Just saw it for the first time–yikes, was it creepy, in a no-budget, cheesy way! Watched it at night, all alone, with the lights off, as it should be. Having been brought up on that “going my way?” Inger Stevens episode of The Twilight Zone, I knew where it was going three seconds in, but it was an enjoyable ride.
This movie is completely illogical, weird, filled with stilted dialogue uttered by the most awkward non-actors, and beyond ridiculous when you really get down to it.
I totally f***ing love this movie!!
This movie has a quality of hysteria and dreamy free-association that really does look like you’re watching someone else’s nightmare bad dreams. The sheer wooden-ness of it doesn’t take you out of the film, instead it increases the surreality of it all. I can’t think of a movie that comes even close to it for the mood and atmosphere it creates. Perhaps the almost-as-bizarre Shatner flick “Incubus” is the closest comparison.
Thanks for mentioning it. I have to put this on my netflix queue for Halloween.
Favorite scene - midway throught the film, our hapless heroine pours out her hysterical story to her psychiatrist about the strange man who’s stalking her. Her psychiatrist’s chair slowlsy spins around to reveal…
Just watched this on TCM too. Great atmosphere but found it slightly unsatisfying in other areas (plot, character development, etc.). Interesting to note that the main zombie was played by the director.
My favorite bit was when she had first poured out her whole story to the doctor, who then tells her, “of course, *I’m not a psychiatrist *. . .” I expected him to add, “I’m a podiatrist–but this has been really interesting!”
Oh! I loved Father Claude Rains, too! When she plays something a little bit more off-kilter than usual on the church organ, he fires her: “*Heathen! Devil woman! Out with you! Begone! *. . . But do stay in touch! Don’t be a stranger, now!”
I’d heard about this movie before, so when I heard it was going to be on TCM I set it up on my DVR. Haven’t watched it yet, but will try to get to it in the next day or two.
Here’s Roger Ebert’s review. I’d read this review years ago but never sought out the movie. He calls the acting “surprisingly effective.” Maybe that’s the same as saying wooden acting adds to the surreal nature of the film? It does sound worth watching, I agree.
Oh, it’s not really him, just someone Claude Rainsish-looking. Likewise, I am pretty sure her sleazy neighbor was not really played by Lee Harvey Oswald, but he *was *a dead ringer.
Some of the acting is quite good, actually: the landlady and the sleazy neighbor are excellent. I think the sleazy neighbor was an acting teacher, though the landlady was an amateur.
Great movie. The lead has a quality that has nothing to do with acting that just feels cold and creepy.
In one of the silent interludes, she and the women in the department store who don’t hear or see her really sell it - there’s no special effects but you just believe she could walk right through them - she almost seems to. And the grounding by touching a tree was neat, too.
As you mentioned, the organ music from the inside of Gary Busey’s brain is another high point.