Once again I hand over the reins of the LBL to my best pal Fran Goria. She's got a double feature of the often mustachioed master of the macabre Vincent Price to help us celebrate Movember. Remember, donations are still being accepted to aid the fight against prostate and testicular cancer by clicking on the icon on the to right, the auction is still underway for the Charles Bronson Icon of Awesomeness painting with all proceeds to benefit Movember charities. Now with that out of the way, I'll turn it over to Fran.
Hi folks! I have a double feature for you tonight starting with 1970’s Scream and Scream Again, followed by 1969’s The Oblong Box. These films have a couple of things in common. They both star Vincent Price and Christopher Lee, they share opposite sides of a Midnite Madness Double Feature DVD, and they were both directed by Gordon Hessler. Hessler also directed a third film starring Price in 1970 titled Cry of the Banshee. My personal favorite bit of trivia about Hessler is that he directed many episodes of the TV cop action series CHIPS from 1978-1982, and the TV movie Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park. Now with all that out of the way, the first of tonight’s features is…
Showing posts with label Vincent Price. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vincent Price. Show all posts
For the Love of Price: The Haunted Palace
Hello folks. It's my last respite of the month before I barrel into the last 15 reviews of the month including The Bigger & Badder Halloween Top 13. I hope you've been enjoying what I've been scaring up so far. Today, I have the second of two special For the Love of Price segments from my best pal and yours Fran Goria. Fran's back this time with the Roger Corman/Vincent Price "Poe" entry The Haunted Palace. So read on and find out how Poe and Lovecraft made a baby, what the two sides of Vinny P are all about, and what's at the core of the Corman in this classic 1960s chiller. Take it away Fran.....
For the Love of Price: Dead Heat (1988)
And on the seventh day he rested, yep that's right the Bugg is kicking back on Sunday getting another week of horror madness ready for you (and putting the finishing touches on The Bigger & Badder Halloween Top 13. To find out how you can be a part of it, check out my Facebook page and like it and stuff. Speaking of stuff, in my absence, I have a special spooky treat for you. Making her first of two appearances in this Halloween Month, my best pal and yours, Fran Goria with For the Love of Price.
For The Love of Price: City In the Sea (1965) a.k.a War Gods of the Deep
Hey, folks, Bugg here, and I'm here with something special today, the triumphant return of Fran Goria's For the Love of Price. I personally don't know anyone who has seen more or knows more about Vincent Price than my pal Fran, and I'm pleased as punch that she's back with more Pricey goodness... or badness, who knows. Either way, I'm sure you'll enjoy her review of the 1965 film City in the Sea a.k.a War Gods of the Deep. Enjoy, and look out for more from Fran in the near future including co-hosting the soon to debut podcast Netflips with your truly. Now get out your swimmies, slip into a bathing suit, and take the jump, or should I say plunge, with Fran and Vincent Price.
Get Off on the Goldfoot: Kicking off Summer with Vincent Price
While the calendar might denote a specific day that summer begins astrologically, I think most of us will agree that when June arrives, summer is upon us. Here at the Lair, it’s no different. It’s the time of year I break out the Bermuda shorts, drag out the lawn chair, slather up with coconut oil, and start soaking in the rays. It also means that my heart turns to the lighter side of genre fare. From the blood soaked beaches to the dense tropic jungles, you’ll find me turning up the heat all summer long. To start it off, I wanted to bring in the king of cool in a pair of sizzling films. When you think about beaches, surf, and sand, the name Vincent Price surely springs to mind right away. Well, perhaps not right away, but I think today I can bring it a little closer with two films featuring Price commanding a phalanx of two pieces.
The Halloween Top 13: The Devil Made Me Do It #6 - The Masque of Red Death (1964)
There's something magical about putting together Edgar Allen Poe and Vincent Price. It's like peanut butter and jelly, Scotch and Soda, or the Captain and Tennille, two great tastes that taste great together. Pairing them is a debt horror fans owe to director Roger Corman and the fine people over at American International Pictures. Tonight's selection on The Halloween Top 13: The Devil Made Me Do It was Corman and Price's sixth venture into the macabre world of Poe, and many say it is the high point of their collaborations. Both star and director were at the height of their powers. and with the lavishly appointed sets and powerhouse co-stars, you have to wonder if it's really the work of ....oh, I dunno....Satan! Coming in at #6, all the flaming apes, single toned rooms, and Vincent Price extolling the virtues of the "Lord of Lies" in The Masque of Red Death (1964).
Prince Prospero (Vincent Price) was an evil man before the Red Death started ravaging the village nestled in the shadow of his castle. When he uncovers the plague's existence, he gathers all his nobles within the castle walls where he promises to keep them safe and secure until the disease runs its course. He kidnaps Francesca (Jane Asher), a girl as pious in her Christianity as Prospero is in his Satanism, with the intent to break her will and bring her into his evil fold. Exposing the girl to the decadence of rich, their cruelty and torment of each other, the Prince begins to weaken her resolve. Little does he know that the coup-de-gras he has planned for his guests, a Masquerade, will also welcome an unwanted appearance by death. As this unfolds, a subplot follows Hop Toad (Skip Martin) and his love for dwarfish dancer Esmeralda (Verina Greenlaw). Offended by Alfredo (Patrick Mcgee) striking Esmeralda, Hop Toad lures the noble into a deadly game.
