If you’ve ever waited for a train in one of London’s older Underground stations, you know how creepy those tunnels can feel late at night. Now imagine something lurking down there, something that isn’t just a drunk commuter. That’s the basic setup of Raw Meat (known as Death Line in the U.K.), a 1972 horror film directed by Gary Sherman. It’s a strange, scrappy little movie that mixes urban decay, cannibalism, and dry British humor. And yes, Christopher Lee shows up, but not in the way you might expect. The film kicks off when a rich civil servant mysteriously vanishes in Russell Square station. Donald Pleasence plays Inspector Calhoun, the cranky cop assigned to figure out what happened. His investigation leads him to rumors about missing people in the Underground. The truth is straight out of a nightmare: decades earlier, workers were trapped in a tunnel collapse. Cut off from the world, they survived by eating the dead, and their descendants have been living down there ever si...