The Terror (1963)
Dir by (deep breath) Roger Corman (only credited
director), Francis Ford Coppola (!), Jack Hale, Monte Hellman, Jack Hill,
Dennis Jakob, Jack Nicholson
Written by Leo Gordon, Jack Hill
Starring Jack Nicholson, Boris Karloff, Sandra
Knight, Dick Miller, Sandra Neumann
First off --and as near
as I can tell I am the first living person with the particular cross-section of
personality flaws that would allow for the discovery of this fact-- the
establishing shots of the imposing castle punctuated by lightning that begin
THE TERROR are clearly the inspiration for the animated establishing
shot of a isolated castle which was first used in Johnny Quest (which
began production the next year), but subsequently became better known as the
Laboratory of Dr. Weird, South Jersey Shore, in Aqua Teen Hunger Force,
the show so powerful it once shut down the city of Boston.
Behold! |
That might seem like an
odd detail to begin on, but it’s actually the most appropriate starting point
imaginable, because THE TERROR is all about Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. In fact,
that’s how it came to exist in the first place. Having just completed THE RAVEN, Roger Corman decided to take advantage of the fact that the sets had not
yet been torn down and he still had Boris Karloff’s phone number, to shoot two
days of Karloff basically just doing stuff in an impressive (but increasingly
sparsely decorated) castle set, figuring they’d fill in the rest of the plot
later. Karloff was understandably reluctant, but was somehow convinced it would
be an easy payday when he was promised $15,000 once the film had grossed
$150,000. Apparently more of an optimist than his long history in the industry
would lead one to imagine, Karloff somehow thought this was possible (it didn’t
even come close). When three years passed and it became clear Karloff was never
going to see that money, Corman then dangled the offer of finally collecting on
that elusive $15,000 bonus… if Karloff would star in one more
movie for him (which turned out to be 1968’s Peter Bogdanovich-directed
TARGETS). And that’s how Roger Corman turned one castle set into two no-budget
horror thrillers and three Boris Karloff projects (or at least, three films
with Boris Karloff’s name on the poster). Don’t feel bad, Boris, there’s no
shame in losing to the best.
Amazingly, despite all
that, the movie isn’t a total disaster. It’s pretty narratively unfocused, of
course, but it does have a story that, while a bit haphazardly plotted, is at least
vaguely identifiable. Like some of the Italian movies of its era, it gets by on
a kind of hazy dream logic, where nothing exactly makes complete sense in any kind of concrete, rational way, but the broad strokes of the drama are clear enough. It even
builds to a kind of legitimately crazy twist which I gotta admit, I never saw
coming (because it comes out of fucking nowhere and they apparently made it up
in editing when they realized that the movie they had shot made no sense, but
still).
So what is the
story? Uh, that’s a little hard to pin down, exactly. But basically, it
involves a Napoleonic soldier (Jack Nicholson! LITTLE SHOP OF HORROR) who
nearly drowns in the ocean like a damned idiot while pursuing the silent
ghostly apparition of a woman named Helene (Sandra Knight, BLOOD BATH, and
newly married to Nicholson [they would divorce in 1968, the same year Karloff
finally got paid]). It’s immediately obvious to everyone except Nicholson that
Helene is a ghost, but this fucking moron cannot get that fact through his
skull no matter how many times she disappears impossibly right in front of him
or people tell him no, Helene’s been dead for years. So he goes to a nearby
castle occupied by Baron Von Leppe (Boris Karloff, THE RAVEN, THE TERROR,
TARGETS) and demands that he be allowed to stay there until he can find this
mystery girl, despite the fact that the Baron and everybody else tell him
directly that there is no girl there, and this is a private residence and not a
fucking boarding house for horny soldiers trying to bang the local ghostly
co-eds. (Incidentally, this is exactly why we have a Third Amendment in the US
Constitution, so Jack Nicholson can’t just show up at your house and say he’s
gonna hang out there while he tries to seal the deal with the ghost of a dead
queen or whatever). Of course, this inevitably leads to a convoluted mystery
about who Helene is and why she is haunting the place, and I mean really convoluted,
because it involves witchcraft, hypnotism, possession, spousal infidelity, Dick Miller, murder,
mistaken identity, and dissociative identity disorder (all that was a spoiler,
I guess, but good luck trying to figure out how it all fits together. Heck, I
just saw the movie, and even I could barely offer a theory about how exactly it's all supposed to work).
Nicholson is a complete,
unmitigated disaster with the stilted old-fashioned dialogue, which handily
defuses every single one of his strengths as an actor (and has there ever been
a more thoroughly modern actor, less suited to antiquarian affectations, than
Jack Nicholson?) but Karloff, even on set for a scant few days, acting with
only the vaguest hint of a script while the sets were being dismantled around
him, still puts in the effort. He has this little thing he does, where he
mischievously arches one eyebrow, which I am just incapable of not falling for.
It exemplifies exactly why he works here and Nicholson doesn’t; Nicholson is
trying to play a character here, and there’s just nothing for him to work with.