The Masque of Red Death is a pastiche of two of Poe's stories, "The Masque of Red Death" and "Hop Frog". Reading "The Masque", it is quickly obvious that there is no misguided love story or red hooded figure dispensing warnings to villagers. Instead it is almost entirely about mood and tone. Poe sinks the reader into Prospero's opulent world devoid of compassion or pity, and, leaving the moral to the reader, he then kills off the Prince and his party. The 1842 story runs barely five pages in my well loved Poe collection, and it's something of a credit to screenwriters Charles Beaumont ("The Twilight Zone", Brain Dead, The Intruder) and R. Wright Campbell (Man of a Thousand Faces, Alice in La La Land) they so adeptly fleshed out the tale. One of the tools they used was to include "Hop Frog" as a subplot. Condensed from the story's seven victims to just one, the tale of a mean spirited joker getting what he deserves plays perfectly against the backdrop of the decadent excesses of heartless Satanists.
Much of the credit for the film's success has to be given over to Corman and Price. Roger Corman is thought of as something of a hack, but looking at the lush color palette and the lavish sets (borrowed from the filming of Beckett), it has all the visual brilliance of Blood and Black Lace or Susperia. Corman knew how to get the right people for the job, and the film's look wasn't hindered by cinematographer and future film director Nicolas Roeg (Don't Look Now, The Man Who Fell To Earth). Corman also got some great performances out of his cast. Price is at his menacing best as the lecherous Satanist. He's so delightfully slimy that he practically oozes around the screen. Jane Asher (who was Paul McCartney's gal pal at the time and brought the then unknown (to Roger Corman) Beatle to the set) is the picture of loveliness, and her decent into nihilistic numbness is well played and believable. The lovely Hazel Court appears as a would-be bride of Satan, but her plotline is disposable and the only part of the film that felt like padding. Skip Martin clearly has a good time playing the role of the vengeful dwarf, but it was Clockwork Orange's Patrick Mcgee who shines in their scenes. While Prospero seems the noble, refined devil worshiper, Mcgee's Alfredo seems only a hair away from being a snarling beast.
Much has been made of the meaning of Poe's story, though it seems fairly obvious to me. The rich can't hide from the problems of the poor forever. Someday, no matter how protected they feel, if nothing is done to change economic and social divisions, it will become their undoing. (Perhaps this should be the official horror selection of the "Occupy" movement.) It's interesting the screenwriters chose to cast Prospero as a Satanist because his self centered hedonistic worldview would be one shared by Anton LeVay in the Satanic Bible released five years after The Masque of Red Death. The story of "Hop Toad" also melds well with Prospero's fall. In the film, both Alfredo and Prospero are men undone by their cruelty and hubris and receive just rewards for their worship of the Lord of Lies.
That brings us to the end of another installment of The Halloween Top 13: The Devil Made Me Do It. I had a great time talking about The Masque of Red Death, but tomorrow we get down to the real nitty gritty as the Top 5 films begin to be revealed. Halloween is less than a week away, better go out and get some candy just in case the devil comes knocking on your door.
Stick around after the trailer for the next reader submitted list, this time from the Empress of Paracinema, Christine Makepeace!
If you're not reading Paracinema Magazine and you're a fan of The Lightning Bug's Lair, then somewhere along the way the Devil has lead you astray. Get yourself back on the straight and narrow and order a copy today, but until then check out these choices the Mistress of the Paracinemist (which is similar to firmament, but more suspenseful), Christine Makepeace.
Prince Prospero (Vincent Price) was an evil man before the Red Death started ravaging the village nestled in the shadow of his castle. When he uncovers the plague's existence, he gathers all his nobles within the castle walls where he promises to keep them safe and secure until the disease runs its course. He kidnaps Francesca (Jane Asher), a girl as pious in her Christianity as Prospero is in his Satanism, with the intent to break her will and bring her into his evil fold. Exposing the girl to the decadence of rich, their cruelty and torment of each other, the Prince begins to weaken her resolve. Little does he know that the coup-de-gras he has planned for his guests, a Masquerade, will also welcome an unwanted appearance by death. As this unfolds, a subplot follows Hop Toad (Skip Martin) and his love for dwarfish dancer Esmeralda (Verina Greenlaw). Offended by Alfredo (Patrick Mcgee) striking Esmeralda, Hop Toad lures the noble into a deadly game.

Much of the credit for the film's success has to be given over to Corman and Price. Roger Corman is thought of as something of a hack, but looking at the lush color palette and the lavish sets (borrowed from the filming of Beckett), it has all the visual brilliance of Blood and Black Lace or Susperia. Corman knew how to get the right people for the job, and the film's look wasn't hindered by cinematographer and future film director Nicolas Roeg (Don't Look Now, The Man Who Fell To Earth). Corman also got some great performances out of his cast. Price is at his menacing best as the lecherous Satanist. He's so delightfully slimy that he practically oozes around the screen. Jane Asher (who was Paul McCartney's gal pal at the time and brought the then unknown (to Roger Corman) Beatle to the set) is the picture of loveliness, and her decent into nihilistic numbness is well played and believable. The lovely Hazel Court appears as a would-be bride of Satan, but her plotline is disposable and the only part of the film that felt like padding. Skip Martin clearly has a good time playing the role of the vengeful dwarf, but it was Clockwork Orange's Patrick Mcgee who shines in their scenes. While Prospero seems the noble, refined devil worshiper, Mcgee's Alfredo seems only a hair away from being a snarling beast.
