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Pit and the Pendulum (1961)

Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
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American-International's standing "haunted castle" set is exhibited to peak advantage in Roger Corman's Pit & the Pendulum. Save for the climax, Richard Matheson's script bears but little resemblance to the Edgar Allen Poe original, though there are pronounced echoes throughout of Poe's The Premature Burial. Vincent Price stars as Nicholas Medina, the son of a notorious Spanish Inquisition torturer. Nicholas' wife Elizabeth (Barbara Steele) has died under mysterious circumstances, prompting Elizabeth's brother Francis (John Kerr) to arrive at the Medina castle to investigate. The tormented Medina believes that Elizabeth was buried alive, and is convinced that he can hear his wife's voice calling out to him. In truth, Elizabeth has faked her death, part of a plan concocted with her lover Dr. Leon (Anthony Carbone) to drive Medina mad. She succeeds in this goal (albeit to her own grief, as the film's very last shot reveals), pushing Medina over the brink. Convinced that he's his own father, Medina dons Inquisition robes, straps Francis to a table, and arranges for a huge steel-bladed pendulum to slowly, slooooowwly descend on his helpless victim. You'd never know that Pit & The Pendulum was shot on the budget and schedule of a B western; the film is consistently good to look at, with eerily evocative color camerawork (Floyd Crosby) and sumptuous art direction. Stock footage of the climactic torture sequence would later find its way into the 1966 spy spoof Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, which also starred Vincent Price. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Vincent PriceJohn Kerr, (more)
Director(s):
Roger Corman
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Pit and the Pendulum

American-International's standing "haunted castle" set is exhibited to peak advantage in Roger Corman's Pit & the Pendulum. Save for the climax, Richard Matheson's script bears but little resemblance to the Edgar Allen Poe original, though there are pronounced echoes throughout of Poe's The Premature Burial. Vincent Price stars as Nicholas Medina, the son of a notorious Spanish Inquisition torturer. Nicholas' wife Elizabeth (Barbara Steele) has died under mysterious circumstances, prompting Elizabeth's brother Francis (John Kerr) to arrive at the Medina castle to investigate. The tormented Medina believes that Elizabeth was buried alive, and is convinced that he can hear his wife's voice calling out to him. In truth, Elizabeth has faked her death, part of a plan concocted with her lover Dr. Leon (Anthony Carbone) to drive Medina mad. She succeeds in this goal (albeit to her own grief, as the film's very last shot reveals), pushing Medina over the brink. Convinced that he's his own father, Medina dons Inquisition robes, straps Francis to a table, and arranges for a huge steel-bladed pendulum to slowly, slooooowwly descend on his helpless victim. You'd never know that Pit & The Pendulum was shot on the budget and schedule of a B western; the film is consistently good to look at, with eerily evocative color camerawork (Floyd Crosby) and sumptuous art direction. Stock footage of the climactic torture sequence would later find its way into the 1966 spy spoof Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, which also starred Vincent Price. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
80 mins

Complete Cast of Pit and the Pendulum


Director(s):
Roger Corman
Writer(s):
Richard Matheson
Producer(s):
Roger Corman
Categories:
Horror
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    Clayton M.

    A spooky castle - Dark passages - A torture chamber - Buried alive. All with Vincent Price and Barbara Steele. This is a treasure. It is the second of the Roger Corman/Vincent Price Poe series which brought Edgar Allan Poe to a whole generation. This outdid House of Usher and is probably the best of the series (which is saying a lot). Not to be missed by anyone who wants to see horror done with style and imagination instead of an axe and spurting blood.

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    Craig A.

    I remember when i was younger watching this movie on the late night Creature Features in my Hometown outside Chicago. It is a really well made movie that takes place in a creepy castle on the edge of a fierce seaside with dark corridors, torture chambers and a good plot. And of course the Great Vincent Price. A Great Popcorn Classic.

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    CHRISTOPHER W.

    Fantastic film. Doesn't follow Poe but does a great job on it's own.

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