La tombe de Ligeia backdrop
La tombe de Ligeia poster

LA TOMBE DE LIGEIA

The Tomb of Ligeia

1964 GB HMDB
novembre 1, 1964

Un homme de la haute bourgeoisie est hanté par des visions de sa défunte femme. Il est certain d'une chose : sa nouvelle compagne est possédée par l'esprit diabolique de celle-ci.

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Equipe

Production: Pat Green (Producer)Roger Corman (Executive Producer)James H. Nicholson (Executive Producer)David Deutsch (Producer)Samuel Z. Arkoff (Producer)
Scenario: Robert Towne (Screenplay)Paul Mayersberg (Writer)
Musique: Kenneth V. Jones (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Arthur Grant (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
Ligeia est morte en assurant à son mari qu'elle se ferait entendre même depuis l'au-delà. En effet, lorsque le veuf se remarie, sa nouvelle compagne devient la victime d'une série d'événements terribles qui semblent être l'œuvre de la défunte. Ambiance gothique pour un film qui s'inspire clairement de "L'Orribile Segreto del Dottor Hichcock" de Freda. Corman, cependant, ne parvient pas à atteindre le niveau de la production italienne en réalisant un film médiocre et par moments excessivement lent. L'histoire est tirée de la nouvelle éponyme de Poe.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (2)

Wiccaburr

Wiccaburr

7 /10

This movie got love, death, and marriage. This movie also plays heavy into hypnosis. The cat is the true star of the movie, getting more screen time than Vincent almost.

The pace is great and so is the unfolding of this story. Nothing gore and bloody, but it does keep suspense and the macabre in tact throughout.

Although not the strongest in the Poe series that Corman did, it is still a movie that can entertain.

Also if Disney wasn't using the title, I feel they could've used "That darn cat!" as a movie title. But it wouldn't pack a punch like Tomb of the Cat or the one it has now.

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

The black cat from hell at a manor in Victorian Britain

Amidst a crumbling castle in 19th century England, a widowed aristocrat (Vincent Price) mourns his wife, but quickly develops a new romantic relationship after meeting the forceful Rowena (Elizabeth Shepherd). Yet the soul of Ligeia seems to be haunting the estate and the apparently mesmerized Baron is hiding something.

Released in late 1964, "The Tomb of Ligeia” is Gothic horror based on the Edgar Allan Poe story from 1838 (which was revised in 1845 with the addition of his 1843 poem “The Conqueror Worm,” written by the character Ligeia). This was the last of Roger Corman’s eight Poe films from 1960-1964, which all made money but this one made the least, possibly because the quasi-series had run its course and the story was overly complicated. Nevertheless, Corman considered it one of the best of the lot.

Since the original tale was so short, scriptwriter Robert Towne incorporated elements from other Poe stories, such as the black cat, mesmerism and a hint of necrophilia. The talky story isn’t as compelling as Corman’s “The Terror” (1963) or even “The Masque of the Red Death” (1964). It’s rather boring for the first hour, but there’s an effectively creepy payoff in the last act, which ties everything together. Like those previous two films, the sumptuous Gothic ambiance is worth the price of admission and the inclusion of Stonehenge is a highlight. You just have to acclimate to the dated drama-focused goings-on.

The movie runs 1 hour, 22 minutes and was shot at Shepperton Studios, just west of London, and Castle Acre Priory north of Swaffham, as well as other spots in England, such as Stonehenge, Polesden Lacey and Polzeath, Cornwall, at the southwest tip of Britain (the beach scene).

GRADE: B-/C+

Avis fournis par TMDB