Much has been made of the meaning of Poe's story, though it seems fairly obvious to me. The rich can't hide from the problems of the poor forever. Someday, no matter how protected they feel, if nothing is done to change economic and social divisions, it will become their undoing. (Perhaps this should be the official horror selection of the "Occupy" movement.) It's interesting the screenwriters chose to cast Prospero as a Satanist because his self centered hedonistic worldview would be one shared by Anton LeVay in the Satanic Bible released five years after The Masque of Red Death. The story of "Hop Toad" also melds well with Prospero's fall. In the film, both Alfredo and Prospero are men undone by their cruelty and hubris and receive just rewards for their worship of the Lord of Lies.
That brings us to the end of another installment of The Halloween Top 13: The Devil Made Me Do It. I had a great time talking about The Masque of Red Death, but tomorrow we get down to the real nitty gritty as the Top 5 films begin to be revealed. Halloween is less than a week away, better go out and get some candy just in case the devil comes knocking on your door.
Stick around after the trailer for the next reader submitted list, this time from the Empress of Paracinema, Christine Makepeace!
Bugg Rating
If you're not reading Paracinema Magazine and you're a fan of The Lightning Bug's Lair, then somewhere along the way the Devil has lead you astray. Get yourself back on the straight and narrow and order a copy today, but until then check out these choices the Mistress of the Paracinemist (which is similar to firmament, but more suspenseful), Christine Makepeace.
Devils and demons... That's a pretty big umbrella, and many varied things can fall under it. I had this super creative idea to like, make a list of my favorite minions. What fun is that though? I want to talk about the big guy himself! So here are my top 5 favorite films showcasing the dude below.
Legend - Arguably the best depiction of The Devil ever placed on film.
The Devil's Advocate - Al Pacino is a wild-eyed papa Devil. This is the film that made me start to question my Pacino allegiance. I can't deny the entertainment value it provides. (Editor's Note: This)
The Omen - The Devil is a sweet wittle boy! Yes, please!
Rosemary's Baby - The Devil (it wasn't just some lowly demon, right?) rapes Mia Farrow. That pretty much says it all.
Prince of Darkness - It's not a list without some Carpenter. Here, The Devil is a liquid. Yea. That's awesome. I like my Devil to be versatile.
Vincent Price in More Dead Than Alive (1969)


More Dead than Alive starts off with a song that I can only infer is supposed to make the viewer equate the biblically named Cain’s struggle with that of Jesus. Try as I might to figure out how to balance out the story of a 12 time killer with a chill carpenter who did killer magic tricks, I came up empty handed. That’s not to say that More Dead than Alive doesn't have a lot of ambitious things going on under the hood. The redemptive tale is told not in a white hat/black hat kind of way, and Cain never seems flippant about his murderous past. In place if clear but heroes and villains, the film is chock full of people who have real reactions and emotions no matter if we’re talking deep regret (Cain), self centered avarice (Price’s Buffalo), or pained, misguided envy (Hampton’s young gunslinger Billy). The film itself looks like a standard studio Western of the late ’60s (save for some really spot on, modern looking editing looking throughout by John F. Scheyer), but the symbolic ideas it contains from the pen of Escape 2000 and Futureworld scribe George Schenck far outweigh it’s simple presentation.
I’m going to talk a bit in a moment about all the leads, but of course the reason we’re here today is because of the presence of Vincent Price. While the whole film is solid, whenever Price shows up as the huckster Dan Ruffelo, he adds a special larger than life flavor to the character. No matter is he is doing his carnival barker bit, scheming over how to make money, or telling the sniveling Billy Valance to keep in line, Price does what he does best. He makes the most of every single second of screen time and plays the part to the hilt. This is one of the million reasons that I love Mr. Price. If you looked at his role on paper, Ruffalo might seem like a thankless part that did little more than connect a few of arcs in the story. As Price plays him, Ruffalo becomes a pivotal person in Cain’s life. He is the catalyst to everything that comes from our repentant hero.
While Price steals away nearly all his scenes, it’s quite a struggle when he’s playing opposite star Clint Walker. Walker, who made his name as a TV cowboy, is an impressive figure standing at a barrel chested six foot six inches tall, and while he strikes a commanding presence, he also has the chops to carry the film o his broad shoulders. Emotional resonance is something that I doubt Mr. Walker thought too much about, his hardened, stoic performance as Cain is perfectly suited for a character filled with repressed guilt. Ann Francis appears as the love of Cain’s life, but she doesn’t show up in more than twenty minutes of the film’s total hour forty running time. Their romance is quite sweet, but I found her character, a single woman living on the frontier as a painter, to be the least genuine and interesting. While everyone from Cain to Billy to Ruffalo had turmoil and issues, Francis’ Monica Alton was the most well adjusted among them. The least adjusted on the other hand would be Paul Hampton’s Billy Valance. While I never thought Hampton was so young to be underage as the film implies, he definitely mined an immaturity of character that made him a despicable foil for Cain.
