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The Last Man on Earth – Italy | USA, 1964 – reviews

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The Last Man on Earth is a 1964 Italian-American science-fiction horror feature film based on the Richard Matheson 1954 novel I Am Legend. The film was directed by Ubaldo Ragona and Sidney Salkow (Twice-Told Tales) and stars Vincent Price. The screenplay was written in part by Matheson, but he was dissatisfied with the result and chose to be credited as “Logan Swanson”. William Leicester, Furio M. Monetti and Ubaldo Ragona were the other writers. It was produced by Robert L. Lippert (Curse of the Fly; The Earth Dies Screaming; Witchcraft). The Italian title is L’ultimo uomo della Terra

Cinematographer Franco Delli Colli also photographed Strip Nude for Your Killer (1975), Macabre (1980); Zeder (1983); Rats: Night of Terror (1984) and Ghosthouse (1988).

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Review:

Richard Matheson‘s 1954 novel I Am Legend has been called the most important vampire tale since Dracula (at least until the Anne Rice hype machine ramped up with Interview With the Vampire).

While it has been filmed three times (with Charlton Heston in The Ωmega Man (1971) and Will Smith in I Am Legend (2007) being the other versions), this Italian-American adaptation is the only version that really follows Matheson’s original text. Matheson, even while he noted that aspect himself, was so notoriously displeased by the results that he took his name off the credits (far be it from me to cast stones, but Matheson’s script for the TV adaptation of The Martian Chronicles didn’t do Ray Bradbury a great favour either – showbiz, ugh).

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It’s borderline threadbare budget – really, the Italians gave even the lower-caste Hercules peplums more lavish treatments than this – and poor dubbing notwithstanding, 1964’s The Last Man on Earth still has enough eerie moments and frissons to merit a look. Comparisons to later George A. Romero living-dead films are apt, even if gore and grue are fairly tame even by contemporary standards of the mid-60s.

It kicks off with first-person narration by plague sole-survivor Robert Morgan (Vincent Price), living in a nameless, silent city full of corpses (actually metropolitan/suburban Rome, suitably stark). His morbid routine in the ‘future’ of 1968 consists of venturing out in daylight, securing supplies, and locating and staking the dormant, vampire-like walking-dead beings that used to be neighbours. At night mobs of the shambling creatures lay siege to his boarded-up house.

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Flashbacks and narration reveal it started with a mysterious worldwide 1965 epidemic that stubbornly resisted any vaccine. Robert, one of a team of scientists working on a cure, seems to be immune himself, however, the disease cruelly claims his wife and child, doomed to be cremated in a burning ravine where city authorities mass-dump the bodies.

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Via a visit from his late wife, Robert himself has horrific confirmation that terrible rumours spreading throughout the city are true; the newly dead – unless they are skewered through – rise by night, zombie-like, hungering for the blood of the living. And, like vampires of folklore, the undead here are repelled by garlic and mirrors. Matheson’s novel went into great lab-smock detail trying to convince readers how this makes sense on a biological level; the movie a little less so, but what else is new with shortchanging science on the silver screen.

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Robert’s routine is ultimately disrupted with the appearance of fellow `survivors’ who are not exactly what they seem to be. And it is one of the strengths of the finale that, intentionally or unintentionally, the grim new successors of humanity seem a visual quotation of Mussolini’s blackshirts.

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Italy’s take on I Am Legend is also the sole version that puts across the thematic payoff of Matheson’s novel, that when you are the only normal person left in a land of monsters (or substitute any undesirable sub-group you want: vampires, werewolves, Trump supporters, Brexit voters, people who watch Simon Cowell TV shows etc.), thus it is that the paradigm shifts… and you by definition become the monster.

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When this is taken into account, the use of Vincent Price, then the embodiment of larger-than-life suave villainy or gothic Poe-leaning horror, in a mostly action-hero scientist part, begins to make sense. Even if it didn’t to Richard Matheson, who complained of miscasting.

Charles-Cassady-Jr-as-Pinhead-HellraiserThe Last Man on Earth has fallen into the public domain. It used to be available on smudgy or washed-out black-and-white low-resolution dupes that were rampant on VHS and then DVD and might conceivably have conveyed what the world looks like after three years of nonstop vampire-fighting and disturbed sleep. It’s thankfully now available free in high-definition widescreen versions online. A computer-coloured version of has recently also been made available but that’s about as appealing as being infected with COVID-19.

