The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll

The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll is a 1960 horror film by Hammer Film Productions, directed by Terence Fisher and staring Paul Massie, Dawn Addams, and Christopher Lee. The screenplay was based on the 1886 novella The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson.

In contrast to other film versions, Jekyll was portrayed as bland and faceless, while Hyde was presented as suave and handsome. This reflects director Fisher's belief in what critics (such as biographer Wheeler Winston Dixon) called "the charm of evil". The film is also unusual in that it is one of the few where the Jekyll/Hyde character does not die in the story's conclusion. The film was released in North America under the titles House of Fright and Jekyll's Inferno.

Unusually for an English film, the cancan girls wear fishnet tights beneath brightly colored petticoats. This was an odd oversight, considering that lead actress Dawn Addams appeared in a black corset with suspender stockings later in the movie.