More Dead than Alive contains some big ideas, some inspired performances, and the one and only Vincent Price, but what it doesn’t contain is much happening. When Westerns get mixed up with philosophy in movies like Fulci’s Four of the Apocalypse, Eastwood’s Pale Rider, or Jarmusch’s Dead Man, there’s a delicate balance that needs to be struck between waxing poetic and whacking bad guys. More Dead than Alive falls on the short side of the action spectrum. With only a handful of shootings, no sex, and very little violence, I’m still a bit puzzled as to how the film garnered an ‘R’ rating, but never the less; this is where the flick really falls apart. If it were not of the actors making their characters so watchable and interesting, I’m not sure I would have made it through the film. The only other thing holding More Dead than Alive back is the ending. I don’t want to say much more, but it contradicted so much of what I had just sat watching for almost two hours.
That brings up to the end of our first new Price review for the month. Look out of a few more, and don’t forget to look back into the archives for many, many more.
Bugg Rating
Deadly Doll’s Choice: From a Whisper to a Scream (1987)
Hey, pssst. I got a movie to tell you about. This isn’t just any movie, but rather my monthly movie swap with Emily from The Deadly Doll’s House of Horror Nonsense. If you haven’t guessed from either the title or the sight gag, she chose From a Whisper to a Scream a.k.a The Offspring. So as not to ‘keep them separated’ let me take a moment to mention that I chose for Emily the evil progeny film Audrey Rose featuring a relatively young Anthony Hopkins. So don’t forget to head on over there after this and see what she thought of my pick for her. Back to the movie at hand. What we have here is am ‘80’s era anthology film that feels like it’s picking up where Amicus left off. This is partially because the three stories are tied together by none other than Lair favorite Vincent Price, but also because when I think anthology horror, the British company springs instantly to mind. However, this is far from a staid British horror film. It takes the formula and amps up the sleaze and the gore.
In portions of film between the stories, Vincent Price plays the librarian and historian of Oldfield, a town with a strange and tragic past pervaded by killers and perverts. His own niece had just faced execution for crimes going back to when she committed her first murder at eight years old. A reporter shows up to interview Price‘s character, Julian White, about his niece. Instead, White launches into a series of tales to illustrate how somehow Oldfield breeds these kinds of people. The first is a tale of a mild mannered man driven to obsession and murder that. The second story illustrates how deadly greed can be. That even when some men have everything, they still must have more. In the third, man finds out that he who eats glass should throw no stones, and in the final scenario, Civil War soldiers are confronted by horrors of their own making.
As is the case with almost any anthology, some of the stories are better than others. For me it was the first two tales that really captured me. Clu Gulager, a longtime character actor and father of Feast director John Gulager, stars in this segment as Sidney Burnside. He’s a meek man who has been saddled with his sickly sister (Miriam Byrd-Nethery, Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, Barney Miller) for life. Over time he has fallen in love with the Grace Scott (Megan McFarland) a beautiful young girl who he works with. He’s ecstatic when she agrees to go out on a date with him, but the date goes very, very wrong. Then, when you think that there’s no possible way that this meek fellow will do worse than killing a woman, he goes way worse. In a church. In her coffin. Yeah, it goes there. (I have to kind of imagine at this point in the film that Price had no idea what the stories were really going to be like.) Gulager sells the character perfectly, and when he gets his comeuppance, and let’s face it they all do, it makes you want to clap and cheer. He really sells his incredibly nebbish looking killer in a way I can only compare to the Cereal Convention in Neil Gaimen’s first run of Sandman. I know that’s a strange reference, but anyone who has read that issue will know what I mean.
The second story, about the gambler Jesse Hardwick (Terry Keiser, the titular character in Weekend at Bernie’s) who gets gunned down by some guys that he owes money. Taken in by an old man in the swamp, Felder (Harry Caesar, The Lady Sings the Blues, Breakin’ 2), is nursed back from what should have been a fatal wound. Jesse soon discovers that Felder has a secret to longevity and perhaps even to immortality, and he must have it. It goes without saying that things go bad for Jesse, and when I say bad, I mean real bad. Let’s just say that he had a little research into what it’s like to be a living corpse well before his days as Bernie Lomax. Keiser gives a great despicable performance that again encourages the audience cheer when his fate befalls him. Both Lomax and Keiser’s segments hit the nail on the head and delivered the goods.
Unfortunately, that means that I loved the first half of the film, and was completely flabbergasted and bored with the second half. The third story about a glass eater that tries to get away from his carnival captors and the fourth with Cameron Mitchell as a Civil War soldier whose regiment encounters a cult of war orphans cause the film to run out to steam. The glass eater’s story was ruthlessly melodramatic and only brought up by some nifty practical effects. After the first two tales of murder and vengeance, it felt a little drab. The fourth story, of the cultish kids, definitely had possibilities, but with so little time to explore the story, it did very little for me. Neither one of them I felt packed any kind of punch at the end, and after seeing what the first two were like, I expected the film to continue on the same theme.
That may be my biggest problem with the film. I like some kind of cohesion between the tales either due to the interlocking scenes or dramatically. Price’s scenes seem like they could have been done on an afternoon before the first shot has ever rolled and perhaps the first page written. Director Jeff Burr would go on to do other films like Eddie Presley, Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, and Night of the Scarecrow that I enjoy, but this was his first feature and so I can give him some leeway. I feel safe to say that he directed the crap out of From a Whisper to a Scream, but it didn’t amount to much for me. With the two stories I liked being frontloaded, it took a while to be able to separate them from the bad taste I had in my mouth as the film ended. Once I did, I decided that I would still recommend this film on the basis of just those two segments. There is also more than enough in the last two that they will surely also hit the mark for someone. Just not me.
