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Experiment in Terror |
List Price: $19.94
Your Price: $17.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: A Top-Notch And Highly-Underrated Suspenser!! Review: A brilliant thriller! This film is probably not going to appeal to everyone (eg: fans of non-stop action or those who want lots of bullets and blood), because this underrated gem of a picture is mostly a cerebral experience. It's very slow paced, which is a good thing here. It gives you time to absorb each scene and think about what's coming next. The city of San Francisco has been used as a backdrop to many, many a motion picture over the years, but Experiment In Terror might just be the best for showcasing this beautiful city! Lots of outdoor footage, from cable car close-ups to Coit Tower to Lombard to Candlestick! Lee Remick is superb as the terrorized Kelly Sherwood and Ross Martin is completely convincing as the wheezing bad guy!! And let's not forget about the sensational Henry Mancini music score. Fabulously creepy from beginning to end! You might not want to watch this film's opening scene alone! It's very realistic, and scary!
Rating: Summary: I'm so pleased Review: From the moment this movie starts, with Henry Mancini's simply outstanding main theme, EXPERIMENT IN TERROR is a marvelously crafted thriller. By now, we're so used to non-stop action, gunplay, screaming, fx, etc., we forget that the key to a good thriller is to thrill by suggesting rather than showing the violence. This one kicks in right away as lovely and talented Lee Remick is confronted by an asthmatic maniac (Ross Martin, best known for Wild Wild West) who wants her to rob the bank where she works, or he'll kill her and her lovely sister (Stefanie Powers in one of her first roles). Glenn Ford, one of our most overlooked actors, plays the FBI agent who struggles to help Lee catch this crook. Anita Loos as Martin's current snooze is also very good in showing the conflict she feels toward the benefactor of her ailing son. Blake Edwards, who will receive an honorary Oscar this year, directs with a haunting malevolence, and then again, there's that Mancini theme...still gives me chills!
Rating: Summary: TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME Review: From the moment this movie starts, with Henry Mancini's simply outstanding main theme, EXPERIMENT IN TERROR is a marvelously crafted thriller. By now, we're so used to non-stop action, gunplay, screaming, fx, etc., we forget that the key to a good thriller is to thrill by suggesting rather than showing the violence. This one kicks in right away as lovely and talented Lee Remick is confronted by an asthmatic maniac (Ross Martin, best known for Wild Wild West) who wants her to rob the bank where she works, or he'll kill her and her lovely sister (Stefanie Powers in one of her first roles). Glenn Ford, one of our most overlooked actors, plays the FBI agent who struggles to help Lee catch this crook. Anita Loos as Martin's current snooze is also very good in showing the conflict she feels toward the benefactor of her ailing son. Blake Edwards, who will receive an honorary Oscar this year, directs with a haunting malevolence, and then again, there's that Mancini theme...still gives me chills!
Rating: Summary: It's about time for this movie to get it's due. Review: I consider this to be one of my faith movies. I just buy it on faith that it's good, and it hasn't disappointed me. It's very effective in the black and white. The music scores are stellar too, and to choose the Twin Peaks section of San Francisco as the beginning of the movie is asking for thrills, and chills. Go potty before watching the movie, and gauruntees to make boy/girlfriends to cuddle close, or your money back. Stars a very foxy Lee Remick who is accosted by a psycho with asthma who threatens her with her life if she doesn't steal money from the bank she works at; and HE'S NOT FOLLOWING AROUND!!! Right after he leaves her she calls the FBI, and speaks with Glenn Ford, but the killer hasn't gone far, and he grabs the phone which is now the serious of the situation, and it's going to get more juicy as Lee now wants to cooperate with FBI, and her bank, and at the same time protect her sister played by 19 year old Stephanie Powers. She's harassed by many people who may be this killer, but Lee doesn't know, so she has no choice, but to play this psycho's game, and is drug all over San Francisco. This guy is just dedicated to getting his way, and he pulls all the stops to do the job even dressing as an old lady to kidnap Stephanie, and I can't help if this is where Nelly got the inspiration for the song "Hot In Herre" as he makes her take off her clothes. The climax comes at the end as Lee ends up making the meeting with the money at Candlestick Park. It's hard-fisted in your face till you smell the garlic on the breath action until the very end, and reeks of sinister thrills. Reminder: Go To Potty Before The Movie Starts. It may be dated, but it's still a heart pounding thriller, and one of my all time favorites. If Hollywood has any brains don't remake this. Nothing will ever hold a candle to this 1962 version.
