name | The Raven |
---|---|
director | Roger Corman |
producer | Roger Corman |
writer | Poem:Edgar Allan PoeScreenplay:Richard Matheson |
starring | Vincent PricePeter LorreBoris KarloffJack Nicholson |
music | Les Baxter |
cinematography | Floyd Crosby |
editing | Ronald Sinclair |
distributor | AIP |
released | |
runtime | 86 minutes |
country | United States |
language | English |
budget | $200,000 |
gross | $1,499,275 }} |
The Raven (1963) is a B movie horror-comedy produced and directed by Roger Corman. The film stars Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, and Boris Karloff as a trio of rival sorcerers. Part of a series of Edgar Allan Poe adaptations produced by Corman through American International Pictures, the film was written by Richard Matheson based on references to Poe's poem "The Raven". The supporting cast includes a young Jack Nicholson.
Three decades earlier, Karloff had appeared in another film with the same title, Lew Landers' 1935 horror film The Raven with Béla Lugosi. Aside from the title, the two films bear no resemblance to one another.
A novelization of the film was written by Eunice Sudak adapted from Richard Matheson's screenplay and published by Lancer Books in paperback.
At the castle, Scarabus greets his guests with false friendship, and Bedlo is apparently killed as he conjures a storm in a last act of defiance against his nemesis. At night, Rexford finds him alive and well, hiding in the castle. Craven, meanwhile, is visited and tormented by Lenore, who is revealed to be alive and well too, having faked her death two years before to move away with Scarabus. As Craven, Estelle, Rexford and Bedlo try to escape the castle, Scarabus stops them, and they are tied and locked up. Bedlo panics and flees away in raven form, having convinced Scarabus to turn him back into bird form rather than face torture. As Craven is confronted with the choice of Estelle's torture or of him giving away the secrets of his "hand magic", Bedlo flies back in, frees Rexford, and together aid Craven.
Craven and Scarabus then seat facing each other and engage in a magic duel. After a lengthy performance of narrow escapes and derision, Craven defeats Scarabus, and escapes with his friends after rejecting Lenore, who tries to reconcile with him after alleging she had been "under a spell". The castle then tumbles down on Scarabus and his mistress, but they are shown to survive, though Scarabus has been stripped of his magic.
Rexford and Estelle retreat alone, while Bedlo tries to convince Craven to turn him back to human form once more. Craven tells him to shut his beak and recites the famous lines from Edgar Allan Poe's poem: "Quoth the raven - nevermore".
Category:1960s horror films Category:1963 films Category:American horror films Category:American International Pictures films
Category:American comedy horror films Category:English-language films Category:Films based on poems Category:Films based on Edgar Allan Poe works Category:Films directed by Roger Corman
bg:Гарванът (филм, 1963) cs:Havran (film) da:Ravnen (film) de:Der Rabe – Duell der Zauberer es:El cuervo (1963) fr:Le Corbeau (film, 1963) it:I maghi del terrore pl:Kruk (film 1963) ro:Corbul (film) ru:Ворон (фильм, 1963) sv:Korpen (1963)This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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