By
1963, Roger Corman had directed several successful Edgar Allan Poe adaptations
for American-International Pictures, and was looking to try something a bit
different. The producer-director was a fan of the influential horror writer H.P.
Lovecraft, and suggested the idea of doing a film version of the author’s
novella The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
to his AIP bosses, James Nicholson and Samuel Z Arkoff. While they agreed to
produce the movie, they hedged their bets a little by making the project part of
the Poe series. The movie was eventually titled The Haunted Palace, after a poem written by Poe. At the end of the
film, several lines from that poem were spoken by star Vincent Price. Oddly enough, Poe's name was misspelled in the credits as Edgar Allen Poe!
Debra Paget & Vincent Price |
The Haunted Palace is a moody, strikingly photographed (by Floyd Crosby)
chiller with solid direction by Corman. The
appropriately chilling score for the movie is by Ronald Stein. The cast is especially strong;
in addition to Vincent Price as Charles, and Debra Paget as Anne (in her last
big-screen role), the film also features Lon Chaney, Jr., Leo Gordon, Elisha
Cook, Jr. and Cathie Merchant. Price often gets an (undeserved) bad rap for
being over the top and hammy, but he was a wonderful actor, steeped in the
theatrical tradition in which he was trained. Price knew just when to take it over the top, and when to
dial it down. Here, he's able to convey Charles' internal struggle with subtle gestures and small changes in mood and facial expression, aided by Crosby's effective lighting and use of color. The house itself is like a character in the film, evoking a real feeling of dread, especially that evil painting of Curwen, which almost feels alive.
Roger Corman's The Haunted Palace is an eerie, well-produced thriller that will appeal to fans
of Price, Corman’s Poe series, and Lovecraft aficionados. It’s one of my
favorites of the “Poe” series, and it’s the first (and one of the best) onscreen adaptations of a
Lovecraft work. The film effectively captures the Gothic tone of Poe's fiction and the otherworldly, fantastical elements of Lovecraft's work. AIP would later release a version of Lovecraft’s The Dunwich Horror, directed by
frequent Corman collaborator Daniel Haller. Shout! Factory released an an
excellent Blu-ray of the film as part of their “Vincent Price Collection” a few
years ago, but that box set (like the MGM "Midnite Movies" DVD of the film) is now out of print. The film does show up on various cable stations on occasion, and is worth seeking out. Here’s a link to the trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJT4uD64IZg.
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