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Category Archives: Films Released in 1961

THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM

THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM-United States-1961

Vincent Price as Nicholas Medina

John Kerr as Francis Barnard

Barbara Steele as Elizabeth Barnard Medina

Luana Anders as Catherine Medina (Image not from film)

Antony Carbone (L) as Doctor Charles Leon

Directed by Roger Corman

Screenplay by Richard Matheson

Based on the short story by Edgar Allan Poe

I love going back to those movies that I saw years ago as a child. Just before I watch them I begin to wonder if they will have the same effect on me now as then. Sometimes time has been unkind to them and I am left to desire more. With “The Pit and the Pendulum” the old frights are there, although not as intense as I remember; but that takes nothing from a film that is more atmospherically unsettling in some scenes and that most films of today cannot hold a candle to. Without films such as “The Pit and the Pendulum” and actors like Vincent Price and the raven-haired beauty Barbara Steele to give him inspiration the world might never have heard of Tim Burton.

Growing up in Spartanburg, South Carolina I would be driven to the local library by my mother or my sister. On certain weeknights they would show old movies and it is there that I was first frightened out of my wits by this adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s tale of betrayal, torture and deceit. I watched as Francis Barnard (John Kerr) desperately tried to find out the cause of his sister Elizabeth’s untimely passing. I watched as the great Vincent Price ran the gamut of emotions from agony to anguish as he tortured himself for his beloved wife’s death.  I remember nearly jumping out of my seat when her casket was opened and her terror-stricken face was revealed. This was one of the moments in my life that my love for horror was released from within the pits of my mind and allowed full reign over my senses. The revelation of her ghastly visage is the stuff that nightmares are made of and it is no lie when I tell you that when I saw that face again 40 years later it still sent a chill down my spine. But the terror does not end there. “The Pit and the Pendulum” has enough fright to fill 10 movies and there is not one false fright or jump scene to be found. No, the scares occur as a result of the combination of the characters reactions and to the screenwriter (Richard Matheson-“The Twilight Zone”, “Trilogy of Terror”) and the director’s (Roger Corman-“A Bucket of Blood”, “The Little Shop of Horrors”); and to their ability to convey that atmosphere of fear to us, the audience. When was the last time you saw a horror film that scared you without making you feel like you were going into cardiac arrest? The fear makers of today could learn a lot by studying the movies of yesterday.

So, the next time you watch “Sleepy Hollow” or “Edward Scissorhands” or almost any of Tim Burton’s gothic tales, make sure you whisper a soft little thank you to Vincent Price, Roger Corman, Richard Matheson and Barbara Steele. They’ve certainly earned it.

Oh, make sure you thank Edgar, too. He’s definitely earned it.

TRIVIA

The film never had an original prologue. It was added when the film was sold to TV and a further few minutes were required to pad out the running time. Only Luana Anders from the original cast was available so an extra scene of her in a madhouse was filmed and tacked on to the beginning. This scene does not really tie in with the rest of the film.

To increase the pendulum’s sense of deadly menace, director Roger Corman took out every other frame during the editing stage making the blade appear to move twice as fast.

Actor John Kerr was worried about being strapped down to the table with the pendulum above him for the movie’s climax. In order to demonstrate that it was perfectly safe, director Roger Corman stood in for Kerr while the scene was being set up.

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THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF

THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF-United Kingdom-1961

Clifford Evans as Don Alfredo Corledo

Oliver Reed as Leon Corledo

Yvonne Romain as Servant Girl (Jailer’s Daughter)

Catherine Feller as Cristina Fernando

Directed by Terence Fisher

Written by Anthony Hinds

Based on the novel “The Werewolf of Paris” by Guy Endore

Don’t you just love these old horror movies? No matter how cheesy they are you just can’t seem to get enough of them. I remember these films from my childhood and I recall fond memories of Saturday afternoons spent watching horror movies on the local channels. Films like “The Curse of the Werewolf” kept my fingers in a position just under my eyes so that I could cover them quickly when the werewolf reared his horrible head. 40 years later and I find myself writing about the same movie that scared me so much as a boy. Life is grand.

The Curse of the Werewolf is the tale of Leon. Born on Christmas day he is cursed to become a beast, a killer, a werewolf. Oliver Reed plays the role of Leon to perfection. Here is a man who makes the most out of overacting and it shows in every scene he appears in. In the final scenes Reed is so terrifyingly good as the werewolf I actually found myself hiding my eyes like that little ten year old boy all those years ago. Alright, alright, I can’t back that up. I didn’t hide my eyes.

I hid under the bed. My dog looked at me like I was crazy. I looked at her like ‘who was under here first, bitch?’

Seriously though, “The Curse of the Werewolf” was one of my favorite horror films growing up. Watching it again after all these years was such a thrill despite the fact that it’s an overacted mess. The werewolf makeup still stands as some of the best of all time and I’m talking just as good as “The Wolf Man” here. The only question I have concerning the film is why was the werewolf’s fur blonde when Oliver Reed’s hair was black? That, my friends, is a mystery for the ages. Ah-woooooo!!!

TRIVIA

The only werewolf movie made by Hammer Studios.

Makeup-artist Roy Ashton based his makeup for this film on Jack P. Pierce’s makeup forThe Wolf Man.

In an interview, Richard Wordsworth stated that in the original screenplay his beggar character was a werewolf. Hammer told him that the censor had problems with the notion of a werewolf/rapist, so out it went.

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