Alright, why hasn't anyone done anything about getting this great Argentine movie translated or subtitled and released on DVD? I saw this movie for the first and only time (until today) at a drive-in theater in 1970 with the young lady who is now my wife. It contained only two of the segments taken from Edgar Allan Poe's stories in its original form, which has apparently vanished. I figured out (finally) how to get information on the movie and finally accessed a complete three-story version on You- tube. I don't speak Spanish so I had to guess what was being said in the third portion of the movie. So, somebody get your mojo working and get this film out!! Horror movie buffs and Poe fanatics will love it.
Plot summary
An anthology of two classic tales from the horror master Edgar Allan Poe. In the first story, "The Case of M. Valdemar," Narciso Ibanez Menta stars as hypnotist Dr. Eckstrom who believes he can keep the dying Henry Valdemar alive. Just as Valdemar is on the brink of death, Eckstrom hypnotizes him. In attempt to prove to his doubting colleagues, he eventually brings Valdemar out of his hypnotized state with horrific results. In our second tale, "A Cask of Amontillado," Menta is John Samivet, a man more concerned with his winery than his young wife Teresa. When a stranger comes to the village, love is in the air. But Samivet has a devious plot in mind for both of the lovers. This is an English-dubbed version of Obras maestras del terror (1960) which removes "The Tell-Tale Heart" segment along with 15 minutes of footage from the other two stories.
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Argentine import of three stories based on works of Edgar Allan Poe
THE MASTER OF HORROR {1965 Re-Edited U.S. Version}(Enrique Carreras, 1959) **1/2
This is another title I happened upon by pure chance on "You Tube": an Argentinian genre effort that was typically retouched and distributed in the U.S. (in its case, by noted exploitationer Jack H. Harris). Still, I was annoyed to learn that – being really a three-part compendium inspired by Edgar Allan Poe stories and, dating from either 1959 or 1960 (depending on which source you read) instead of 1965 (as I had been led to believe) – it actually predates Roger Corman's similar TALES OF TERROR (1962)! It is all the more baffling, then, that the two remaining episodes here, namely "The Case Of Mr. Valdemar" and "A Cask Of Amontillado", also formed part of the afore-mentioned AIP anthology (though the latter adaptation was renamed "The Black Cat" and, obviously, incorporates elements from its famous namesake in the tortured author's canon)! For the record, the dropped third act revolved around "The Tell-Tale Heart", though it is solely available online in unsubtitled Spanish (as is the film in its undiluted form); this led the running-time to be reduced from anywhere between 115 and 122 minutes – the internet proves unreliable on this aspect as well – to a rather brusque 59! I did acquire the uncut version after viewing this and, randomly checking it out, I notice there is additional footage in the other segments, too! Anyway, the end result is not too bad considering, albeit decidedly uneven. The first half is superior: reasonably atmospheric and with star Narciso Ibanez Menta ideally cast (and made-up) as the mesmerist keeping a dying man in a state of suspended animation; the latter's grave (no pun intended) voice is suitably unsettling, too. The second one starts off a bore, with the bland charlatan and his equally insipid romancing – but, as soon as the revenge takes over (even if Menta's look this time around, as the slighted husband, is somewhat unflattering!),it gets back on steady ground; best of all is the very last revelation, involving the fate of the protagonist's faithless wife, an image strong enough to make the film's U.S. poster! Incidentally, I should have recalled Ibanez Menta from THE Dracula SAGA (1973),but I was also surprised to discover that he had starred in a 1952 rendition of Nicholas Blake's pulp thriller "The Beast Must Die" which would later serve as the basis of arguably Claude Chabrol's masterpiece from 1969! The cast also includes the almost similarly-named Narciso Ibanez Serrador, who would go on to achieve a cult reputation as the director of THE HOUSE THAT SCREAMED (1969) and WHO CAN KILL A CHILD? (1976)! Finally, I should point out that the movie is framed by sequences featuring a maid left alone in a large house, who chooses to while away the night reading from Poe while a storm rages outside.
Wow!
This is a dubbed version of the 1960 Argentinan horror film Obras Maestras del Terror. It's missing "The Tell-Tale Heart*" and fifteen minutes of footage that was cut from "Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" and "The Cask of Amontillado."
You can blame Jack H. Harris.
I have to say that this is my favorite version of Amontillado that I've seen, as the young wife is seeking the flowery passion from the young rogue who is staying at the farm of the older husband, a man who seeks to love and provide for his wife yet doesn't have the romantic mind of his younger rival.
I'd love to see a full release of this along with the original Spanish language uncut film. Until that is commercially available, you can check out the American version as part of Severin's Tales of the Uncanny blu ray. However, as far as I know, it was only part of the Black Friday version.
*This story was part of 1972's Legend of Horror.