light wear on the edges of the case. The Vhs tape is in good condition. Shipped the next business day! We own a small family book store and sell our extra media that have been on our shelfs for too long. Additional Details ------------------------------ Product description: When his brother disappears, Robert Manning pays a visit to the remote country house he was last heard from. While his host is outwardly welcoming, Manning detects a feeling of menace in the air with the legend of Lavinia Morley, Black Witch of Greymarsh, hanging over everything. VIEWER COMMENT: "After the disappearance of his brother, antique dealer Robert Manning (Mark Eden) travels to the remote country manor of Greymarsh where he was last seen. There he stays with the charming J. D. Morley(Christopher Lee) and his beautiful neice, Eve (Virginia Wetherell). However, the Morley family is descended from Lavinia Morley (Barbara Steele in green makeup), the legendary Black Witch of Greymarsh. As Robert continues to investigate the disappearance of his brother, he is beset by horrible dreams about black masses and ritual sacrifices and ends up seeking the wheelchair bound Professor John Marshe (Boris Karloff), an expert on the occult, for help. This 1968 film from Vernon Sewell, a rather uninspiring director who made the 1952 film "Ghost Ship," suffers because the story is not worthy of a film that has two of the biggest names in horror film history with Karloff and Lee (and a famous face in Steele). The two take turns stealing scenes, with Lee getting the better of the deal because for once he gets to display some charm as he goes his evil way. The story is loosely adapted from the H.P. Lovecraft short story "The Dreams in the Witch House," which means it is a good idea gone horrible astray .... There are plenty of ....laughs (Robert makes a comment about expecting Boris Karloff to pop up) and a few moments of passing erotic interest, but if it were not for Karloff's explanation at the end of the film we would not really have a good idea of what was going on. "The Crimson Cult," released in England as "Curse of the Crimson Altar," is a bad movie whose badness works in its favor in terms of enjoying it on a level unintended by its creators. The reliance on psychedelic Format: ntsc