Film Review
Often cited as the best of Roger Corman's Edgar Allen Poe adaptations,
The Masque of the Red Death feels
less like a conventional horror film and more like an über-kitsch
reinterpretation of Ingmar Bergman's
The Seventh Seal, not that that
is necessarily a bad thing. The vibrant use of colour in the sets
and costumes, along with the high degree of stylisation in just about
every department from acting to make-up, makes this one of Corman's
most striking films - a brave, but too obvious, attempt by the director
to shake of his reputation as a perveyor of exploitation trash and
recast himself as one of the art house elite.
Although the plot is silly and much of the dialogue toe-curlingly bad,
Corman's assured direction and Vincent Price's deliciously camp take on
villainy makes this one of the most compelling and enjoyable of the low
budget horror films of this era. You would never think, on the
strength of her lacklustre performance here, that Jane Asher would go
to become a major film actress. By contrast, Patrick Magee
relishes his role and comes close to out-classing Price as the
principal baddy; where else would you see him burned to death in a
monkey costume?
Whilst
The Masque of the Red Death
occasionally veers dangerously close to the abyss of pretentious
over-indulgence, its eerie Gothic atmosphere, sinister quasi-religious
undertones and Price's chilling presence make it a classic of its
genre, one that will remain a firm favourite with all fans of the
horror genre. The hysterical denouement offers the one truly
frightening moment in the film, with Vincent Price literally scaring
himself to death. The very last scene (where the various coloured
pestilences get together for a bit of a chinwag on a not very
convincing heath) should, however, have been cut. This would have
been unbearably silly even in an episode of Monty Python.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Roger Corman film:
Frankenstein Unbound (1990)
Film Synopsis
12th Century Europe is being scourged by many plagues, the most
fearsome of which is the Red Death. When Prince Prospero learns
that this plague has reached the villages surrounding his castle, he
orders his men to burn them to the ground. Before doing so, he
takes one of the villagers, a young woman named Francesca, prisoner,
along with her father and her lover - these three will provide
the entertainment at a costume ball which Prospero intends to host at
his castle. Francesca's pleas to Prospero to show mercy and
release her fall on deaf ears. He is a devout Satanist, and she
is soon to be initiated into his diabolical cult...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.