Showing posts with label Amicus Productions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amicus Productions. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2023

TALES FROM THE CRYPT (1972)

 

(Director: Freddie Francis. Screenwriters: Milton Subotsky, Al Feldstein, and Johnny Craig, “based on stories written by Al Feldstein, Johnny Craig and Bill Gaines, originally published in the Comic Magazines Tales From the Crypt[, The Haunt of Fear] and The Vault of Horror by Bill Gaines” [IMDb].)

 

Review

In this five-story horror anthology film put out by Amicus Productions, a group of catacombs-exploring tourists wander into a room where a commanding, hooded Crypt Keeper (Ralph Richardson, THE GHOUL, 1933) tells his reluctant, disturbed listeners possible demises that face them.


The first tale he tells, “. . . And All Through the House,” set in a Christmastime, garishly decorated house, shows Joanne Clayton (Joan Collins, EMPIRE OF THE ANTS, 1977) killing her husband (played by Martin Boddey) while her young, gone-to-bed daughter, Carol (Chloe Franks) eagerly awaits Santa Claus’s arrival. Meanwhile, on the radio, news about a Santa suit-wearing maniac on the loose, is heard—an escape that will impact the quality of Joanne and Carol’s holiday celebration.

“. . . And All” originally appeared in the February-March 1954 issue of The Vault of Horror (#35).

 

Reflection of Death” concerns Carl Maitland (Ian Hendry, DAMIEN: OMEN II, 1978), a businessman leaving his family for his younger secretary, Susan Blake (Angela Grant), when they’re involved in a serious car accident. Upon coming to—he miraculously survived the crash—he stumbles home, where stranger fears await him.

Reflection” originally appeared in the April-May 1951 issue of Tales from the Crypt (#23).

 

In the Crypt Keeper’s third story, “Poetic Justice”, a snob, James Elliot (Robin Phillips) engages in a smear campaign against his kind, grieving and lower-class neighbor, Arthur Edward Grimsdyke (Peter Cushing), driving Grimsdyke into emotional dire straits. Of course, this comes to haunt Elliot later.

David Markham (BLOOD FROM THE MUMMY’S TOMB, 1971) played Edward Elliot, James’s father.

Poetic” originally appeared in the March-April 1952 issue of The Haunt of Fear (#12).

 

Wish You Were Here”, a rework of W.W. Jacobs’s 1902 story “The Monkey’s Paw”, concerns a couple, Enid and Ralph Jason, who are granted three wishes via a Chinese figurine, and live to regret their desires.

Richard Greene played Ralph. Barbara Murray played Enid. Roy Dotrice played Charles Gregory, the Jasons’ lawyer.

Wish” originally appeared in the November-December 1953 issue of The Haunt of Fear (#22).

 

In “Blind Alleys”, an administrator for a home for blind people (Major William Rogers, played by Nigel Patrick) indulges in a luxurious lifestyle while neglecting and terrorizing his clients. When one of them dies, another, George Carter (Patrick Magee, DIE, MONSTER, DIE!, 1965), confronts the greedy, dismissive director, leading to Rogers’s nightmarish punishment.

Blind” originally appeared in the February-March 1955 issue of Tales from the Crypt (#46).

 

All the mini-tales (including its wraparound) are entertaining, some better than others—standout segments are “. . . And All” (with its eye-popping, Christmas-colored hues and cherry-red blood, and Joan Collins’s nasty-then-desperate characterization), “Poetic Justice” (with its incisive viciousness and a great performance by Peter Cushing), and the nightmarishly creative comeuppance of  Blind Alleys” (and a memorable performance by the always compelling Patrick Magee).

TALES, tightly edited (hello, Teddy Darvas), and one of cinematographer-turned-director Freddie Francis’s better films, is often shot in grim, dark color tones (credit Norman Warwick). It’s a mostly excellent film, its atmospheric opening scenes, shot in Highgate Cemetery, Swain’s Lane, Highgate, England, set the tone for the film whilst Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Toccata & Fugue in D Minor” plays at key moments. TALES’s PG rating is due to its lack of onscreen violence and brief instances of obviously fake blood (“. . . And All, “Poetic Justice” and “Blind“)—that said, its sometimes nasty characters and resolutions, while they further sell TALE‘s often potent horror, might give some parents pause in letting their younger kids see this.

 

Deep(er) filmic dive

According to IMDb. . .

Stephen King and George A. Romero’s 1982 film CREEPSHOW originated in their desire to remake TALES FROM THE CRYPT (1972).


Peter Cushing took a cut in pay to act in TALES.

 

The Jasons’ mansion in “Wish You Were Here” was also a shooting location in THE OMEN (1976, the Thorns’ mansion).

 

In “Wish You Were Here”, the scene where Ralph Jason is pursued by a motorcycle was shot on the Alpine Circuit at Milbrook test track—also used in Gordon Hessler’s 1970 hybrid terror flick SCREAM AND SCREAM AGAIN (in the Michael Gothard being chased by cops scene).

 

Blind Alleys” was remade as an episode of the 1989-1996 HBO series,TALES FROM THE CRYPT episode, “Revenge is the Nuts” (Season 6 episode 5, original air date: November 16, 1994).

 

Peter Cushing and Joan Collins, who share no scenes in TALES, co-starred in FEAR IN THE NIGHT (1972).


Saturday, April 30, 2022

FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE (1974)

 

(Director: Kevin Connor. Screenwriters: Robin Clarke and Raymond Christodoulou, based on R. Chetwynde Hayes’s published stories.)


Review

This entertaining and moralistic compendium horror film was released in Britain in 1974 and stateside in 1976.

The wraparound story features Peter Cushing (THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, 1957) as The Proprietor of an antiques shop, Temptations Limited: Offers You Can’t Resist. Four characters─lead characters in each of the four following stories─cheat or lie to The Proprietor while negotiating purchases from him. Of course, bad things happen to them. Ben Howard played the “Burglar.”

 

In the first tale, “The Gate Crasher,” a young man (Edward Charlton, played by David Warner) buys an antique mirror for far less than its market value, takes it home, holds a séance with friends, inadvertently waking the spirit that lives in a mist-filled alternative world beyond its glass-and-fake-gold frame. When that spirit (The Face, played by Marcel Steiner) demands that Charlton murder people for their blood, the young man is compelled to do so.

 

An Act of Kindness” begins when an unhappily married, middle-aged office worker, Christopher Lowe (Ian Bannen), befriends─with what he views as a harmless fib─a war-vet match-seller (Jim Underwood, played by Donald Pleasence) on the street. This leads to an affair with Underwood’s daughter, Emily (Angela Pleasence), black magick and deaths that Lowe fails to foresee. Diana Dors played Mabel Lowe, Christopher’s derisive wife.

 

The third tale, “The Elemental,” is titled for a malevolent spirit that haunts Reginald Warren (Ian Carmichael) after he exchanges the pipe’s price tag for a cheaper one in The Proprietor’s antique shop. The elemental terrorizes him and his wife, causing him to contact a spiritualist (Madame Orloff, played by Margaret Leighton) to rid them of the pestiferous supernatural being.

 

 In “The Door,” a young man, William Seaton (Ian Ogilvy) buys an ornate, monster-faced door. The item is delivered to Seaton’s house, used to replace a closet door, transforming the closet into an antique, shadowy and blue-lit room─an alternate realm, with a strange, menacing man inside it. Lesley Ann-Down played Rosemary Seaton, Ian’s wife.