TORTURE GARDEN-1967-Five people visit
Dr. Diablo's Torture Garden at a carnival. After Diablo (Burgess
Meridith) shows them a recreation of an electric chair execution he
introduces them to a statue of Atropus, the goddess of destiny. Then
he invites each of them to stare at the statue and a tale featuring
them is conveyed.
In “Enoch” a neer do well (Michael
Bryant) kills his old uncle (Maurice Denham) to get his hidden money
but instead he comes under the supernatural influence of a cat named
Bathaza! It makes him kill people so it can it their brains! He winds
up beheaded in a jail cell. Niall McManus (CURSE OF THE DEMON) plays
his doctor.
“Terror Over Hollywood” takes place
in Tinseltown where actress Clara Hayes (Beverly Adams) becomes
involved with a former matinee idol Bruce Benton (Robert Hutton) who
is literally an 'immortal” star thanks to a weird
surgeon who in the end makes Clara a “living doll”.
In “Mr. Steinway” a woman (Ursula
Howells) falls in love with a brilliant but lonely pianist named Leo
(John Standing) who's piano seems to be possessed by his dead mother.
When the two become lovers the piano pushes her out a window!
In “The Man Who Collected Poe”, an
American book collector Ronald Wyatt (Jack Palance) wants a rare
Edgar Allan Poe book owned by English Poe collector Kanning (Peter
Cushing). Kanning has quite a collection. In fact the real Poe is
alive in his basement after making a deal with the devil! This has a
weird “huh?” ending.
The framing sequence also has a nice
twist ending involving a another patron (Michael Ripper) where after
Diablo reveals his real identity (can ya guess?) to the viewing
audience.
TORTURE GARDEN was the first of a
series of anthology films Robert Bloch wrote for Amicus, the main
rival to Hammer in the 1960's (he'd already done THE PSYCHOPATH and
THE DEADLY BEES for them). The stories themselves aren't that great
but they are weird enough (a cat that eats brains, a killer piano,
Poe still alive). Director Freddie Francis (who worked on several
other Amicus anthologies written by Bloch) keeps things moving but
the acting makes up for any plot faults.
Thanks for reading!
2 comments:
This definitely wasn't my favorite anthology from that time but it was still OK. Funny back then most of the even the lesser films had some merit, unlike today.
Wow! You're absolutely right!
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