In the song this feeling is compared to being chased by a pack of hounds. The song is actually about being afraid to fall in love.
You would be forgiven for thinking they indicate a stronger link between the movie and the song, but that is not the case. More than just serving as spice, they set the stage for what follows. It is wonderfully dramatic and fits the theme of the song beautifully in terms of those ‘hounds of love’ chasing after the protagonist. The spoken intro adds a lot to that and is a great fit. Kate Bush was making very cinematic music at this point (with her music videos following suit, some of them looking like mini-movies), full of imaginative and conceptual storytelling made to fire up the imagination. This phrase is also referred to in the first chorus. The answer is pretty much “very little” from a direct story perspective, but she was clearly inspired by the concept of being hunted and specifically took note of the phrase she used as the song’s spoken intro. The obvious question is how much this film influenced the rest of the song when Kate Bush wrote it. It is widely regarded as a creepy movie with a very intense and eerie atmosphere.
James story Casting the Runes (1911), and concerns an American psychologist who travels to England to investigate a satanic cult suspected in more than one death. The movie storyline was adapted from the M.R.
He plays a medium channelling a character played by Maurice Denham, who provides the voice. The sample that opens the Kate Bush song Hounds of Love comes from the 1957 British horror film Night of the Demon and are mouthed by the actor Reginald Beckwith.