TWICE TOLD TALES-1963-This trio of tales are
based on stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne and were probably made to
cash in on AIP's successful Corman/Poe series (TALES OF TERROR was
released the year before). While director Sidney Salkow is no Roger
Corman, he does a capable job on such a noticeably low budget. And he
got “Poe” star Vincent Price to be in all three segments! (He's
also the narrator)
In “Dr. Heidegger's Experiment”,
the old doctor of the title (Sebastian Cabot) celebrates his over 40
year friendship with Alex Melbourne (Price) but the doc still pines
for his lost love Sylvia (Mari Blanchard) who died on their wedding
night. When a storm damages her tomb, the duo investigates and finds
her ancient body preserved with no signs of decay. After some
experimentation, Dr. H. finds that the water seeping into her tomb is
actually some kind of eternal youth serum. He and his friend drink it
and become young again. The doctor decides to use the serum on his
dead wife. He brings her back to life with tragic (but predictable)
results.
Next is “Rappacino's Daughter”,
where a once famous scientist (Price again) has made his daughter
(Joyce Taylor) poisonous through the infusion of a deadly plant into
her blood stream (or something like that). Anything she touches dies.
He has presumably done this to “protect her from sin” after his
own wife's infidelity. A young medical student (Price's RETURN OF THE
FLY co-star Brett Halsey) falls in love with her. The scientist
tricks the student into becoming poisonous too. The student's
professor (Abraham Sofaer) creates a serum that might cure them. The
deadly love birds drink it and die. The scientist commits suicide.
The final segment is a truncated
version of the novel “The House of Seven Gables”, a version of
which Price co-starred in in the 1940's.
Jerold Pyncheon (Price of course) and his wife Alice (Beverley
Garland) return to the haunted house he grew up in and where every
male Pyncheon has died. Jerold wants a treasure hidden in a secret
vault but a family foe Jonathan Maulle (Richard Denning) stands in
his way. Alice becomes possessed by the spirit of a woman who once
loved a Maulle ancestor, who was hung by a Pyncheon ancestor. When
Jerold's sour puss sister (Jacqueline DeWit) says she deserves a
share of the elusive booty he kills her and then buries Alice alive!
After finding the treasure he's strangled by a skeleton hand.
Somehow Maulle rescues Alice as the House of Seven Gables crumbles. Gene Roth has a small role as a cab
driver.
Screenwriter/producer Robert E. Kent
worked with Edward L. Cahn on some of the best horror/Sci-Fi movies
of the '50's (IT! THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE, INVISIBLE INVADERS).
Despite it's budgetary drawbacks TTT is entertaining. Director
Sidney Salkow worked with Price again when he co-directed LAST MAN ON
EARTH.
Thanks for reading!
Thanks for reading!
1 comment:
Yeah this was at least decent. I liked the middle story the most but Price keeps them all watchable, of course!
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