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6.8/10
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An avant-garde take on Poe's classic story of a traveller taking shelter at a household under a mysterious curse.An avant-garde take on Poe's classic story of a traveller taking shelter at a household under a mysterious curse.An avant-garde take on Poe's classic story of a traveller taking shelter at a household under a mysterious curse.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
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Did you know
- Alternate versionsIn 1972, Film Archives Company copyrighted a version with a music score, presented by Raymond Rohauer.
- In 2000, the National Film Preservation Foundation issued a 4-disk boxed DVD containing this movie with a music score, and running 13 minutes. This film was preserved by the George Eastman House.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Fractured Flickers: Anna Maria Alberghetti (1963)
Featured review
This unusual and memorable movie version of Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher" has some creative details, and although it is one of the more obscure versions of the story, it offers a distinctive look at a couple of its many interesting aspects. The style is deliberately murky, and it has not so much as an inter-title, so that you do need to know at least the basic plot in order to understand what is happening.
The original story is psychologically provocative and often uncomfortable, even by Poe's usual standards, and this adaptation is pretty successful in using symbolism and visual images to bring out various aspects of the mental disorientation and dread that the characters struggle with. You can watch it a couple of times and still notice new details that the film-makers inserted at various points. It focuses particularly on the peculiarly complex relationship between Roderick and Madeline, with the narrator of the original story much less prominent here.
Poe's fascinating short story has been the source for many different movie versions, and Jean Epstein made a particularly good one in the same year as this feature. This Watson/Webber version, with its short length and its avant-garde approach, is hard to compare with the full-length versions. For what it tries to do, though, it works pretty well.
The original story is psychologically provocative and often uncomfortable, even by Poe's usual standards, and this adaptation is pretty successful in using symbolism and visual images to bring out various aspects of the mental disorientation and dread that the characters struggle with. You can watch it a couple of times and still notice new details that the film-makers inserted at various points. It focuses particularly on the peculiarly complex relationship between Roderick and Madeline, with the narrator of the original story much less prominent here.
Poe's fascinating short story has been the source for many different movie versions, and Jean Epstein made a particularly good one in the same year as this feature. This Watson/Webber version, with its short length and its avant-garde approach, is hard to compare with the full-length versions. For what it tries to do, though, it works pretty well.
- Snow Leopard
- Aug 18, 2005
- Permalink
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- Also known as
- La caída de la casa de Usher
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime13 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Fall of the House of Usher (1928) officially released in Canada in English?
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