Three short tales of supernatural horror. In “The Telephone,” a woman is plagued by threatening phone calls. In "The Wurdalak,” a family is preyed upon by vampiric monsters. In “The Drop of Water,” a deceased medium wreaks havoc on the living.
This movie contains 4 potentially triggering events.
In the second segment, the old man demands that his son go out and shoot a barking dog. You only ever hear barking, there is never a dog seen on screen. But you do hear a gunshot.
In the second segment a child is kidnapped by his vampire grandfather and killed. His dead body is shown, and his father wants to stab him in the heart to prevent him from coming back from the dead. The father doesn't do this, and later in the film the returns as a ghoul.
Sort of. The third segment is the play on Poe's "The Telltale Heart." A woman steals a ring from a corpse and then thinks she sees the old woman in her apartment.
In the second segment, a father wants to stab his dead son in the heart to prevent him from coming back as a vampire. The mother says she will kill herself if he does so.
This movie is from 1963, so there is nothing overt as far as homosexuality. But in the first segment, there are heavy lesbian overtones to one of the character's motivations. She does end up dying.