Film Review
Roger Corman made a great virtue of producing films on an impossibly
tight budget but here he surpasses himself. Having completed
The Raven ahead of schedule, Corman
found that he had two days left to make use of his guest actor Boris
Karloff. That was enough time to shoot a few scenes with Karloff,
on existing sets, for another picture. Afterwards, the rest of
the film was shot, with his assistants - Francis Ford Coppola, Monte
Hellman and Jack Hill - taking over most of the directing duties.
Jack Nicholson, who starred in this film and
The Raven, volunteered to direct a
few shots, since he was keen to gain some directing experience.
Given the slapdash way in which the film was put together, it is
incredible that
The Terror holds
up as well as it does. It certainly isn't in the premier league
of Corman's films but it is still a chillingly atmospheric piece with some
truly horrifying moments. The sequences on the ragged
coastline are particularly haunting, more so that those
in the familiar Gothic horror interiors, and Ronald Stein's
creepy score adds greatly to the spine-tingling ambiance.
Admittedly, the performances let the
film down a little - Karloff looks as if he badly needs a holiday and
Nicholson appears painfully wooden in several scenes - but this hardly
matters. As a low budget shocker,
The Terror delivers the goods and
is a pretty respectable addition to the Roger Corman canon of classy schlock
horror.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Roger Corman film:
The Masque of the Red Death (1964)
Film Synopsis
Lieutenant André Duvalier is an officer in the French Foreign
Legion. Having been separated from his regiment, he finds himself
alone on a deserted beach. He is surprised by a beautiful young
woman in a white dress, but she mysteriously disappears after she has shown him where to
find drinking water. Intrigued by the young woman, Duvalier
explores the area and finds an ancient house standing near to the
shore. Its owner, the Baron Victor Von Leppe, claims to know
nothing of the woman, but Duvalier recognises her image in a portrait
of the Baron's wife, who died twenty years previously. The Baron
reluctantly confesses to the lieutenant that he murdered his wife when
he found her in bed with a lover and has lived as a recluse ever
since. When he sees the woman again, Duvalier realises that she
is possessed by the spirit of the Baron's dead wife and suspects she is
in great danger. In truth, it is the Baron whose life is in
peril...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.