In the end I’m going to give From a Whisper to a Scream an average grade, but the person that recommended the film is anything but. Not only is Emily reviewing Audrey Rose today at my request, but she’s had great horror coverage all month long. So hop on over there and see what she thought of my recommendation, and next month we’ll be back with another movie swap. (And by that time we’ll have actually met at Horror Hound Weekend, so be prepared for my review to be littered with in-jokes.) Come on back here tomorrow for the second half of my costume retrospective, and don’t forget to get your entries in for the Halloween Top 13: The Remake only 3 days left!
In portions of film between the stories, Vincent Price plays the librarian and historian of Oldfield, a town with a strange and tragic past pervaded by killers and perverts. His own niece had just faced execution for crimes going back to when she committed her first murder at eight years old. A reporter shows up to interview Price‘s character, Julian White, about his niece. Instead, White launches into a series of tales to illustrate how somehow Oldfield breeds these kinds of people. The first is a tale of a mild mannered man driven to obsession and murder that. The second story illustrates how deadly greed can be. That even when some men have everything, they still must have more. In the third, man finds out that he who eats glass should throw no stones, and in the final scenario, Civil War soldiers are confronted by horrors of their own making.
As is the case with almost any anthology, some of the stories are better than others. For me it was the first two tales that really captured me. Clu Gulager, a longtime character actor and father of Feast director John Gulager, stars in this segment as Sidney Burnside. He’s a meek man who has been saddled with his sickly sister (Miriam Byrd-Nethery, Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, Barney Miller) for life. Over time he has fallen in love with the Grace Scott (Megan McFarland) a beautiful young girl who he works with. He’s ecstatic when she agrees to go out on a date with him, but the date goes very, very wrong. Then, when you think that there’s no possible way that this meek fellow will do worse than killing a woman, he goes way worse. In a church. In her coffin. Yeah, it goes there. (I have to kind of imagine at this point in the film that Price had no idea what the stories were really going to be like.) Gulager sells the character perfectly, and when he gets his comeuppance, and let’s face it they all do, it makes you want to clap and cheer. He really sells his incredibly nebbish looking killer in a way I can only compare to the Cereal Convention in Neil Gaimen’s first run of Sandman. I know that’s a strange reference, but anyone who has read that issue will know what I mean.
The second story, about the gambler Jesse Hardwick (Terry Keiser, the titular character in Weekend at Bernie’s) who gets gunned down by some guys that he owes money. Taken in by an old man in the swamp, Felder (Harry Caesar, The Lady Sings the Blues, Breakin’ 2), is nursed back from what should have been a fatal wound. Jesse soon discovers that Felder has a secret to longevity and perhaps even to immortality, and he must have it. It goes without saying that things go bad for Jesse, and when I say bad, I mean real bad. Let’s just say that he had a little research into what it’s like to be a living corpse well before his days as Bernie Lomax. Keiser gives a great despicable performance that again encourages the audience cheer when his fate befalls him. Both Lomax and Keiser’s segments hit the nail on the head and delivered the goods.
Unfortunately, that means that I loved the first half of the film, and was completely flabbergasted and bored with the second half. The third story about a glass eater that tries to get away from his carnival captors and the fourth with Cameron Mitchell as a Civil War soldier whose regiment encounters a cult of war orphans cause the film to run out to steam. The glass eater’s story was ruthlessly melodramatic and only brought up by some nifty practical effects. After the first two tales of murder and vengeance, it felt a little drab. The fourth story, of the cultish kids, definitely had possibilities, but with so little time to explore the story, it did very little for me. Neither one of them I felt packed any kind of punch at the end, and after seeing what the first two were like, I expected the film to continue on the same theme.
That may be my biggest problem with the film. I like some kind of cohesion between the tales either due to the interlocking scenes or dramatically. Price’s scenes seem like they could have been done on an afternoon before the first shot has ever rolled and perhaps the first page written. Director Jeff Burr would go on to do other films like Eddie Presley, Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, and Night of the Scarecrow that I enjoy, but this was his first feature and so I can give him some leeway. I feel safe to say that he directed the crap out of From a Whisper to a Scream, but it didn’t amount to much for me. With the two stories I liked being frontloaded, it took a while to be able to separate them from the bad taste I had in my mouth as the film ended. Once I did, I decided that I would still recommend this film on the basis of just those two segments. There is also more than enough in the last two that they will surely also hit the mark for someone. Just not me.
In the end I’m going to give From a Whisper to a Scream an average grade, but the person that recommended the film is anything but. Not only is Emily reviewing Audrey Rose today at my request, but she’s had great horror coverage all month long. So hop on over there and see what she thought of my recommendation, and next month we’ll be back with another movie swap. (And by that time we’ll have actually met at Horror Hound Weekend, so be prepared for my review to be littered with in-jokes.) Come on back here tomorrow for the second half of my costume retrospective, and don’t forget to get your entries in for the Halloween Top 13: The Remake only 3 days left!
Bugg Rating
For The Love of Price: Shock (1946)
Some romances know not the bounds of time, space, distance, dimension, or the cinema screen. One such romance has occurred between The LBL’s Fran Goria and Vincent Price. Once in a while the pull is just too overwhelming, and Miss Goria must put pen to paper for the love of the man, for the love of his movies…..
Shock (1946) Director: Alfred L. Werker. Writer: Eugene Ling (screenplay). Starring: Vincent Price, Anabel Shaw, and Lynn Bari.
