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The Haunted Palace

 
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The Haunted Palace

The Haunted Palace

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  • Director: Roger Corman
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Gothic Film, Haunted House Film
  • Themes: Demonic Possession, Witches, Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Vincent Price, Debra Paget, Lon Chaney, Jr., Frank Maxwell, Leo Gordon
  • Release Year: 1963
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 87 minutes

Plot

The Haunted Palace is a witches' brew of stories written by Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft--with the fine hand of sinister scenarist Charles Beaumont stirring the pot. Vincent Price plays two roles this time: A New England doctor burned as a sorcerer in 1745, and the dead man's great-grandson of 1855. Arriving in the village where his grandfather was killed, Price and his bride Debra Paget are shunned by the community. They are told that the mutant progeny of the "sorcerer"'s evil experiments are still roaming the countryside--with hulking manservant Lon Chaney Jr. a good example of these monstrosities. The longer he stays in the family mansion, the more Price is taken over by the spirit of his ancestor. The result: The possessed Price, together with Chaney and a warlock assistant, set about to create a mutant race to overtake the world. Concluding with the near-sacrifice of bride Debra Paget and the torching of the mansion, The Haunted Palace is a marvelous--and economically produced--exercise in Grand Guignol. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

The title of this film is borrowed from Edgar Allan Poe, but the real inspiration was H.P. Lovecraft's fantastic horror epic The Strange Case of Charles Dexter Ward. Whatever the source, this chiller is still considered as part of Roger Corman's "Poe" films and all the usual signs are there: sturdy direction, great sets, spooky atmosphere, and a splendid two-tiered performance by Vincent Price. The actor stars as a good-natured young man whose arrival in a small town to claim his castle inheritance becomes doomed when his body is taken over by a diabolical ancestor. Playing both roles could have looked silly in the hands of the wrong actor, but Price's ability to distinctly shift his facial features from good to sinister really adds power to the character. Another horror great, Lon Chaney Jr. co-stars in a small role as Price's faithful assistant. The special effects are obviously dated, but effective with makeup work on the town's mutants reminiscent of several great Twilight Zone episodes. The major effect comes at the finish with the unveiling of the castle's monster, but the tape/disc must be paused in order to get a clear look since it is only shown in glimpses. There is also a monstrous mutant locked up in one resident's home (this was lifted from Lovecraft's The Dunwich Horror), but it is only shown in silhouette before being burned to death. The screenplay was written by Corman favorite Charles Beaumont, who also scripted the Poe films The Premature Burial and The Masque of the Red Death. The Lovecraft story was remade in 1991 as The Resurrected. ~ Patrick Legare, All Movie Guide

Cast

Elisha Cook, Jr. - Peter Smith; John Dierkes - Jacob West; Harry Ellerbe - Minister; I. Stanford Jolley - Boat Captain; Darlene Lucht - Young Woman Victim; Cathy Merchant - Hester Tillinghast; Barboura Morris - Mrs. Weeden; Milton Parsons - Jabez Hutchinson; Guy Wilkerson - Leach; Bruno Ve Sota - Bartender

Credit

Daniel Haller - Art Director, Marjorie D. Corso - Costume Designer, Roger Corman - Director, Ronald Sinclair - Editor, Ronald Stein - Composer (Music Score), Ted Coodley - Makeup, Floyd D.Crosby - Cinematographer, Roger Corman - Producer, Harry Reif - Set Designer, Charles Beaumont - Screenwriter, H.P. Lovecraft - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

The Abominable Dr. Phibes; Die, Monster, Die!; The Dunwich Horror; From Beyond; Kill, Baby, Kill; The Masque of the Red Death; Re-Animator; The Terror; 13 Ghosts; The Shuttered Room
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Wikipedia: The Haunted Palace
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The Haunted Palace
Directed by Roger Corman
Produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff
James H. Nicholson
Roger Corman
Written by Story:
H. P. Lovecraft
Screenplay:
Charles Beaumont
Starring Vincent Price
Debra Paget
Lon Chaney Jr.
Music by Ronald Stein
Cinematography Floyd Crosby
Editing by Ronald Sinclair
Distributed by American International Pictures
Release date(s) 1963
Running time 87 min.
Country United States USA
Language English

The Haunted Palace (1963) is an American International Pictures horror feature film starring Vincent Price, Lon Chaney Jr., and Debra Paget in a story about a village held in the grip of a cult. The film was directed by Roger Corman, and is usually listed as one in his series of eight films based on the works of American author Edgar Allan Poe. However, the film actually derives its plot from The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, a novella by H. P. Lovecraft. The film's only connection to Poe is its title, which derives from a poem by Poe published in 1839 and later incorporated into his horror tale, "The Fall of the House of Usher".

