The Masque of the Red Death

1964 "Horror has a face."
6.9| 1h30m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 24 June 1964 Released
Producted By: Alta Vista Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A European prince terrorizes the local peasantry while using his castle as a refuge against the "Red Death" plague that stalks the land.

Genre

Drama, Horror

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Director

Roger Corman

Production Companies

Alta Vista Productions

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The Masque of the Red Death Audience Reviews

Plantiana Yawn. Poorly Filmed Snooze Fest.
Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
Mandeep Tyson The acting in this movie is really good.
Fleur Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
jovana-13676 As Guillermo del Toro has said it, RED is the color of ghosts and sin. And no one does the colors better than Nicolas Roeg who photographed this film. It's a feast for the eyes and death comes in bright colors as a mysterious stranger. Vincent Price scares himself to death which is something to look at. Production design is gorgeous. A true artwork from King B!
utahman1971 This is a horror movie and there is not one thing even to think it could be scary. What is wrong with people rating this high for a horror movie. It is like a dramatized play on a movie. I for one as using this movie an example of Price movies, it terrible and boring as heck. I can't see what people would rate this movie so flipping high, and rate actually more talking and action, lower than this movie.This one is not even a bother of watching all the way through. I never liked any of Price movies. Just can't see the fetish of Price. Same goes with John Wayne, and also Elvis Presley and so on. Well, to each their own. Good luck with liking these kind of movies.
GL84 Deciding to visit the countryside towns, an Italian prince throws his annual masquerade ball to overlook his burning a village down to forget the plague ravaging the area only when the party guests start dying, he is forced to come face-to-face with his own personal demons.This one has several built-in pluses working for it being another of the Price/Corman/Poe films. Among the best parts here is that this one continues what occurs in most of the other efforts as it features some great location work. As most of the time is spent with the characters exploring the Gothic, cob-webbed labyrinthine castle, it builds up suspense marvelously through several fun and highly enjoyable scenes. The first trip through the castle, as the character is exploring it for the first time, creating a sense of dread as the build-up to an unexpected moment is clearly within reach with the small little jump at the end a nice topper. The fact that a large portion of the film is built around his treatment and obsession with the girl works well with the different manners he goes about trying to win her approval through his cruel treatments makes for some fun times here, and are given a lot of room to work here with the setting in that particular castle. The beautifully constructed story is as usual based on one of Poe's tales, and it keeps the movie rolling along nicely as a fast-paced film from this time, which is quite nice and it stays close to the story as well. As well, there is plenty to like about this one's main facet with the party scenes. The dagger sequence is as brilliant a display of suspense as ever, and a later dream sequence is also a masterful highlight capturing a striking mood. The last plus here is the film's biggest asset in that it ages a lot better than the others in the series due to it's high production values, beautiful looking scenery, and the occasional shock jump here and there. Of course, all of this is useless without the wonderful as ever Price leading the way with one of greatest performances ever. He truly is magical to behold and this one is no exception. There's really only one complaint about the film, which is quite dependent on many viewer's own issues. This is the fact that the much-rumored party sequence is so late in the movie that it can seem like eternity to get there. Yes, it does move along at a fast enough clip, but it happens so late in the film that it can seem like forever before it happens. It is worth the wait, however, but sometimes it feels like it should've happened earlier. One relatively minor complaint, though, isn't enough to deter this from one of the better Corman/Price/Poe film around.Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and satanic themes and rituals
thefinalcredits "Why should you be afraid to die? Your soul has been dead for a long time."In moving his adaptations of Poe's classic tales of horror to the UK, Corman not only produced his best work, but also benefited greatly from the contributions of the likes of cinematographer, Nicholas Roeg. Loosely based on Poe's work of the same name, the film's screenplay amalgamated strands from two works by the master of horror, while also presenting a celluloid version of a 'morality play' not present in the original story. The presence of Charles Beaumont in the pair of screenwriters, given his prominence in the development of the feel of many episodes of the 'Twilight Zone', lends the movie its surreal yet captivating quality. From the outset, Roeg's influence can be appreciated with the 'Bergmanesque' appearance of Red Death in the mist-laden forest. Indeed, Corman delayed production of this movie due to the similarities to Bergman's 'Seventh Seal'. Moreover, one can witness Roeg's recent experience of working under David Lean on 'Lawrence of Arabia' in his masterful use of editing. Another important British contribution is that of musician and composer, David Lee, whose score for this film would be a career high point for the man responsible for Peter Sellers and Sphia Loren's hit, 'Goodness Gracious me'. It is amazing that this score, which so aptly adorns each scene of the movie, was completed in just three weeks from the man who would become one of the founders of JazzFM. Corman himself belies his reputation as merely a helmer churning out bare-bones 'B-movies' with the sumptuous artistic look of the piece. Though, he could be accused of attributing style more importance here than the pure mechanics of horror, which are given more vent in the rest of his films. The performance of Vincent Price can be ranked as one of his best, portraying the sadistic Prince Prospero, who holds court over the decadence and depravity of his rich guests, taking sanctuary from a pestilent disease decimating the impoverished peasantry outside the castle gates. His despotic nature reveals itself in the callous disregard he has for the lives of his subjects, and the relish he takes in seeking to corrupt the beautiful young ingenue played by Jane Asher, the girlfriend of McCartney at the time. By incorporating Prospero's satanism in the plot, and contrasting it to the young peasant girl's Christian beliefs, the director and screenwriters allow for an opportunity to recast Poe's story as a philosophical treatise on the nature of good versus evil. Price is in his element hinting at the malevolent deity he worships, in one memorable scene, stating: 'If a god of love and life ever did exist...he is long since dead. Someone...something rules in his place'. Prospero's growing fascination with the young girl leads to the growing resentment of the incumbent 'lady' of the castle, succinctly played by horror film regular Hazel Court. Her attempt to maintain her position by fully embracing the prince's satanic beliefs, and then offering herself as bride to his master, leads to a truly memorable dream sequence in which she is repeatedly sacrificed to the shaman priests of various cultures, before her own brutal death. Yet, the most terrifying scene belongs within the sub- plot based on another short story from Poe. In retribution for a mindless assault on his dancer girlfriend by one of the prince's malevolent guests, the court midget, Hop Toad, lulls the perpetrator into performing a party trick which will end in a truly horrific fiery end. In portraying the former, Skip Martin, and the latter, Patrick Magee, respectively complete a solid supporting cast . The denouement of the story is more faithful to Poe's original narrative in establishing that death comes equally to all, with a superb dance macabre where Red Death, voiced superbly by John Westbrook ( am I alone in thinking it was Christopher Lee), passes fatally among the castle guests before revealing his true identity to Prospero himself. The film does have obvious flaws, among which are firstly, the use of a child dubbed with an adult's voice to incarnate the midget dancer, and secondly, the countless opportunities afforded to Prospero to have sport with deciding the fate of the peasant girl's lover and father (played by Nigel West before he achieved more renown). Yet, the lasting impression, down to the final credits, is of a film which should be remembered as demonstrating Corman's unexploited potential as a true auteur.