12 British Horror Films You Need To See

2. Peeping Tom (1960)

Peeping Tom opened shortly before Psycho in the UK €“ and promptly wrecked the career of its director. In 1960, Michael Powell was the much-lauded co-director of The Tales Of Hoffmann, A Matter Of Live And Death and The Red Shoes, but here he was directing a sleazy film about a photographer who murders women and captures their expressions on film. Had he lost his mind? It may involve a psychopathic killer, but Powell€™s film couldn€™t be more different from Psycho. It€™s a cold, clinical film, that never skimps on the portrayal of London€™s seamier side. The first scene shows the main character picking €“ and then murdering €“ a prostitute, which is very different from Psycho€™s €œcontroversial€ shots of Janet Leigh in her underwear. Grim and unrelenting, this is by no means a €œfun€ picture, but it appears to have influenced Hitchcock€™s later career. Returning to London in 1972 to shoot Frenzy, Hitch not only cast Anna Massey, Peeping Tom€™s lead actress, but when it came to staging the first murder, Hitch showed it in full close-up, just like Powell.
Contributor

Ian Watson is the author of 'Midnight Movie Madness', a 600+ page guide to "bad" movies from 'Reefer Madness' to 'Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead.'