Rating: Summary: I'm so pleased Review: I have always been very satisfied with the service from this company, and to date, I still am. I received my movie in a timely manner, and it was in perfect condition. :)
Rating: Summary: A Superb Thriller Review: In a time when one is supposed to have the wits scared out of you by graphic depictions of violence on the screen you would think that a film like "Experiment In Terror" (1962)would be out of place. There is no graphic violence what so ever; not even a harsh word. I can assure you however that it will scare the wits out of you.It might not depict graphically but does something even more unsettling; leaving it to your imagination. Through the stark use of light and shadow combined with a superb script director Blake Edwards will have you on the edge of your seat through what is basically a simple police procedural. It is quite simple ; a bank teller (Lee Remick) is coerced by someone unknown ,but who knows her, to steal from a bank. The coercer is , until the end, not seen even though he appears in several scenes. That effect is brought about by Edwards use of those stark shadows. With the help of an FBI agent (Glenn Ford) a cat mouse game procedes as the FBI narrows in on a suspect more sinister than first believed. The climax is superbly crafted and to the point. One of the crucial elements of the film is Henry Mancini's very unnerving and edgy score that will come as a shock to those who only know him through such lighter fare as The Pink Panther which oddly enough Blake Edwards also directed. One for the edge of your seat and not easily forgotten.
Rating: Summary: The Title Says It All Review: On a basic level "Experiment in Terror" is a police procedural. The hunt for a stalker, blackmailer and murderer. Under Blake Edwards direction it becomes alot more. Filmed in black and white with a fondness for night scenes the film unsettles its audience by allowing them to use their imaginations. No gratuitous violence or blood splattered scenes. In its shadows where the horrors are barely glimpsed the audience has to use their imagination to conjure up their worst nightmares. That is often scarier than a graphic depiction. Ford and Remmick are excellent and Ross Martin turns in a performance that makes him the world champion haevy breather. Martin is noted for lighter roles but is superb here in his sinister turn. Henry Mancini's subtle but unsettling score is icing on the cake. Enjoy with the lights out.
Rating: Summary: TENSE, EXCITING THRILLER..... Review: Take an early, lean Blake Edwards, a tension filled script, a cast of fine actors, great San Francisco location shooting and a suspenseful score by Henry Mancini and you have "Experiment in Terror"---one of the best suspense thrillers ever made. Adapted by the story's authors, it pits innocent bank clerk Lee Remick against asthmatic madman Ross Martin who terrorizes her in an extortion plot to rob her bank. His threats include harming her kid sister Stefanie Powers. When Remick contacts the FBI, agent Glenn Ford and his associates barrel into action. The result is a bizarre cat & mouse game between Remick, Martin and Ford. Martin is slick and murderous. But he manages to finance expensive hip surgery for a 6 yr.old Asian boy whose mother he's seeing. His heavy breathing is some of the most realistic I've ever heard in a film. Edwards directs "Experiment" in a fast paced style that keeps you glued to the screen all the way to the Giants game finale. Again, his on location shooting is superb. He never goes for the cheap shot in this film. Some scenes are just down right creepy. "Experiment in Terror" gets my vote as one of the best DVD finds around and deserves collector's status. It's wonderful b&w photography is preserved in a nice crisp print and the sound is fine. This is a first rate keeper all the way. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: Lee Remick, Ross Martin and Glen Ford were all fantastic. Review: The Movie kepted me on the edge of my seat the whole time. From the very second Ross Martin started to stalk Lee Remick under a shadowed light so you couldn't tell who he was. To the very end of the movie. The script was fantasic, and was fit just perfect to a real life situation that might just really happen.Ross Martin did a really good job playing a stalker. Lee Remick played a really good victim, and Glen Ford played an excellent detective. The film was directed great, the lighting was wonderful. Blake Edwards Did a great job. The title " Experiment in Terror" was even perfect. I am an actor and a cinamatographer, and to me this movie showed every thing a great film should. To me this is a film that'll never be forgotten.
Rating: Summary: Thrilling masterpiece Review: This is a masterpiece of suspence, you never know what's going to happen next. And the music, the music just enhance it all. What a movie. I haven't seen many movies like this.
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