Dead Of Night (1945) Review

Dead Of Night (1945)

Directed by Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden & Robert Hamer

Written by H.G. Wells, E.F. Benson, John Baines & Angus MacPhail

Starring: Michael Redgrave, Mervyn Johns, Frederick Valk, Roland Culver

Plot Synopsis: (via IMDB)
An architect senses impending doom as his half-remembered recurring dream turns into reality. The guests at the country house encourage him to stay as they take turns telling supernatural tales.

My Opinion:

I’d been wanting to see this for a long time as I knew there was a creepy ventriloquist’s dummy in it. Not many things actually give me the creeps in horror movies but those things do!!! *shiver* So I’m happy that I finally saw this but I had no idea beforehand that it was actually a collection of several strange & eerie stories and that the dummy was only one part of those. That was kind of a nice surprise, though. It’s kind of like the original The Twilight Zone before its time (but with more of a horror theme than the quite often sci-fi theme of those). Considering that I still think the original The Twilight Zone is the greatest TV show ever, Dead Of Night was the exact sort of movie for a person like me. I just wish I’d enjoyed the stories a little more. A couple were good, a couple were okay, and the one that seemed to go on the longest was pretty weak.

In this movie, a man arrives at a party at a house in the country and claims to have seen all the guests in a dream, although he’s never met them before. He’s able to predict a couple of things that soon happen, which may or may not just be coincidences. This gets the guests each talking about their own bizarre stories which they’ve either heard about or experienced themselves. We get to see each of these stories while in between them we keep coming back to our storytellers and the stranger who claims to have met them all before.

I won’t go into too much detail on the individual stories in order to avoid spoilers. The first one involving a race car driver was possibly my favorite, although it was pretty obvious where it was headed if you’ve watched enough episodes of The Twilight Zone. But I’m certainly not going to complain at it feeling like an episode of my favorite TV show. The story told by the youngest party guest was fun and slightly creepy but, again, nothing too unexpected when you’ve watched a lot of this sort of thing. I would assume that the two most popular stories are one involving a mirror that seems to be cursed in some way and, of course, the one with the ventriloquist’s dummy as it’s the cover of every DVD I’ve seen and is what I always thought was the one and only story in the film.


I’d say these are the two most well put-together stories with the finest acting in the film. Michael Redgrave stars as the ventriloquist and, although I can’t pretend to fully know all the classic English actors, the Redgrave name is certainly well known and he does a fine job in the story that has clearly most stayed in the minds of anyone who has watched Dead Of Night. I know if I’d seen this years ago I’d have loved it. It’s very “me”. Unfortunately, I’ve just seen these sort of stories so often that the movie didn’t quite have the impact on me that it could have. It was definitely worth my time, though (despite the ghost “comedy” story, which some may love but I found to be overlong & the weakest story by far). But the mirror & the ventriloquist stories make up for the weaker ones and you may find the dummy haunting your dreams in the same way the man in the central story is haunted by dreams he can’t explain. Dead Of Night is a British supernatural horror classic that deserves more recognition than it seems to get. I wish there were more films like it nowadays.

My Rating: 7.5/10

38 thoughts on “Dead Of Night (1945) Review

    • That’s because I’m totally cool, Alex! 😉 lol. I think we discussed this one once?? I’d been wanting to see it for ages. I finally decided to just buy the DVD. 🙂 It really is pretty great! Especially for its time. I wish modern scary movies could be as good!

  1. This film has the distinct honor of being declared the first horror anthology film ever made and an inspiration to Subotsky/Rosenberg to pursue these types of film as Amicus Films several decades later 🙂

  2. Pingback: Happy Halloween! My Horror Month Roundup | Cinema Parrot Disco

  3. Pingback: The Boy (2016) Review | Cinema Parrot Disco

  4. Pingback: Magic (1978) Blind Spot Review | Cinema Parrot Disco

  5. Pingback: My Top Ten Creepy Dolls In Movies & Television  | Cinema Parrot Disco

  6. Pingback: Goosebumps (2015) Review  | Cinema Parrot Disco

  7. Reblogged this on Cinema Parrot Disco and commented:

    To finish Creepy Dolls Week I’m reblogging my review of Dead Of Night, a great 1945 British horror anthology with a disturbing ventriloquist’s dummy. Man, I hate those things!

    Here’s a recap of what I posted this week:

    – A list of My Top Ten Creepy Dolls In Movies & Television

    Reviews of:
    – The Boy (2016)
    – Magic (1978)
    – Dolls (1987)
    – Annabelle (2014)
    – Finders Keepers (2014)
    – Goosebumps (2015)

    Starting tomorrow I’ll be doing four days of reviews of films directed by Mike Flanagan…. 🙂

  8. Pingback: Dead Of Night (1945) Review | Cinema Parrot Disco

  9. I haven’t seen this one, but those ventriloquist dummies are the worst dolls ever. It is like someone made the decision to make them look as human as possible and as creepy as possible at the same time.

  10. Pingback: My Blog’s October 2016 Horror Month Recap | Cinema Parrot Disco

  11. Pingback: Toy Story 4 (2019) Review | Cinema Parrot Disco

  12. Pingback: Watched, Read, Reviewed: October 2020 | Cinema Parrot Disco

  13. Pingback: Seconds (1966) & Kind Hearts And Coronets (1949) Reviews | Cinema Parrot Disco

  14. Pingback: Ten Horror Movie Mini-Reviews | Cinema Parrot Disco

  15. Pingback: My Top Ten Pre-1970 Horror Movies | Cinema Parrot Disco

Leave a reply to table9mutant Cancel reply