Karloff, on the other hand, is just trying to entertain. “Me, act? I just make
faces,” said his THE RAVEN co-star Peter Lorre,* a cheeky but somewhat revealing insight into the style of acting employed by much of the generation which preceded Nicholson. Karloff, for his part, makes great faces, big
and broad and theatrical but (mostly) without irony. He’s not mugging or
indulging in any kind of arch camp (like his other RAVEN co-star,
Vincent Price), he just figures that hey, the kids paid good money** to see
this turkey, might as well give them the maximum possible acting by volume.
Hell, they even managed to drag the 76-year-old actor (he was born in 1887)
into a fight scene in chest-deep water, which honestly seems like it would
qualify as elder abuse. I guarantee he had no idea what the hell he was doing,
but he always knows to be entertaining, which is every bit what a movie like
this requires.
The movie itself is a
little less lively than Karloff; there’s a little bit of action, a couple minor
setpiece sequences, but mostly it finds a nice groove of spooky, dreamy ghost
story, and parts of it actually look quite nice. There’s a sequence with a
rotating multi-colored lantern that casts different colors on Dick Miller’s
face which would be recycled for Karloff’s CURSE OF THE CRIMSON ALTAR and
probably looks even better here. It’s uneventful and the acting is sometimes a
little dodgy, but it looks suitably stately, and certainly not like a movie
which was thrown together haphazardly in a matter of days just to get some
extra value out of a corny castle set. Hell, there are a dozen major-budget
movies which came out this year which don’t look half as good. It’s twice as
coherent and five times prettier than SUICIDE SQUAD, for example. Not that it’s
a visual feast or anything, it just makes the most of some nice-looking sets
and locations, in classic Corman style doing as much as possible with as few
resources as possible. The huge entrance hall he purloined from THE RAVEN has
been stripped to almost nothing compared with its imposing opulence in that
movie (you really miss the fire-breathing statues, which really tied the place
together in my opinion) but just to make sure the space doesn’t look entirely
drab, Corman or one of his dozen uncredited directors*** sprinkle the
background liberally with brightly colored candlesticks arranged in geometric
formations. It couldn’t have cost more than ten bucks, but exactly the sort of
thing that separates a lazy, monotonous cheap movie from a watchable one.
I’m
not saying it’s a classic or anything, but if you’re a fan of this era of
Corman schlock (it is often grouped with his Poe movies, even though it’s an
outlier which, unlike THE RAVEN or THE HAUNTED PALACE doesn’t even pretend to be based on Poe) it’s got the vibe you want. And hey, that set from THE RAVEN does
look fly as hell. There are certainly worse reasons to make a movie.
*
See Stephen Youngkin’s biography of Lorre, The Lost One: A Life of Peter
Lorre
**
Although you don’t have to, as in their haste to crank THE TERROR out they neglected to
add copyright information to the credits. I highly recommend that you avail
yourself of this very nice-looking youtube version instead of the VHS-quality one that Amazon Prime, with their
usual shamelessness, is trying to hustle as content for their paid service,
the charlatans.
*** The minute budget
precluded Corman himself from directing certain segments as per union rules,
requiring a rotating cast of novices he was mentoring including a very young
Francis Coppola, Monte Hellman, and Jack Hill.
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2017 CHECKLIST!
The Discreet Charm of
the Killing Spree
TAGLINE
|
DRACULA…. FRANKENSTEIN… HOUSE OF WAX… PIT AND
THE PENDULUM… and Now A New Classic Of Horror Comes To The Screen. If you’re
gonna lie, lie big.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
Given its historical French setting, I
genuinely thought this was going to be about either the Reign of Terror or the Great Fear.
But it turns out to be about neither, and no one is ever terrified at any
point (there is a ghost, but Nicholson is horny for her instead of terrified).
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LITERARY ADAPTATION?
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No, which is impressive given that they could
have passed it off as Poe without really losing any more credibility than
they had already lost when they made THE RAVEN about dueling wizards.
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SEQUEL?
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Arguably part of Corman’s loose “Poe Cycle” of
1960-1965, though also arguably not.
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REMAKE?
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None
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COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
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USA
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HORROR SUB-GENRE
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Ghost/ Haunting
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SLUMMING A-LISTER?
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Nicholson and Francis Coppola, very early in
his career
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BELOVED HORROR ICON?
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Karloff, Corman, Dick Miller.
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NUDITY?
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No
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SEXUAL ASSAULT?
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None
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WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
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Hawk attack!
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GHOST/ ZOMBIE / HAUNTED BUILDING?
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Yes
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POSSESSION?
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Some old lady, like, hypnotizes the ghost, I
think?
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CREEPY DOLLS?
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None
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EVIL CULT?
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None, though the implication of witchcraft.
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MADNESS?
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Certainly!
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TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
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No
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VOYEURISM?
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Dick Miller watches some villainous hypnotism
through a window
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MORAL OF THE STORY
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It’s not necrophilia if she’s a ghost
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