Contents

Plot

The film starts on a dark, foggy night in 1765. The villagers in the New England town of Arkham are suspicious of the strange goings-on up in the manor overlooking the village. They suspect its inhabitant, Joseph Curwen, of being a warlock. After one of the girls in the village disappears, the terrified townsmen, torches raised, storm the castle and confront its mysterious owner. Convinced the girl has been bewitched, they tie Joseph to a tree outside his manor and burn him alive. Before dying, however, Joseph puts a curse on the men there and on the whole town of Arkham, saying he will rise from the grave years later to torment their descendants.

Flash forward a hundred and ten years in 1875. Charles Dexter Ward and his beautiful wife Anne arrive in Arkham. Charles has inherited the manor of his distant ancestor, the aforementioned Curwen, and has come to see it. The locals are obviously wary and inhospitable to him, as they believe the strange deformities (the couple witnesses a girl with no eyes as they arrive in the estate) the villagers have developed in the years since Joseph Curwen's burning to be part of the curse. They meet them first in the "Burning man" tavern, an ironic prelude for what is to come.

A deformed son is kept locked in a room at Weeden's house is referred as "it" and Weeden mentions that "it knows he has arrived". He refers to it as the "half-witted thing locked in the attic" when speaking to the doctor in the tavern. The couple encounters many deformed villagers missing eyes, limping and with other facial deformities in the village. The doctor reveals that they were gathered by Weeden in an attempt to scare the couple away. He also mentions that Curwen came to the village 150 years ago, making the year of his arrival 1725 and his age at the time abnormal as he appeared to be in his forties.

The Elder Gods are mentioned along with Cthulhu and Yog-Sothoth by the village doctor when he refers to the Necronomicon, along with advice to the couple to leave the village. The doctor also mentions that the villagers believed that Curwen wanted those beings to mate with mortal women to create a new race to rule the world.

There seems to be a creature in the pit under the palace but no information is revealed about it and it exists in the past and in the present. However Curwen mentions Torquemada the fifteenth century inquisitor and the palace may have been moved from Europe "stone by stone" as Weeden states in the tavern, perhaps Spain.

Once at the manor they meet the creepy housekeeper Simon Orne. Simon seems to know more than he's telling, but Charles is more interested in the eerie painting of Curwen, hanging over the mantle. That night he is overtaken by the spirit of his dead warlock ancestor as he gazes into the portrait and recognizes the caretaker for who he really is, his old assistant which informs him that 110 years have passed. His first step upon his return is to take revenge on the descendants of his murderers. Joseph has their names on a paper list which he tears as each one is slain. Weeden falls into the fireplace with his deformed son that Joseph releases. The second victim, Gideon, is doused in gasoline, burned alive as well. At the same time he succeeds in resuscitating his long dead mistress, using the infamous Necronomicon and even digs her corpse out of the grave to accomplish this. At first his hold on Charles is limited to the night, but as time goes on he grows stronger, eventually being in complete control. His wife, noticing the changes in her beloved husband, seeks solace in the advice of the town doctor, the one reasonable man in the village. Eventually he realizes what the possessed Charles is trying to do and foils him by burning the portrait of the dead warlock. Escaping the flames of the burning palace, Anne breathes a sigh of relief, believing the terror is finally over. But as the camera fades on Charles we realize that Joseph Curwen still inhabits his mind.

The creature in the pit

A creature with green skin, two arms, and two more limbs in his upper body seems to inhabit the pit in the underground chamber of the palace since at least 1765 and is shown three times in the film. Mortals are sacrificed to this being. The creature has huge black eyes with no pupils and growls incoherently.

Characters and cast

Characters are used anachronistically and the descendants of the past events are portrayed by the same actors.

  • Joseph Curwen/Charles Dexter Ward portrayed by Vincent Price
  • Anne, Ward's wife portrayed by Debra Paget
  • Hester Tillinghast, Curwen's mistress and Weeden's betrothed, portrayed by Cathie Merchant
  • Dr. Willet/Priam Willet portrayed by Frank Maxwell
  • Simon Orne portrayed by Lon Chaney Jr.
  • Jabez Hutchinson portrayed by Milton Parsons
  • Ezra Weeden and his wife portrayed by Leo Gordon and Barboura Morris
  • Gideon Leach/Mr. Leach portrayed by Guy Wilkerson
  • Bruno portrayed by Bruno VeSota

Production notes

Roger Corman, at the time famous for his Poe-based horror films, wanted to do something different with The Haunted Palace by doing a Lovecraft story. American International Pictures had the name changed, against Corman's wishes, to keep in line with the popular Poe series. The only connection the film has with the poem is a brief quotation at the end of the film spoken by Vincent Price.

Francis Ford Coppola provided additional dialogue for the film.

The set for the village of Arkham was quite small, but was built in forced perspective so that it appeared on camera to cover more ground. Both the front of the palace and the underground dungeon appear in Corman's The Terror, which at that time was being shot piecemeal on sets from other AIP movies.

Reception

Awards and nominations

Trivia

Clips from The Haunted Palace are among the stock footage from various Corman features used for the 1974 Vincent Price film Madhouse, in which he plays a horror movie actor. The clips are presented as the early work of Price's character.

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Haunted Palace" Read more