Film Review
With
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965) proving such a hit at the box office it is perhaps surprising
that Amicus waited as long as two years before releasing their next
portmanteau horror film. Maybe it was the company's lack of
success with one-story films that led the company to return to the
anthology format with
Torture Garden,
another macabre compendium of low budget horror and suspense.
Having recently scripted one of Amicus's most critically reviled films,
The Deadly Bees (1966), the
writer Robert Bloch redeems himself with a series of ingenious tales
that range from the patently absurd (a head-eating cat and homicidal
piano) to the deliciously creepy (cybernetic film stars and Edgar Allen
Poe reincarnated as Faust).
Although it probably deserves its reputation as the weakest of Amicus's
portmanteau films,
Torture Garden
offers an abundance of thrills and surprises, and Bloch's penchant for
jet black comedy is never out of sight for long. Bloch's lack of
experience as a screenwriter shows in the poor pacing of the first two
stories but the author is back on form for the fourth, which is
arguably the weirdest, most unsettling tale of any horror anthology
film. What a stroke of genius: to put Edgar Allen Poe in an story
which he may well have written! The graveyard-scented poetry of this
diabolically eccentric segment is heightened by the compelling
performances from the two actors who carry it, Jack Palance and Peter
Cushing. As ever, it is the ungainly framing story that is the
weakest link, and even with Burgess Meredith's delightfully
over-the-top presence it proves to be an unwelcome distraction.
Amicus would do much better with its subsequent portmanteau films, but
Torture Garden has what it takes to
make it a guilty pleasure. Believe me, you'll never look at Tom Cruise again
in the same light.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Freddie Francis film:
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)
Film Synopsis
Dr Diabolo lures five strangers into his fairground show, offering them
each a glimpse of their future if they will stare into the Shears of
Fate. Colin Williams is the first to volunteer and sees himself
visiting an elderly uncle in an attempt to extort cash from him.
The old man dies before he can reveal the location of his stash of gold
coins, leading Colin to unearth a coffin in the cellar containing a
cat. The feline apparition offers to reward Colin if he will feed
him - on human heads. Next, Carla Hayes, an ambitious young
actress, learns the secret of why Hollywood film stars never seem to
age, and suffers the same fate. Carla's friend Dorothy Endicott
sees an even grimmer future for herself as she learns that the one
thing a girl must never do is to get between a world-class pianist and
his piano. Victim number four, Ronald Wyatt sees that he is
prepared to sell his soul in order to complete his collection of Edgar
Allan Poe artefacts - with Poe himself! Is this a harmless
sideshow or is there more to Dr Diabolo than we
imagine?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.