Dr. Richard Cross (Price) is a well respected psychiatrist who has been having an affair with his nurse, Elaine Jordan (Bari). One evening, while at the Hampton Arms Hotel, the two are confronted by Dr. Cross’ wife. An argument ensues, and Dr. Cross kills his wife in a fit of rage. In the adjacent room, Janet Stewart (Shaw) witnesses the scene and goes into a state of shock. Concerned about her condition, Janet’s husband checks her into the local sanitarium, run by Dr. Cross. He uses the opportunity to convince Janet that she is crazy. Dr. Cross and his nurse Elaine plot to kill Janet, the only witness to the Doctor’s crime. They would administer insulin shock treatment, subsequently overdosing the girl on insulin. It was the perfect solution, but will the two be able to carry out yet another murder?
Shock is a lovely little film noir gem. It is a simple tale of murder that ends with a satisfying conclusion. The film was originally a product of 20th Century Fox’s “B” unit. However, Shock did so well that it was bumped up to an “A” picture. It is easy for one to see why the film was so well received at the time. The story was interesting, the film was shot well (although my copy could stand for some digital remastering), and it had a great cast (mostly). Shock was Price’s first solo starring role for 20th Century Fox. He delivered an outstanding performance. Price was totally believable from the burst of anger leading up to the murder, to the guilt and remorse after, to the need to cover his crime, to his reluctance to kill again, to his calm resolve at the end. There was a great range of emotion needed to play Dr. Cross, and Price played it with grace and subtlety. Many criticize Price as an over-actor, but Shock is one film that can prove them wrong. Not only did Price play the role perfectly, but he proved himself as a leading actor.
When Price was first given the script for Shock, the studio asked him and Lynn Bari if they could shoot the film in twenty days and still have it look like a first class production. After reading the script, Price responded “Certainly we can, if you don’t change the script and louse it up for us.” The two actors accepted the challenge, and the film was shot in exactly twenty days. The studio was very pleased with the results.Lynn Bari was great opposite Vincent Price. Her Nurse Jordan was the perfect complement to Price’s Dr. Cross. She went from the caring doctor’s assistant to the evil seductress with ease. Her character kept quietly convincing Dr. Cross to go further and further to cover his crime and it was no surprise that Dr. Cross listened.
Lynn Bari was in many “B” class studio films playing mainly the other woman or the femme fatale. Her curvaceous figure and high cheek boned features helped the type casting I’m sure. Besides acting, Miss Bari was also the second most popular WWII era pin-up model. She was affectionately known as “The Woo Woo Girl” and “The girl with the million dollar figure”. I have to say that I like “The Woo Woo Girl” best of the two nick names. It almost sounds like a bad reference to the female anatomy, and that makes me giggle. “I can almost see her woo woo!” Not that I could find any risqué photos of Miss Bari, on the contrary they were all lovely and tasteful. However I love a good box joke, so my brain automatically went there. I do apologize.
The rest of the cast for Shock was also fabulous, with the exception of Miss Anabel Shaw. Her character spent most of the film unconscious, so it was hard to notice the bad acting, but one scene gave her secret away. Anabel Shaw did well until she had the react to the murder and go into shock. The scene, and the look on her face, was the most over the top piece of hilarity that I have seen in awhile. I hate to admit this, but I had to rewind and watch it several times. Shaw had a few other substantial roles, such as Gun Crazy (1950) and she co-starred with Miss Bari a second time in Home Sweet Homicide (1946). Mostly she played bit parts and uncredited roles. I’m not very surprised after seeing Shock, but I did love how terrible the one scene was.
I truly liked Shock. I always enjoy watching Vincent Price, especially in a performance so different from the norm. Price had an affinity for devilish roles, but he played it so differently this time. He was still a killer, but his performance captured a different kind of monster than in some of his later films. I am not saying that Shock is one of the great Price films, but certainly worth the watch. This film would be a great watch for a Vincent Price fan or a lover of film noir. I know it is “shocking” that I liked Shock!
Dr. Richard Cross (Price) is a well respected psychiatrist who has been having an affair with his nurse, Elaine Jordan (Bari). One evening, while at the Hampton Arms Hotel, the two are confronted by Dr. Cross’ wife. An argument ensues, and Dr. Cross kills his wife in a fit of rage. In the adjacent room, Janet Stewart (Shaw) witnesses the scene and goes into a state of shock. Concerned about her condition, Janet’s husband checks her into the local sanitarium, run by Dr. Cross. He uses the opportunity to convince Janet that she is crazy. Dr. Cross and his nurse Elaine plot to kill Janet, the only witness to the Doctor’s crime. They would administer insulin shock treatment, subsequently overdosing the girl on insulin. It was the perfect solution, but will the two be able to carry out yet another murder?
Shock is a lovely little film noir gem. It is a simple tale of murder that ends with a satisfying conclusion. The film was originally a product of 20th Century Fox’s “B” unit. However, Shock did so well that it was bumped up to an “A” picture. It is easy for one to see why the film was so well received at the time. The story was interesting, the film was shot well (although my copy could stand for some digital remastering), and it had a great cast (mostly). Shock was Price’s first solo starring role for 20th Century Fox. He delivered an outstanding performance. Price was totally believable from the burst of anger leading up to the murder, to the guilt and remorse after, to the need to cover his crime, to his reluctance to kill again, to his calm resolve at the end. There was a great range of emotion needed to play Dr. Cross, and Price played it with grace and subtlety. Many criticize Price as an over-actor, but Shock is one film that can prove them wrong. Not only did Price play the role perfectly, but he proved himself as a leading actor.