Charles Cassady Jr. – MOVIES & MANIA

Other reviews:

“Although Vincent Price is miscast in the role of Morgan, he succeeds in conveying his character’s bone-deep despair and frustration. He might be nobody’s idea of an action hero, but there’s nothing to say that a slightly prissy scientist can’t be the sole survivor of a global epidemic – and wouldn’t a man who’s at home amongst beakers and test tubes look vaguely comical engaging in hand-to-hand combat with a group of weak zombies?” 20/20 Movie Reviews

Vincent Price Collection II Blu-ray

Buy the Vincent Price Collection II from Amazon.com

“Franco Delli Colli’s eerie black and white photography is an asset in keeping the film very stark and atmospheric and even documentary-like at times. In particular, the opening scenes of a dead urban world are extremely chilling (especially the church sign: The End Has Come!). Also, the scenes with Vincent Price driving through the deserted streets are particularly well done.” DVD Drive-In

Buy: Amazon.com

Cast and characters:

Vincent Price … Doctor Robert Morgan
Franca Bettoia … Ruth Collins
Emma Danieli … Virginia Morgan
Giacomo Rossi Stuart … Ben Cortman (as Giacomo Rossi-Stuart)
Umberto Raho … Doctor Mercer (as Umberto Rau)
Christi Courtland … Kathy Morgan
Antonio Corevi … Governor (as Tony Corevi)
Ettore Ribotta … TV Reporter (as Hector Ribotta)
Rolando De Rossi … TV Reporter (uncredited)
Giuseppe Mattei … New People Leader (uncredited)
Enrico Salvatore … TV Reporter (uncredited)
Alessandro Tedeschi … Passerby (uncredited)

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The post The Last Man on Earth – Italy | USA, 1964 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.


Shock – USA, 1946 – reviews and film free to watch online

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Shock is a 1946 American Film-Noir thriller feature film about a distraught woman who is sent to a private sanitarium by a man she saw committed a murder.

Directed by Alfred Werker from a screenplay written by Eugene Ling based on a storyline by Albert DeMond with additional dialogue by Martin Berkeley, the 20th Century Fox production stars Vincent Price, Lynn Bari, Frank Latimore and Anabel Shaw. Produced by Aubrey Schenck.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“The film is most effective in its depiction of the treatment administered to a perfectly sane woman – these are quite distressing and uncomfortable and retain a quiet power […] A neat and nasty little thriller that boasts an early role for Price, whose suavely sinister and tortured performance throughout the film, is the kind he became famous for.” Behind the Couch

“The unfortunate part of the film is that it really doesn’t work well – its greatest attributes are the noir atmosphere and plot base. I enjoyed it, as I often do with weak, but interesting, cinema, but don’t expect the great writing and momentum-building pace of many of the ‘dark cinema’ of this era.” DVD Beaver

“Clocking in at 70 minutes, Shock is a pretty good little suspense yarn with the usual shadowy characteristics. At times it seems more of the psychological horror variant, with a dream sequence that has the panicked Janet running through a misty room, only to encounter a giant door that will not budge, as well as crazed inmate escaping from his cell on a dark and rainy night, nearly strangling a nurse to death.” DVD Drive-In

“This is an interesting little movie; though I don’t think it quite lives up to its premise, nonetheless it has a strong beginning (with a great little dream sequence to kick things off) and a strong ending, plus it is blessed by a good performance by Vincent Price before he became a horror star.” Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

Shock grows a little melodramatic as it reaches its end, but is worth seeing for an overlooked Price performance.” Flick Attack

“It’s as unpretentious as so many other noirs are, clocks in at a very acceptable 70 minutes, and has some moments that could easily have been dressed up in gothic robes and pushed from the realm of thriller into outright horror. In other words… this is a little gem.” For It Is Man’s Number

“Dismissing the morose performance of Vincent Price in the leading role and the purely mechanical iciness of Lynn Bari as his accomplice in crime, and dismissing, too, the crude and tawdry nature of the script, one is forced to challenge this picture as a social disservice at this time.” The New York Times, March 9, 1946

…Shock certainly possesses all the ingredients for what should’ve been a tight little film noir. But the 70-minute running time often feels a whole lot longer thanks to Eugene Ling’s egregiously talky screenplay and the distinctly low-rent atmosphere, with the end result a film that’s not even remotely as effective as its premise might’ve indicated.” Reel Film Reviews

Shock was the first time that Price was cast in the type of mad scientist role that would later become his trademark.  For that reason, Shock has an important place in the history of cinematic terror. But, unfortunately, Shock itself is kind of forgettable.  It’s pretty much your standard thriller, one that makes the mistake of revealing Price’s villainy from the start.” Through the Shattered Lens

“An occasionally creepy thriller […]  When Shock was first released, psychiatry was still somewhat feared and misunderstood by the general public and some critics found the film irresponsible for its portrayal of the profession and condemned the producers for exploiting public misgivings about psychiatry.” TV Guide

Cast and characters:

  • Vincent Price … Doctor Richard Cross
  • Lynn Bari … Nurse Elaine Jordan
  • Frank Latimore … Lt. Paul Stewart
  • Anabel Shaw … Mrs Janet Stewart
  • Stephen Dunne … Doctor Stevens (as Michael Dunne)
  • Reed Hadley … District Attorney O’Neill
  • Renee Carson … Miss Hatfield – Head Nurse
  • Charles Trowbridge … Doctor H.J. Harvey

Filming locations:

Backlot, 20th Century Fox Studios – 10201 Pico Boulevard., Century City, Los Angeles, California

Technical details:

  • 70 minutes
  • Black and white
  • Aspect ratio: 1.37: 1
  • Audio: Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)

The post Shock – USA, 1946 – reviews and film free to watch online appeared first on MOVIES and MANIA.

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