seriously. The final explanation doesn't explain anything. But this is a murder mystery far over the edge, on the tradition of "Doctor X".
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7/10
Bava-influenced krimini
BandSAboutMovies14 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The translation of the German title to this film - Under the Spell of the Uncanny - is way cooler than The Zombie Walks and The Hand of Power**, the other titles for this Edgar Wallace adaption. No matter - this movie looks cool as hell, a Blood and Black Lace influenced pre-giallo with a delightful skull-faced killer named The Laughing Corpse* who even has his very own poison filled scorpion ring.

There's one bonkers scene that would never be in a movie made in 2020, where the hero repeatedly tries to look up the skirt of a gorgeous librarian, who is played by Ewa Strömberg. She of course would catch the eye of noted pervert Jess Franco, who would cast her in Vampyros Lesbos and She Killed In Ecstasy.

As for the movie itself, Scotland Yard's Inspector Higgins takes on a case that starts with a man laughing from the inside of his own coffin and gets even stranger with the deaths of nearly everyone who know that man, all from the scorpion ring of that dashing masked killer.

The credits for this really shout mod while the heroes shout old school, but you know, I pretty much loved all of it. I haven't really explored the Wallace adaptions, but the last two I've watched her been more than entertaining.

This is one of the few giallo I've seen where the killer uses a machine gun. Also, there's a guy with green skin and no one makes a single mention of it, so 1968 Germany was way woke early.

*The voice of The Laughing Skull came directly from director Alfred Vohrer.

**That's the title of the book that this was based on.
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7/10
Edgar Wallace calling/investigating
kosmasp13 June 2021
Actually it is Inspector Higgins, played by Joachim Fuchsberger ... and he did a few of these movies. I remember that I loved them as a kid, even if they were done way before I was even born. But I had a thing for crime stories anyway, so that wasn't that hard actually.

They may be more about the mystery and us guessing who the culprit is all along. And while Higgins is no Sherlock Holmes, this is not supposed to be any Holmes either ... there are elements of Giallo I reckon in this ... with the fake red blood and the killings ... and the story quite frankly. A nice little movie and throwback ... when criminals coorparated after you apprehended them ... for no good reason at all....
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5/10
First seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater in 1977
kevinolzak24 December 2020
1968's "The Zombie Walks" ("Im Banne des Unheimlichen" or Under the Spell of the Unknown) is perhaps better known to American audiences as "The Hand of Power," the actual title of the Edgar Wallace source novel though a less enthralling one. Like the earlier example "The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle," it's another crime drama laced with horror elements, more pronounced here with its killer dubbed 'The Zombie' or 'The Laughing Corpse' and sporting skull mask with a mouth that opens to audibly exhale, his method of murder a signature ring with poison scorpion stinger. Director Alfred Vohrer and star Joachim Fuchsberger were old hands in this series, the script mostly played for laughs, kicking off with the funeral of Sir Oliver, supposedly killed in an airplane crash, insane laughter emanating from his coffin, his brother Sir Cecil (Wolfgang Kieling) insisting on seeing the dead man walking as a zombie. Numerous questions abound: is Sir Oliver still alive, what are those excessive payments from Sir Cecil all about, how does the fetching female reporter (Siw Mattson) stay one step ahead of the law, and why does she assume that mouth to mouth resuscitation equals making out? The answers aren't always forthcoming, and too many characters again make it difficult to pin down a single suspect, but for a later Wallace entry it manages to stand on its own.
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3/10
such a joy when the killer 'zombie' arrive
christopher-underwood15 October 2015
This is pretty poor. I started well and being in colour and made in 1968 had high-ish hopes. The thing here is that there were just too many people involved and the tale far too ridiculous and uninteresting. It needs more than a few colourful sets and humour. Actually the humorous element was okay but then the seriousness of the tangled tale then becomes undermined and more difficult to watch. The only reason this gets any points at all from me is the 'zombie'. An absolute object lesson to all low budget film makers. A black cloak, a wide brimmed hat and a skull face mask with beautifully working jaw and great lighting. It is increasingly such a joy when the killer 'zombie' arrives to relieve us from our boredom that we are immediately on the wrong side.
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8/10
The Hand of Power (The Zombie Walks)
trimbolicelia27 October 2018
OK late 60's West German made, English-dubbed Edgar Wallace mystery thriller. Usual convoluted story, this time pepped-up with some creep running around in a skeleton outfit, poisoning victims with a needle ring. The heroine is a reporter who always seems to be one up on the cops. The Sinister Cinema DVD-R is not bad quality and the color is adequate.
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5/10
Shall we just call it "The Laughing Corpse"?
Coventry2 November 2022
From the versatile (albeit rather monotonous) mind of Edgar Wallace comes another reasonably effective Krimi that incomprehensibly isn't called "The Laughing Corpse". I think we can all agree this would make a much better title than the dull and irrelevant titles "The Zombie Walks" or "The Hand of Power". The best sequence is the opening, when during the funeral of the wealthy but eccentric Sir Oliver the pallbearers drop the casket because diabolical laughter suddenly comes from inside of it. When soon after the heirs of Sir Oliver are getting killed, the remaining family members are convinced he returned as a vengeful zombie.

The usual Krimi-ingredients are there, like far too many characters that are all suspects, and the only way to prove their innocence is by dying at the hand of the real killer. Scotland Yard hero Joachim Fuchsberger is present again, but to my knowledge this is the first and only Krimi without the annoying Eddi Arent as the comic relief. Instead, the charismatic Hubert Von Meyerinck provides the redundant comical interludes. Oh, there's also a guy with a green face, but everybody seems to think this is totally normal. It must be said the killer looks awesome! He wears a creepy skull mask, in combination with long hair, a black cloak and hat, and uses scorpion's venom to murder his victim. Where can I pick up his outfit to celebrate Halloween?
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4/10
Unusual title, usual Wallace
Horst_In_Translation28 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Im Banne des Unheimlichen" or "The Zombie Walks" or "The hand of Power" is a German color movie from 1968, so not too long anymore until this film has its 50th birthday. If you read the name of the director Alfred Vohrer, the name of writer Ladislas Fodor and the name of lead actor Joachim Fuchsberger, you will realize immediately that this is another West German movie adaptation of the Edgar Wallace crime novels. This trio worked on many of these. There is one unusual thing about this one here and that is the title. Usually, it includes the name of the main antagonist, mostly a non-human creature (that is in fact a human dressing up), so this film also could have been called "The Laughing Corpse", but it is not. The rest of it is the usual though. It runs for under 90 minutes, there are several unrealistic plot twists, unsuccessful attempts at humor (especially at the very ending for example the sound effect when she injects herself the deadly poison) and of course many characters with whom you can never be sure who's the good guy and who is the bad guy. And the women are also always the same in these films in the way they were written, which is pretty tough as they are really just vehicles to the story or to make the police detective look good. No strong characters here in terms of females. As a whole, I thought this was a pretty mediocre watch, like basically almost all the other Wallace films. Kinda disappointing looking at how America and the UK dished out one good Bond film after the other during that era. I give "Im Banne des Unheimlichen" a thumbs-down.
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