Hysteria

TERRIFYING SUSPENSE ...it will shock you out of your seat!

6.4
19651h 25m

An American wakes up in an English hospital unable to remember anything of his life before a recent car accident. With only a photograph torn from a newspaper to guide him, and an unknown benefactor, he attempts to unravel what looks increasingly like a bizarre murder.

Production

Logo for Hammer Film Productions
Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios
Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Hysteria (1965) (HQ Hammer Theatrical Trailer)

Hysteria (1965) (HQ Hammer Theatrical Trailer)

Cast

Photo of Robert Webber

Robert Webber

Chris Smith

Photo of Jennifer Jayne

Jennifer Jayne

Gina McConnell

Photo of Lelia Goldoni

Lelia Goldoni

Denise James

Photo of Peter Woodthorpe

Peter Woodthorpe

Marcus Allan

Photo of Sue Lloyd

Sue Lloyd

French Girl

Photo of Marianne Stone

Marianne Stone

Miss Grogan

Photo of Kiwi Kingston

Kiwi Kingston

French Girl's Husband

Photo of John Arnatt

John Arnatt

Mr. James

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

No hysterical histrionics here, just solid hysteria.



Hysteria is directed by Freddie Francis and written by Jimmy Sangster. It stars Robert Webber, Anthony Newlands, Jennifer Jayne, Maurice Denham and Lelia Gordon. Music is by Don Banks and cinematography by John Wilcox.



From the long line of Hammer Thrillers with one word titles that followed in the wake of Psycho, Hysteria is a decent addition to the roster. Plot in simple terms finds Webber as Chris Smith, a survivor of a car crash who is suffering with amnesia. Upon finding out some mysterious benefactor has been footing the hospital bills for him, he is naturally intrigued as to who it is. Following the bare minimum of clues, while struggling with angry voices he hears in his head, Smith finds himself in a vortex of mystery and shifty shenanigans.



What follows is a monochrome murder mystery laced with psychopathic tendencies, paranoia, dangerous attractions, twists and extended flashbacks. It’s all a bit flimsy if you wanted to dissect it as a viable story, but Sangster comes up with some good ideas in the name of entertainment, and Francis is able to eek out suspense at regular intervals. Cast are fine, including the sometimes maligned Webber who sits the role well, while Denham offers up a good one as the detective who is not to be taken lightly.



Good solid twisty thriller from Hammer. 7/10

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