Only three stories for comic-book horror fans in this second compendiums of creepies - all of them good for more chuckles than chills under the direction of Gornick, who was well advised to stick to his career as cinematographer after this. In the first story a wooden Indian comes to life to destroy those who have killed the owners of the store outside which it stands. In the second, a floating tarpaulin devours 'sinful' holidaying teenagers on a lake. the third, concerning a hit-and-run victim who comes back to haunt his killer, has the best of George A Romero's dialogue, and the best performance (Chiles), but simply doesn't know how to round off its story with any ending other than the sickening conventional. Gornick's direction has no idea of how to shock an audience other than with head-on or overt horror; it's almost as sad as the appearance of a much-aged Dorothy Lamour in episode one.
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