The City Of The Dead -1960- A.k.a. Horror Hotel... -

Bill hasn’t heard from Nan in three days. He drives to Whitewood with Nan’s brother, Richard. The town greets them with bland hospitality. No one has seen Nan. She must have left early. No, there is no innkeeper named Newless. The Raven’s Inn is boarded up, cobwebbed, uninhabited for fifty years.

Mrs. Newless (Patricia Jessel, with eyes like polished jet) greets her at the Raven’s Inn. “You’ll be comfortable here, dear. So few young people visit. We like… tradition.”

But the fog is already creeping back.

The climax is a coven in the crypt. Nan, now pale as tallow, stands among the hooded figures—a bride to the horned shadow. Driscoll removes his glasses. Without them, he is not a professor. He is the high priest of Whitewood, the same man who has presided over the Black Sabbath every century since 1692. Mrs. Newless is Elizabeth Selwyn, immortal and hungry.

She makes it back to the inn. Mrs. Newless brings her warm milk with honey. “To calm your nerves.” The City of the Dead -1960- a.k.a. Horror Hotel...

The prologue unfurls like a sermon from a fever dream. In 1692, beneath a sky the color of pewter, the Massachusetts village of Whitewood drags a woman named Elizabeth Selwyn to the stake. She is not merely accused of witchcraft—she confesses with a smile that cracks her lips. As the flames lick her petticoats, she strikes a bargain with the Devil himself. A shadow passes over the sun. The villagers flinch. And Elizabeth Selwyn swears that Whitewood will belong to her forever.

Bill and Richard fight through the catacombs. A torch falls. Flames spread. And in a twist that echoes the prologue, the coven burns—not to death, but to release . The curse requires a living town. As the last ember dies, Whitewood dissolves like morning frost. Gas lamps gutter out. The shops become hollow shells. And in the final shot, Professor Driscoll’s lecture podium sits empty in a sunlit classroom, save for a single scorched glove. Bill hasn’t heard from Nan in three days

“To understand evil,” Driscoll says, “one must sometimes visit it.”

He suggests Whitewood—now a quiet, forgotten crossroads on the map—as a place where the old customs never truly died. A perfect case study. He gives Nan a letter of introduction to a certain Mrs. Newless, who runs the local inn. Nan’s boyfriend, Bill, is uneasy. Something in Driscoll’s calm advice feels like a trap door swinging open. But Nan is young and fearless in the way the young are before they learn better. No one has seen Nan

But the church stands. And the mausoleum. And Professor Driscoll, who arrives the same night “to help,” wearing a clerical collar that doesn’t quite fit and a book bound in human skin.

She drives through November fog, past skeletal trees, until the road narrows and the sign reads: Whitewood – Established 1680 – Population 97 . The town is a single cobbled lane, gas lamps hissing in the dusk, shop windows displaying wares from another century. No one walks the street. But faces press against upstairs curtains.

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