IMDb RATING
6.4/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
A man's obsession with his dead wife drives a wedge between him and his new bride.A man's obsession with his dead wife drives a wedge between him and his new bride.A man's obsession with his dead wife drives a wedge between him and his new bride.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Maxwell Craig
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
Anthony Lang
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
Del Watson
- Footman
- (uncredited)
Fred Wood
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
Awesome poster, solid movie
At one point in this film Vincent Price says 'Christopher, not ten minutes ago I tried to kill a stray cat with a cabbage'. Now, I think that is a pretty good reason alone to watch this movie but if that's not enough for you well, its another Roger Corman gothic horror starring Vincent the magnificent, based loosely on an Edgar Allen Poe story. There's nice sets and locations, lush cinematography, an above average script and Price doing what he does best, as well as vegetable-based violence directed at felines.
One of the better entries in the series
One of the Roger Corman/Vincent Price 'Poe collaborations', based on Poe's short story Ligeia. Price plays Verden Fell, a man who believes himself haunted by the spirit of his dead wife. When Fell remarries, his new wife also feels Ligeia's presence - which she believes is trying to kill her. Ultimately, Fell must face Ligeia - whether real, or just a manifestation of his obsession - and purge her from his life.
Price is on form. Elizabeth Shepherd does well in the dual roles of Ligeia and new wife, Rowena. Filmed in England, several British character actors (Derek Francis, Richard Vernon, Frank Thornton) make welcome appearances, and Castle Acre Priory in Norfolk serves as a picturesque and atmospheric location. Corman's direction is tight, maintaining an underlying sense of unease, building to a fiery climax. 7/10.
Price is on form. Elizabeth Shepherd does well in the dual roles of Ligeia and new wife, Rowena. Filmed in England, several British character actors (Derek Francis, Richard Vernon, Frank Thornton) make welcome appearances, and Castle Acre Priory in Norfolk serves as a picturesque and atmospheric location. Corman's direction is tight, maintaining an underlying sense of unease, building to a fiery climax. 7/10.
Stylish but ponderous
"Ligeia" is one of my very favorite E.A. Poe stories, a masterpiece of suspense that doesn't reveal its secret until the very last word. Like a lot of Poe's stories, however, the transformation to the screen isn't always an easy one. A great deal of the action in the short story takes place in the narrator's head, and to make a feature length movie out of it there must be some added action and characters.
The screenwriter here, Robert Towne, would go on to bigger and better things and garner fame and awards while doing it. But this early script of his is a rather modest one. The action drags more and more as the film goes on and the sense of horror and tension dissipates rather than builds as the film progresses. Plus there's that annoying black cat (left over from another Poe story, perhaps?)
What points this movie does get are for style. Roger Corman wasn't a schlock director by any means; he had a great eye and and gave his films a distinctive look and feel. The cast is a very good one as well. Vincent Price does the usual fine job we expect from him and I liked actress Elizabeth Shepard as the Lady Rowena, Price's wife who succeeds Ligeia. I wasn't familiar with her before seeing this movie and I found her very watchable. But 'The Tomb of Ligeia' is hardly classic Poe or a memorable horror film. But fans of Corman and the Hammer Films type of productions may want to see it.
The screenwriter here, Robert Towne, would go on to bigger and better things and garner fame and awards while doing it. But this early script of his is a rather modest one. The action drags more and more as the film goes on and the sense of horror and tension dissipates rather than builds as the film progresses. Plus there's that annoying black cat (left over from another Poe story, perhaps?)
What points this movie does get are for style. Roger Corman wasn't a schlock director by any means; he had a great eye and and gave his films a distinctive look and feel. The cast is a very good one as well. Vincent Price does the usual fine job we expect from him and I liked actress Elizabeth Shepard as the Lady Rowena, Price's wife who succeeds Ligeia. I wasn't familiar with her before seeing this movie and I found her very watchable. But 'The Tomb of Ligeia' is hardly classic Poe or a memorable horror film. But fans of Corman and the Hammer Films type of productions may want to see it.
builds scarily
Very fine Poe adaptation. I had always reckoned Masque of the Red Death, from the same period to be far superior, but not so. Viewed again this is very well put together, especially the first half, which is really only setting the scene for the Poe tale to be told. Not quite as stylish as the aforementioned film, this is still, nevertheless, possessed of a very strong dream like quality and builds scarily as doors rattle, animals squawk and the inevitable black cat scrambles, leaps and screeches. Wonderful setting of Castle Acre Priory helps give the film greater authenticity and Corman mixes the Shepperton Studio interiors well with the beautiful Norfolk countryside and the marvellous grandiose priory remains. I don't know why the tomb of the title had to be so shining white and new looking but never mind, a really good Corman outing with excellent performances from Price and the leading lady Elizabeth Shepherd, who regrettably seems to have otherwise worked almost exclusively in television. She has real presence here in a double role successfully mixing the seductiveness of Lady Rowena and the satanic steel of Ligeia.
Corman's best?
Of all the collaborations between director Roger Corman and sensuous, creepy actor Vincent Price, this is probably their best. There's the small cast of characters, mainly Ligeia, buried in a marble tomb in the grounds of a sinister old abbey, Rowena, a lady horserider looking for someone she can be 'drawn' to who is more interesting than her beau Christopher, and Verdon, Ligeia's bereaved husband, with his black shades and mood swings. There's also a cat. And this cat is really the true star of the film, watching, attacking, influencing.
The film benefits from its heavy use of locations, and makes it stand apart from the studio interiors of other adaptations. This is a decadent, decaying England with strange happenings and curses. It is a superb film, and lifts the Shepperton Poe adaptations to a new level.
The film benefits from its heavy use of locations, and makes it stand apart from the studio interiors of other adaptations. This is a decadent, decaying England with strange happenings and curses. It is a superb film, and lifts the Shepperton Poe adaptations to a new level.
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Roger Corman has referred to this movie as the biggest and most exciting of all his Edgar Allan Poe adaptations.
- GoofsIn spite of continued reference to his aversion to sunlight, Verden Fell neither wears his special glasses outside on the day of his wedding, nor on the honeymoon scenes at Stonehenge. However, he starts wearing them again on returning to the Abbey, a detail given special emphasis. This suggests that his aversion is a psychosomatic neurosis and that he does not need them when he is happy and away from Ligeia's baleful influence.
- Quotes
Verden Fell: Christopher, not ten minutes ago I... I tried to kill a stray cat with a cabbage, and all but made love to the Lady Rowena. I succeeded is squashing the cabbage and badly frightening the lady. If only I could lay open my own brain as easily as I did that vegetable, what rot would be freed from its grey leaves?
- Crazy creditsThe only end credits shown is the cast and they each come with a clip of their appearance in the film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Nightwatch Presents Edgar Allan Poe: The Tomb of Ligeia (1973)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 22m(82 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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