Traveling minister Reverend John Keyes and his wife Lorna are quietly menaced by a devil cult in the Old West. By the time the good Reverend figures out what's really going on, it may be too... Read allTraveling minister Reverend John Keyes and his wife Lorna are quietly menaced by a devil cult in the Old West. By the time the good Reverend figures out what's really going on, it may be too late to stop the evil.Traveling minister Reverend John Keyes and his wife Lorna are quietly menaced by a devil cult in the Old West. By the time the good Reverend figures out what's really going on, it may be too late to stop the evil.
Lynn Loring
- Lorna Keyes
- (as Lyn Loring)
David S. Cass Sr.
- Man
- (as Dave Cass)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I feel like I have some uber-rare disease that no one has heard of and I have finally come across a support group on the net! I finally found this title by asking for an answer on an "experts" site on the web. I too, saw this movie in my youth and was struck by the atmosphere and especially the ending. I have never forgotten it and have never seen it since. No one I know saw the film and I had almost given up on ever finding it's title. Alas, even knowing the name, I shall probably never see the film again as it is impossible to find commercially. Small steps...
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Whenever people ask me to name the scariest movie I've ever seen, I invariably reply "Black Noon" and to this day nobody's ever heard of it.
I watched it alone some 30 years ago at the tender age of 13 when my parents had gone out for the evening. As far as I know its only ever been shown once in the UK and sadly is unavailable on DVD or VHS.
If anyone can trace a copy please let me know.
If I watched it again now it would probably be a big disappointment but it has always stuck in my memory as a particularly disturbing little film!
I watched it alone some 30 years ago at the tender age of 13 when my parents had gone out for the evening. As far as I know its only ever been shown once in the UK and sadly is unavailable on DVD or VHS.
If anyone can trace a copy please let me know.
If I watched it again now it would probably be a big disappointment but it has always stuck in my memory as a particularly disturbing little film!
One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Bernard L. Kowalski; Produced and Written by Andrew J. Fenady for Screen Gems, broadcast by CBS TV. Photography by Keith Smith; Edited by Dann Cahn; Music by George Duning. Starring Roy Thinnes, Yvette Mimieux, Lyn Loring, Ray Milland, Gloria Grahame, Henry Silva and Hank Worden.
Interesting made-for-TV horror feature, which, in the tradition of Fenady's curious "Rawhide" episodes, emphasizes the supernatural within a familiar Western format, up until some last minute plot slippage. The film is very effective as a combo "Curse of the Undead" and "The Brotherhood of Satan", exploring devil worship, voodoo, wild dream sequences, and stark good versus evil confrontations. Especially fine is Silva portraying evil personified as a Paladin-dressed gunfighter.
Interesting made-for-TV horror feature, which, in the tradition of Fenady's curious "Rawhide" episodes, emphasizes the supernatural within a familiar Western format, up until some last minute plot slippage. The film is very effective as a combo "Curse of the Undead" and "The Brotherhood of Satan", exploring devil worship, voodoo, wild dream sequences, and stark good versus evil confrontations. Especially fine is Silva portraying evil personified as a Paladin-dressed gunfighter.
I cannot believe how unknown this movie is,it was absolutely incredible. The ending alone has stuck with me for almost thirty years. The road sign through the rearveiw mirror blew me away. If you liked "RACE WITH THE DEVIL" you will love this movie
As is the case with many of these movies, I had never heard of "Black Noon" and had it not been for you tube, chances are, I never would have. The movie takes place in the days of the old west and follows a reverend named John Keyes and his wife, Lorna, who find themselves at the mercy of the desert when, out of the blue it seems, they are rescued by folks from a small town. At first, everything seems fine until Lorna starts falling in and out of sickness, until the reverend is seemly bringing "good luck" to the town that had experienced misfortune, and until the wife begins hearing voices and seeing people dressed in strange garb with animal masks in the dead of night. Anyone who's seen enough horror movies probably knows where this is going: its a devil cult and a damn good one too! In fact, I would go as far as to say this probably one of the best devil cult themed movies I have ever seen due to the good acting from Roy Thinnes as the reverend, Ray Milland as the town's leader, the beautiful Yvette Mimieux as "Deliverance", and Hank Worden as old man Joseph. It also helps that the props for the town are very well done and the filmmakers know how to effectively film some creepy, dream like sequences. The only bad thing I can find with the movie is that its been allowed to be forgotten. Still, if you ever get the chance, "Black Noon" is a great way to catch some quality storytelling from an age in which they knew how to do it. P.S. If you should ever find yourself traveling in one of America's great deserts and you come across some people from a town called San Melas, don't accept their help; instead, RUN!!!
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was shot in the desert regions just north of Los Angeles.
- GoofsIn the opening scene in the desert there are vultures flying around but the sounds they make are the sounds of seagulls. Vultures make a woofing, grunting sound.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Deadly Earnest's Nightmare Theatre: Black Noon (1978)
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