When Price was first given the script for Shock, the studio asked him and Lynn Bari if they could shoot the film in twenty days and still have it look like a first class production. After reading the script, Price responded “Certainly we can, if you don’t change the script and louse it up for us.” The two actors accepted the challenge, and the film was shot in exactly twenty days. The studio was very pleased with the results.Lynn Bari was great opposite Vincent Price. Her Nurse Jordan was the perfect complement to Price’s Dr. Cross. She went from the caring doctor’s assistant to the evil seductress with ease. Her character kept quietly convincing Dr. Cross to go further and further to cover his crime and it was no surprise that Dr. Cross listened.
Lynn Bari was in many “B” class studio films playing mainly the other woman or the femme fatale. Her curvaceous figure and high cheek boned features helped the type casting I’m sure. Besides acting, Miss Bari was also the second most popular WWII era pin-up model. She was affectionately known as “The Woo Woo Girl” and “The girl with the million dollar figure”. I have to say that I like “The Woo Woo Girl” best of the two nick names. It almost sounds like a bad reference to the female anatomy, and that makes me giggle. “I can almost see her woo woo!” Not that I could find any risqué photos of Miss Bari, on the contrary they were all lovely and tasteful. However I love a good box joke, so my brain automatically went there. I do apologize.
The rest of the cast for Shock was also fabulous, with the exception of Miss Anabel Shaw. Her character spent most of the film unconscious, so it was hard to notice the bad acting, but one scene gave her secret away. Anabel Shaw did well until she had the react to the murder and go into shock. The scene, and the look on her face, was the most over the top piece of hilarity that I have seen in awhile. I hate to admit this, but I had to rewind and watch it several times. Shaw had a few other substantial roles, such as Gun Crazy (1950) and she co-starred with Miss Bari a second time in Home Sweet Homicide (1946). Mostly she played bit parts and uncredited roles. I’m not very surprised after seeing Shock, but I did love how terrible the one scene was.
I truly liked Shock. I always enjoy watching Vincent Price, especially in a performance so different from the norm. Price had an affinity for devilish roles, but he played it so differently this time. He was still a killer, but his performance captured a different kind of monster than in some of his later films. I am not saying that Shock is one of the great Price films, but certainly worth the watch. This film would be a great watch for a Vincent Price fan or a lover of film noir. I know it is “shocking” that I liked Shock!
For the Love of Price: Champagne for Caesar (1950)
Some romances know not the bounds of time, space, distance, dimension, or the cinema screen. One such romance has occurred between The LBL’s Fran Goria and Vincent Price. Once in a while the pull is just too overwhelming, and Miss Goria must put pen to paper for the love of the man, for the love of his movies…..
Beauregard Bottomley (Colman) is a genius, who is seeking employment at the multi-million dollar Milady Soap Company. The president of Milady Soap is the eccentric Bumbridge Waters (Price). The interview goes badly, and Bottomley wishes to get even. He devises the perfect plan. Every week, Milady Soap sponsors a weekly quiz show, where the prize doubles with every correct answer. Bottomley gets on the show, and he uses his knowledge of everything to take the company for everything that it has.
Champagne for Caesar is a film I picked up a couple of years ago for my collection, but I never got around to watching it. There was always something else to see, and I just wasn’t sure if I would care for it much. It was completely different from the rest of my Price film and frankly it scared me. What if I did not like it? How would that fair to my love of Price? Well, my worries were unfounded. I really enjoyed the black and white comedy, and it taught me to never doubt Mr. Price. I mean, he is my favorite for a reason.
I think I will start by explaining the title of the film. Champagne for Caesar refers to Bottomley’s pet parrot, Caesar. The bird is a bit of an alcoholic, and he is partial to champagne. Beauregard and his sister, Gwen (Britton), found the parrot leaning against a lamppost, drunk, and unable to remember where he lived. The two took the bird in, and tried to wean him off the sauce. Caesar was voiced by Mel Blanc. I doubt that there is anyone who doesn’t know who Mel Blanc is, and all I’ll say is if it was a Warner Brothers cartoon then Blanc did the voices. Caesar was only in a couple of scenes, enough to be cute, but not enough to make the viewer want to kill the bird. Caesar also has one of the best lines in the film. “Polly wants a drink. Lets get loaded.”
Champagne for Caesar is a crisp and clean film. The look, the sound, the feel, and the screenplay are all crisp and clean. It was quite a refreshing comedy satire. Maybe this was because I expected so little, but I was surprised at my joy for it. Director Richard Whorf did a great job; I am surprised that there are so few movies in his filmography. He mostly has TV shows to his credit, but 68 episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies isn’t too shabby.An amazing cast came together for Champagne, but two men really stand out from the crowd (bet you can guess one of them). The lead role of Beauregard Bottomley was played by Ronald Coleman. He was originally a star of silent films, who made the transition to sound with ease. He was also well known on the stage and radio. Colman was one of Vincent Price’s acting idols, and the young star was a bit star struck to be working with such an accomplished actor. In fact, Price originally asked the director to make his first seen with Colman a non speaking one. It was easy to see why Price was so nervous. Colman was a true professional, who really captured the essence of Bottomley. He was a well bred genius and scholar. From his movements to his speech, Colman really embodied Bottomley, and he was just brilliant in this role.
