Film Review
By the late 1950s, director Roger Corman had earned a reputation as a
master of the low budget horror film. His early successes
encouraged the execs at American International Pictures to up the ante
and give him the time and the money to start making films that at least
approximated to the standards of comparable Hollywood
productions. The gamble paid off spectacularly. Although
its budget was still modest by the standards of the major studios (just
350 thousand dollars, allowing for a 15-day shooting schedule),
House of Usher was to be one of
AIP's most profitable films. Over the decade that followed, the
company derived a large chunk of its income from similar Gothic horror
films, mirroring what a certain British film company named Hammer was doing in England
at the time.
House of Usher was the first
in a series of eight adaptations of Edgar Allen Poe stories to be
directed by Roger Corman for AIP. Most of these films featured
Vincent Price in the kind of role (the sinister Gothic chatelain) in
which he excelled. The film is one of Corman's best, a
masterfully crafted, visually stunning spine-chiller that is laden with
menace and suspense, and seasoned with more than a touch of the
macabre. The labyrinthine set, with its dark passages and shadowy
baroque chambers, evokes a sense of stifling oppression which gives the
evil that lurks at the heart of the story a terrifying physical
presence. The artistic highpoint is a nightmarish dream sequence,
of the kind that Corman was particularly good at rendering on a
miniscule budget.
Vincent Price is at his sinister best as the utterly creepy Roderick
Usher. For once, the actor eschews his usual camp histrionics and
instead adopts a more subdued and measured style of acting, which gives
him a more threatening and powerful screen presence than usual.
Screenwriter Richard Matheson gives Price some of his most memorable
lines (including the legendary "
Evil
is not just a word - it is a reality!"). It is small
wonder that after this film Vincent Price would become virtually
typecast in this kind of role for the rest of his career. He
played the part so damn well, and audiences loved him for it.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Roger Corman film:
The Little Shop of Horrors (1960)
Film Synopsis
Philip Winthrop visits the house of Usher, a decaying mansion in a
desolate area of misty swampland, with the intention of taking away his
fiancée, Madeline. He receives an ice-cold welcome from
Madeline's older brother, Roderick, a man who suffers from extreme
hypersensitivity and an aversion to strangers. Roderick insists
that Madeline cannot leave the house and must not marry, since she,
like him, is afflicted with an ancient family curse that is slowly
draining away her life and driving her towards sanity. Believing
Roderick to be mad, Philip makes preparations to take Madeline from the
house, but on the day of their departure she suddenly dies. After
her body has been laid to rest in the family crypt, Philip realises
that she is still alive and resolves to free her. But Madeline is
no longer the sweet innocent girl he once knew...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.