A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.A hooded serial killer finds a novel way to murder his victims--he lashes them to death with a whip. The police try to track him down before any more murders occur.
Kurd Pieritz
- Monsieur d'Arol
- (as Kurt Pieritz)
Uschi Glas
- Mary
- (as Ursula Glas)
Walter Echtz
- Mr. Smith
- (uncredited)
- …
Helmut Heyne
- Notar
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Manfred Meurer
- Gangster (bewacht Mädchen)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe last of Rialto Film's Edgar Wallace films to be shot in black and white, yet it was one of the most successful films of the series with approximately 3,500,000 viewers during its initial theatrical run and approximately 1,500,000 more during the following years up to 1970. It also was the last film of the series directed by Harald Reinl (he directed the first one, "Face of the Frog (1959)" and the last appearance of his wife Karin Dor. Both made five Edgar Wallace films, four of which together.
- GoofsWhen Sir William is killed, he turns around and watches the monk face to face. But in the next moment he can be seen again with his back turned on the monk.
- Crazy creditsIn the opening Titels the name of cast and crew are in white over a colored scene of a burning car.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-in Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 5 (1998)
Featured review
This is a solid middle-period entry in the long-running German "Krimi" series, based on the ingenious thrillers of Edgar Wallace. In this case, the film-makers were taking the plot seriously and not trying (much) to dazzle the viewer with the nifty cinematic trickery and vivid violence that would become the hallmark of the series. Fortunately, the plot is a strong one, involving the usual murderous infighting over an inheritance, a girls' boarding school, and the wonderfully avenging titular character who breaks necks with the visually impressive snap of his whip. The style fits best into the Eurospy genre of the 60s, which was director Reinl's forte. Besides the monk, there is a weird caretaker who keeps pigeons and who casts creepy facial masks of people at the school, which turn into death masks after the inevitable murder of their models (shades of "I Bury the Living"). A poisoned water pistol serves as one girl's defense from prospective attackers. Karin Dor, the director's statuesque wife, resembles Barbara Steele in the lead role, and series favourite Eddie Arent, normally the effective comic relief, has a quite unexpected role to play here. More effort than usual is spent establishing the Thames-side background, though the German origin is unmistakable. Best of all is the wild lounge score by retro-hip composer Peter Thomas, with chimes and cascading organ swells (à la Vic Mizzy of "Munsters" fame) to highlight the monk's appearances. A lurid-colour sequel, "The Monk With The Whip", is much more campy and flamboyant, in keeping with the later efforts in the series directed by Alfred Vohrer.
- goblinhairedguy
- May 9, 2004
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Der unheimliche Mönch
- Filming locations
- Trafalgar Square, St James's, London, England, UK(Gwendolin walks past it.)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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