The Frozen Dead


1h 35m 1967
The Frozen Dead

Brief Synopsis

A mad scientist uses a girl's disembodied head to re-animate Nazis frozen 20 years before.

Film Details

Genre
Horror
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
Boston opening: 27 Sep 1967
Production Company
Gold Star Productions; Seven Arts Productions
Distribution Company
Warner Bros.--Seven Arts, Inc.
Country
United Kingdom

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 35m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White (theatrical prints), Color (Eastmancolor) (tv prints)

Synopsis

At the end of World War II, 1,500 of Hitler's top officials were frozen alive and hidden in caves. Former Nazis Dr. Norberg and his aide, Karl Essen, are conducting revivification experiments at a manor in the English countryside. Although they have been successful in restoring body functions, they have been unable to revive the brain. They explain to visiting ex-Wehrmacht officer General Lubeck that they need a live brain with which to experiment. Consequently, when Norberg's niece, Jean, arrives from the United States with her college friend Elsa, the sadistic Essen disposes of Elsa but keeps her decapitated head alive in a laboratory cabinet. Although Jean is told that her friend had to leave suddenly for London, the young girl is unconvinced and reveals her suspicions to Ted Roberts, an American scientist. Roberts is permitted by Norbert to view the severed head, and he agrees to keep the secret. Meanwhile, Elsa's brain is developing a telepathic rapport with Jean in order to warn her that her life is in danger. After Lubeck has concluded that Essen is a security risk and ordered him put into the deep-freeze chamber, Jean sneaks into the laboratory and discovers Elsa's head. When Lubeck aims a gun at her, Norberg intervenes on behalf of his niece. As they engage in a death struggle, Elsa's brain activates a collection of electronically-controlled dismembered arms which reach out and strangle the two ex-Nazis.

Film Details

Genre
Horror
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
Boston opening: 27 Sep 1967
Production Company
Gold Star Productions; Seven Arts Productions
Distribution Company
Warner Bros.--Seven Arts, Inc.
Country
United Kingdom

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 35m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White (theatrical prints), Color (Eastmancolor) (tv prints)

Articles

The Frozen Dead


Twenty years after the end of World War II, a German scientist (Dana Andrews) starts to thaw out a dozen Nazi soldiers who have been kept alive in suspended animation. If all goes well, his superiors will awaken 1,500 more frozen Nazis hidden in caves around Europe, so they can continue their quest for world domination. Unfortunately, Andrews is able to thaw the bodies but not their brains, resulting in Nazi zombies. Perhaps, he reckons, he could experiment on another brain and find a solution to this problem. Luckily, his niece (Anna Palk) and her friend (Kathleen Breck) are visiting; surely no one will miss Breck if she disappears, will they?

Written, produced and directed on a low budget in England by an American filmmaker, Herbert J. Leder, The Frozen Dead (1966) is bizarre in countless ways, from Dana Andrews's poor attempt at a German accent to Kathleen Breck's performance primarily as a decapitated, but still alive, shaved head, adorned with coiled wires.

Reviews were generally awful, although Variety deemed it "a skillfully contrived, clinically ghoulish pic that should keep the young set riveted to their seats... May revolt adults. Faint-hearted parents should be advised to stay comfortably at home watching tv." Film historian Phil Hardy (The Overlook Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction) later wrote: "Even Leder's pedestrian direction cannot remove the delirium from images such as the rack of human arms ready for use and Breck's soulful, boxed-in head."

Shot in color, The Frozen Dead was released to theaters in black-and-white. (Color prints later showed up on television.) In the United States, Warner Bros. released the picture on the bottom half of a double bill with It! (1967), another Herbert J. Leder horror film, this one starring Roddy McDowall, which didn't garner much enthusiasm either.

The story idea of Nazi zombies was revisited somewhat in Shock Waves (1977), starring Peter Cushing and John Carradine.

Look for Edward Fox, later to star in The Day of the Jackal (1973), as a zombie known as "Prisoner #3."

By Jeremy Arnold
The Frozen Dead

The Frozen Dead

Twenty years after the end of World War II, a German scientist (Dana Andrews) starts to thaw out a dozen Nazi soldiers who have been kept alive in suspended animation. If all goes well, his superiors will awaken 1,500 more frozen Nazis hidden in caves around Europe, so they can continue their quest for world domination. Unfortunately, Andrews is able to thaw the bodies but not their brains, resulting in Nazi zombies. Perhaps, he reckons, he could experiment on another brain and find a solution to this problem. Luckily, his niece (Anna Palk) and her friend (Kathleen Breck) are visiting; surely no one will miss Breck if she disappears, will they? Written, produced and directed on a low budget in England by an American filmmaker, Herbert J. Leder, The Frozen Dead (1966) is bizarre in countless ways, from Dana Andrews's poor attempt at a German accent to Kathleen Breck's performance primarily as a decapitated, but still alive, shaved head, adorned with coiled wires. Reviews were generally awful, although Variety deemed it "a skillfully contrived, clinically ghoulish pic that should keep the young set riveted to their seats... May revolt adults. Faint-hearted parents should be advised to stay comfortably at home watching tv." Film historian Phil Hardy (The Overlook Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction) later wrote: "Even Leder's pedestrian direction cannot remove the delirium from images such as the rack of human arms ready for use and Breck's soulful, boxed-in head." Shot in color, The Frozen Dead was released to theaters in black-and-white. (Color prints later showed up on television.) In the United States, Warner Bros. released the picture on the bottom half of a double bill with It! (1967), another Herbert J. Leder horror film, this one starring Roddy McDowall, which didn't garner much enthusiasm either. The story idea of Nazi zombies was revisited somewhat in Shock Waves (1977), starring Peter Cushing and John Carradine. Look for Edward Fox, later to star in The Day of the Jackal (1973), as a zombie known as "Prisoner #3." By Jeremy Arnold

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Notes

Released in Great Britain in Eastmancolor in 1967.