The best Vincent Gardenia’s horror movies

Vincent Gardenia

Vincent Gardenia

07/01/1920- 09/12/1992
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Vincent Gardenia’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Vincent Gardenia.

Little Shop of Horrors

Little Shop of Horrors
7.1/10
  • Genre: ComedyHorror
  • Release: 19/12/1986
  • Character: Mr. Mushnik
Seymour Krelborn is a nerdy orphan working at Mushnik's, a flower shop in urban Skid Row. He harbors a crush on fellow co-worker Audrey Fulquard, and is berated by Mr. Mushnik daily. One day Seymour finds a very mysterious unidentified plant which he calls Audrey II. The plant seems to have a craving for blood and soon begins to sing for his supper.

The Dybbuk

The Dybbuk
5.7/10
The Dybbuk is a made for TV film adaptation of a classic Jewish folktale. The story is about a young Jewish man, Sender (Theodore Bikel) who loves a young Jewish woman, Leah (Carol Lawrence) but her father arranges her marriage with another man. The grief of this causes Sender to die, but his spirit passes into the body of his beloved on her wedding day. Rabbi Azrael (Ludwig Donath), who serves as our narrator through the beginning of the film, is charged with the task of exercising Sender’s Dybbuk (sometimes defined as a malicious spirit or demon who possesses the living) from Leah’s body.

The House by the Edge of the Lake

The House by the Edge of the Lake
5.1/10
  • Genre: Horror
  • Release: 28/09/1979
  • Character: Old Painter
A young university student "Lillian" (Fani) returns to her family's country villa near a lake where years earlier had mother drowned. She is supposedly researching a local legend, a witch called Kira and strange symbol associated with her.

The Screaming Skull

The Screaming Skull
4.6/10
  • Genre: Horror
  • Release: 01/01/1973
  • Character: Ollie
Chemically-dependent doctor Ollie suffers from hallucinations (or are they?) of a talking skull and conducts experiments at the expense of his wealthy wife, who hates him for letting their son die. Shot on video, this originally aired on late night TV. Though it aired in color, the only known surviving print is a black and white kinetoscope.

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