Review of The Raven

The Raven (1963)
7/10
Quoth This Critic, Forevermore
31 January 2012
Any time you get to see a film with Boris Karloff, Peter Lorre, and Vincent Price in it, don't ever pass it up. You may nevermore get a chance to see this.

Suggested by the classic poem by Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven is set in Medieval Times and in the tongue in cheek spirit of the film, that could mean the theme park. Magician Vincent Price lives in his castle with his daughter and memories of his second wife Lenore who departed a few years back.

As the poem says a rapping came at his chamber door and The Raven enters and it talks like Peter Lorre. When Price restores it to human form it is Peter Lorre. Lorre wants Price to go challenge the chief magician of the society who is Boris Karloff. And as an inducement he tells him that the late Lenore is not so late and that she's alive and living in sin with Karloff.

Who could resist that, but also their children seem to be bonding and that would be Lorre's son Jack Nicholson and Karloff's daughter Olive Sturgess. The four of them go calling on Karloff and indeed find Hazel Court as Lenore very much alive. She's a magician groupie and Karloff's got the biggest wand.

This film is positively infectious, three great players indulging in a contest as to see who can chow down fastest on a living room set. That final magic duel lasting fifteen minutes with no dialog between Price and Karloff is alone worth seeing this for. And remember those two have some of the greatest speaking voices ever in film.

Roger Corman produced and directed a real classic here, don't miss this one when it's broadcast.
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