- Tales from the Crypt (film)
Infobox Film
name = Tales from the Crypt
caption = Theatrical release poster
director =Freddie Francis
producer =Milton Subotsky Max Rosenberg
writer =Milton Subotsky (screenplay)
starring =
distributor =20th Century Fox
released =March 8 ,1972
runtime = 92 min.
language = English
budget =
music =
amg_id = 1:48498
imdb_id = 0069341
|"Tales from the Crypt" is a British
horror movie , made in 1972 byAmicus Productions . It is ananthology film consisting of five separate segments, based on stories fromEC Comics . Only two of the stories, however, are actually from EC's "Tales from the Crypt". The reason for this, according to "Creepy" founding editorRuss Jones , is that Amicus producerMilton Subotsky did not own a run of the original EC comic book but instead adapted the movie from the two paperback reprints given to him by Jones. The story "Wish You Were Here" was reprinted in the paperback collection "The Vault of Horror" (Ballantine, 1965). The other four stories in the movie were among the eight stories reprinted in "Tales from the Crypt" (Ballantine, 1964).In the film, five strangers encounter the mysterious
Crypt Keeper (Ralph Richardson ) in acrypt , and he tells each in turn the manner of their death. Richardson's hooded Crypt Keeper, more somber than the EC original (as illustrated byAl Feldstein and Jack Davis), has a monk-like appearance and resembles EC's GhouLunatics. However, in the EC horror comics, the other horror hosts (the Old Witch and the Vault Keeper) wore hoods, while the Crypt Keeper did not.The screenplay was adapted into a tie-in novel by Jack Oleck, "Tales from the Crypt" (Bantam, 1972). Oleck, who wrote the novel "Messalina" (1950), also scripted for EC's Picto-Fiction titles, "Crime Illustrated", "Shock Illustrated" and "Terror Illustrated". A sequel, "The Vault of Horror", was released in 1973.
ynopsis
Five strangers go with a tourist group to view old
cave s. Separated from the main group, they find themselves in a room with the mysterious Crypt Keeper, who details how each of the strangers will die....And All Through the House (
The Vault of Horror #35) - After Joanne Clayton (Joan Collins ) kills her husband onChristmas Eve , she prepares to hide his body but hears aradio announcement stating that a homicidal maniac (Oliver MacGreevy) is on the loose. She sees the maniac outside her house but can't call the police because of her husband's body. The segment ends with the maniac, dressed asSanta Claus , being let into the house by Joanne's little daughter. He strangles Joanne to death.Reflection of Death (
Tales from the Crypt #23) - Carl Maitland (Ian Hendry) abandons his family to be with Susan Blake (Angela Grant). After they drive off together, they are involved in a car accident. He wakes up in the wrecked car and attempts to hitchhike home, but no one will stop for him. Arriving at his house, he sees his wife (Susan Denny) with another man. He knocks on the door, but she screams and slams the door. He visits Susan at her apartment and learns she is blind. She tells him that two years have passed since the accident, which blinded her and resulted in his death. Maitland looks in a mirror and realizes he is dead. Awakening in the car with Susan, he knows the experience was only a dream -- but then sees that he is just about to really crash the car.In the third segment, "Poetic Justice" ("
The Haunt of Fear " #12, March-April 1952), Edward Elliott (David Markham) and his son James (Robin Phillips) are a snobbish pair who resent their neighbour, retired garbage man Arthur Grymsdyke (Peter Cushing ) who owns a number of animals and entertains children in his house. To get rid of what they see as a blight on the neighborhood, they push Grymsdyke into a frenzy by conducting asmear campaign against him, first resulting in the removal of his beloved dogs, and later exploiting parents' paranoiac fears aboutchild molestation . A kindly widower, Grymsdyke commits suicide after receiving hateful valentines. He believes they were sent by all of the neighborhood, but in truth, they came from James. Returning from the grave on Valentine's Day, one year later, Grymsdyke kills the son by ripping his heart out and inserting it into a valentine left for the father."
Wish You Were Here " ("The Haunt of Fear" #22, November-December 1953), is a variation onW. W. Jacobs ' famed short story "The Monkey's Paw ." Businessman Ralph Jason (Richard Greene) is close to financial ruin. His wife Enid (Barbara Murray ) discovers a Chinesefigurine and wishes for a fortune. Ralph is killed on the way to collect it. She uses her second wish to bring him back to the way he was just before the accident but learns that his death was due to a heart attack (caused by a skeletal ghoul, who follows Ralph on a motorcycle and ultimately scares him to death, as a result of the figurine). When she once again wishes for him to be brought back to life, she finds she has trapped him in eternal pain because his body had been embalmed; this actually presents a possible plot hole, as the spouse had wished earlier that her husband would be back the way he was immediately before the accident. Therefore, Ralph's body should have been restored by that wish to a state where his body had not been embalmed (since obviously he was not embalmed before the car accident).In the final segment, "Blind Alleys" ("Tales from the Crypt" #46, February-March 1955), Major William Rogers (
Nigel Patrick ), the new director of a home for the blind, makes drastic financial cuts, reducing heat and rationing food for the residents, while he lives in luxury with Shane, hisGerman Shepherd . When he ignores complaints, the blind residents exact revenge by constructing in the basement a maze of narrow corridors lined with razor blades. They starve the Major's dog, place the Major in the maze's centre, release the dog and turn off the basement lights.After completing the final tale, the Crypt Keeper reveals that he was not warning them of what would happen, but telling them what had happened, they had all committed their various sins and died their various ways. Clues to this "twist" can be spotted throughout the film, including Joan Collins' character wearing the brooch her husband had given her for Christmas just before she killed him. The door to
Hell opens, and the visitors all enter. "And now... who is next?" asks the Crypt Keeper, who then turns to face the camera and says, slowly and melodramatically, "Perhaps "you"?"DVD Release
"Tales From The Crypt" along with the sequel, "The Vault of Horror", was released on a double feature DVD on
September 11 2007 .Connections to the TV Series
"All Through the House", "Blind Alleys", and "Wish You Were Here" were all somewhat adapted into episodes for the "Tales From the Crypt" television show. "Blind Alley" and "Wish You Were Here" were both changed.
"Blind Alleys" was now about a beautiful blind girl who comes to live at the house, where the sadistic director tries to sexually assault her. In the end, she and the other residents take their revenge on the director in the same fashion as in the original story.
"Wish You Were Here" became "Last Respects" and served as a type of loose sequel to the original story. The statue was changed back into a monkey's paw, and the story now deals with three sisters come in possession of it. One wishes for a million pounds, and she and the second sister are in a car crash where she dies, and her life insurance policy is for one million pounds. When the third sister wishes that the dead sister was the way she was just before the crash, she learns that she was actually killed by the second sister. In a form of revenge, the third sister gives her last wish to her sister, but she did not say "which" sister she wanted to give it to, beating the monkey's paw at its own game. The wish is transferred to the dead sister, who comes back to kill the second sister.
External links
*
* [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1020820-tales_from_the_crypt/ Tales from the Crypt] atRotten Tomatoes
* [http://movies2.nytimes.com/mem/movies/review.html?title1=&title2=Tales%20from%20the%20Crypt%20%28Movie%29&reviewer=VINCENT%20CANBY&pdate=19720309&v_id=48498 "New York Times": Vincent Canby review]
* [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19720315/REVIEWS/203150301/1023 "Chicago Sun Times": Roger Ebert review]
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