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Savage Intruder (also known as Hollywood Horror House[1]) is a 1970 American psychological horror film directed by Donald Wolfe and starring Miriam Hopkins, John David Garfield and Gale Sondergaard.[2]

Plot

Katharine Packard, a once-prolific movie star now struggling with alcoholism, lives a quiet and reclusive life of retirement with a small group of servants in a mansion in the Hollywood Hills. One morning, during a drunken stupor, Katharine accidentally falls down the stairs and injures her leg, and is told she will have to stay in a wheelchair for a while because of it. As a result, Katharine and her servants hire a young man named Victor “Vic” Valance to act as her personal assistant and nurse. Unbeknownst to any of them, however, is that Vic is actually a serial killer who has been murdering and dismembering middle-aged women in and around the Hollywood area.

Over time, Katharine and Vic develop a close friendship, and even begin to develop romantic feelings for each other. During this time, Vic begins dating and eventually has sex with Katharine’s personal cook, Greta. Tensions arise after Katharine’s secretary Leslie insinuates to Greta that Vic and Katharine are in a sexual relationship; something that Greta was apparently unaware of. When Greta confronts Vic about it, an argument breaks out which results in Vic slapping her and attempting to hold her back when she tries to run away. Devastated, Greta tells Leslie that she is quitting her job at the mansion and will be leaving in the morning. That night, Greta is decapitated by Vic with a cleaver.

The next morning, Vic tells Leslie that Greta has left the estate, which makes her suspicious of him because Greta had told her that she was going inform Katharine of her relationship with Vic before leaving. That night, Leslie sneaks into Vic’s room and finds a herion needle in his drawer. She also finds a small briefcase in his closet, but Vic suddenly appears before she can open it and orders her to leave. Leslie complies, but not before accusing Vic of “taking advantage” of Katharine’s vulnerability and telling him that she will do everything she can to ensure that he leaves and never comes back.

The following day, Leslie manages to convince Katharine that Vic is no more than a “vulgar opportunist”, and so Katharine orders him to leave. Vic obliges, but returns not long after and knocks Katharine unconscious before injecting vodka into her bloodstream. Eventually, after psychologically tormenting her, Vic murders Katharine, and, by using his manipulation skills, as well as a mannequin that resembles Katharine, Vic is able to establish himself as the new man of the house after murdering Leslie and Katharine’s maid Mildred.

Cast

Production

Donald Wolfe shot Hollywood Horror House on and off between late 1969 and mid 1973 with funds from his star’s home tour bus company, with “lurid, candy-colored freak-outs” shot by Cinematographer John Arthur Morrill (A Boy and His Dog (1975 film)) and grisly murder set pieces.[1]

Release

It was filmed as The Comeback, two years later it released theatrically as Savage Intruder and later issued on VHS by Unicorn as Hollywood Horror House,[3] without an official DVD release.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b “Hollywood Horror House”. Vinegar Syndrome. Retrieved March 27, 2026.
  2. ^ Nissen p.202
  3. ^ “Grotesque Grand Dame Rarity- Hollywood Horror House”. Original Cinemaniac. February 18, 2020. Retrieved March 27, 2026.
  4. ^ “Hollywood Horror House (1970) (filmed in 1968)”. The Bloody Pit of Horror. August 10, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2026.

Bibliography

  • Axel Nissen. Actresses of a Certain Character: Forty Familiar Hollywood Faces from the Thirties to the Fifties. McFarland, 2007.