A psychiatrist investigates a man possessed by a spirit living in an antique mirror that can bring dead people back to life.A psychiatrist investigates a man possessed by a spirit living in an antique mirror that can bring dead people back to life.A psychiatrist investigates a man possessed by a spirit living in an antique mirror that can bring dead people back to life.
- Barbara Anholt
- (as Lynda Day)
- Ingrid Dorne
- (as Katharine Woodville)
- Boy on Bench
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaNBC World Premiere Series, Fear No Evil was the first Movie of the Week (MOW).
- Quotes
Myles Donovan: How do you see yourself? As white magic fighting black? Good against Evil?
Dr. David Sorell: Against you, yes. Against this - thing - you've done.
Myles Donovan: Do you understand what evil really is? Because it's won it's case, doctor. I mean, one worships the all powerful if one worships at all. Look at the misery of our world, the agony and the suffering. Can you doubt that Satan leaped from heaven, not as the vanquished, but as the victor? And gave us science, the destroyer, my own particular shrine. We're all hostages of hell, doctor! All we can do is cry for mercy. Do you deny my logic?
Dr. David Sorell: Your case fails.
Myles Donovan: Prove it.
Dr. David Sorell: Life is a denial. What you worship is death.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Ritual of Evil (1970)
The film has a nicely creepy feel, befitting the studio (Universal) that brought the world so many classic horror films during the 30's.
Also, the score by Billy Goldenberg is effectively spooky, especially the scene wherein the entranced George descends from the stairs to be "rejoined" with her deceased husband.
"Fear No Evil" yielded a sequel a year later, the somewhat weaker "Ritual of Evil" with Jourdan returning in the lead role.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1