Vincent Price was spectacular in the film as well. He played Bumbridge Waters, president of Milady Soap. Waters is pompous and arrogant man, who would stop at nothing to keep Bottomley from taking the company. Price was great in the role. His comedic timing and delivery was spot on. It was not often that Price was in a comedy without horror overtones, but he seemed very natural in the role. Bumbridge Waters was the role that landed Price his role in in 1985’s The Great Mouse Detective (a fantastic little animated Sherlock Holmes) tale 35 years later. Champagne for Caesar showed off yet another facet of Price’s gem of an acting career.
I was pleasantly surprised by my joy of Champagne for Caesar. While I will be the first admit that I am not well versed on 50’s satire, but I felt the story was original and different. The style and dialogue were wonderful and the cast a delight. Do not let the surface of this film discourage anybody from seeing it. It was just an all around good time and I for one feel like a better person for seeing it.
Price Rating
For the Love of Price: Witchfinder General (1968)
Some romances know not the bounds of time, space, distance, dimension, or the cinema screen. One such romance has occurred between The LBL’s Fran Goria and Vincent Price. Once in a while the pull is just too overwhelming, and Miss Goria must put pen to paper for the love of the man, for the love of his movies…..

Witchfinder General (1968) Directed by Michael Reeves Written by Michael Reeves and Tom Baker (based on a novel by Ronald Bassett) Starring: Vincent Price, Ian Ogilvy, Hillary Dwyer and Robert Russell.
Mathew Hopkins (Price) and his assistant, John Stearne (Russell), travel the country side doing “God’s work”. In this case, “God’s work” is finding, torturing, and killing those accused of witchery. Stearne particularly likes the torture part of the job, especially if ladies are involved. They travel to Brandeston where the local priest, Father Lowes (Rupert Davies), is accused of being Satan’s cohort. Hopkins shows the priest mercy in return for sexual favors from his niece, Sarah (Dwyer). Stearne rapes Sarah while Hopkins is away, and as a result, Hopkins has the priest hanged for witchcraft. When Sarah’s soldier fiancé, Richard Marshal (Ogilvy), hears the news, he makes a vow. He will find the two men and make them answer for their sins.
Witchfinder General a cult classic for two main reasons. First of all, it contains one of Price’s best and most menacing performances, and combined with Michael Reeves’ talent as a director, the film really shines. Not to mention that it is based on a novel about a bit of history. In 1645, during England’s civil war, there was a young man named Mathew Hopkins who traveled the country side convicting and executing witches. He had various tests to look for witchcraft, some of which are seen in the film. Many of these scenes were cut from the English version of the film, but remained intact for the American release. The American release also received a name change to cash in on the Roger Corman/Price/Poe films. The name was changed to Conqueror Worm after a Poe poem, and they cut in Vincent Price giving a reading of the poem over the closing credits.
Michael Reeves was a very promising young director, but sadly, Witchfinder General was his fourth and last film. Reeves’ life was cut short in 1969 from a barbiturates and alcohol overdose. Reeves had three quite successful films under his belt when he took the helm of Witchfinder which included The Sorcerers (1967) with Boris Karloff, She Beast (1966) with Barbara Steele, and Castle of the Living Dead (1964) with Christopher Lee. When he originally took on directing Witchfinder, Reeves envisioned Donald Pleasance in the lead role, and he was none to happy with the casting of Vincent Price. Reeves did not hide his feelings for the actor and the two clashed on set on many occasions. However, they were both professional enough to make a classic film. After Price saw the finished product, he sent Reeves a letter of congrats. In it, he wrote “So, my dear Michael, in spite of the fact that we didn’t get along too well…….I do think that you have made a very fine picture, and what’s more I liked what you gave me to do.” Price also once called the man difficult but brilliant once again proving what a class act Vincent really was.
Perhaps it was the tension on set that caused Price to deliver such a real and raw performance that showcases one of the most memorable roles of the actor’s career. He really had a commanding presence as Mathew Hopkins. There was none of the over-the-top characterizations that most have come to know from Price. His portrayal of Hopkins was as true as it gets, dark and sinister. During the “swimming test” scene, after the three accused witches were fished from the lake, Hopkins looks at the body of the one that drowned and said “She was innocent”. At that moment, I knew this man was pure evil. Price delivered a fierce performance in this role, but the rest of the cast, while all competent, did not reach Price’s level of skill.
Now, I must confess, Witchfinder General is not one of my favorite Vincent Price films. Don’t get me wrong, I like it. Price was spectacular in it. Hollywood even tried to cash in on it again with 1970’s Cry of the Banshee. It starred Price (in a very similar role), and Hillary Dwyer, but alas, it was no Witchfinder General. I have seen this, along with many other witch huntin’ movies, and Witchfinder is by far the best, but I just need more excitement. Perhaps I am biased, but I was never really big on witches anyway. If it were not for Price shining so brightly, I would probably not revisit this one, but he was just so damn great! I definitely think that everybody should see this film, especially a classic film fan or a fellow Vincent Price fan (but they've probably already seen it). Overall, I liked my visit to Brandeston, but I wouldn’t want to live there..... or die there from drowning.
Price Rating

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