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The Terror (1928 film)

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Director
  
Music director
  
Louis Silvers

6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Mystery, Horror

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

The Terror (1928 film) movie poster

Language
  
English (Sound version)

Release date
  
September 6, 1928 (1928-09-06) (Sound version)October 28, 1928 (1928-10-28) (Silent version)

Based on
  
The Terror by Edgar Wallace

Screenplay
  
Harvey Gates, Joseph Jackson

Cast
  
(Olga Redmayne), (Mrs Elvery), (Ferdinand Fane),
Alec B Francis
(Dr Redmayne), (Alfred Katman)

Similar movies
  
Roy Del Ruth directed The Terror and Private Number, Smart Money (1931), Tenderloin (1928), Smart Alecks (1942), Mr Wise Guy (1942)

The terror 1963 review


The Terror is a 1928 early American slasher film written by Harvey Gates and directed by Roy Del Ruth, based on the play of the same name by Edgar Wallace. This was the second "all-talking" motion picture released by Warner Bros. (The first was Lights of New York) This film was also the first all-talking horror film made, using the Vitaphone sound-on-disc system.

Contents

The Terror (1928 film) movie scenes

Plot

"The Terror", a killer whose identity is unknown, occupies an English country house that has been converted into an inn. Guests, including the spiritualist Mrs. Elvery and detective Ferdinand Fane, are frightened by strange noises and mysterious organ music. Connors and Marks, two men just released from jail, have sworn revenge upon "The Terror". Following a night of mayhem that includes murder, the identity of "The Terror" is revealed.

Cast

The Terror 1928

  • May McAvoy as Olga Redmayne
  • Louise Fazenda as Mrs. Elvery, a spiritualist
  • Edward Everett Horton as Ferdinand Fane, a Scotland Yard detective
  • Alec B. Francis as Dr. Redmayne
  • Matthew Betz as Joe Connors, a just-released criminal
  • Otto Hoffman as Soapy Marks, a just-released criminal
  • Holmes E. Herbert as Goodman
  • Joseph Gerard as Supt. Hallick
  • John Miljan as Alfred Katman
  • Frank Austin as Cotton

  • The Terror 1928

    Cast notes

    Return of the Terror shadowplay

  • The credits are spoken by a caped and masked Conrad Nagel.
  • Reception

    VITAPHONE VARIETIES Dancing the Devil Away

    In August 1928, Time said the film is "better than The Lion and the Mouse, [an] all-talk picture of which May McAvoy, Alec Francis, two of the terrorized, are veterans." Three months later, John MacCormac, reporting from London for The New York Times upon the film's UK premiere, wrote:

    NitrateVillecom View topic THE TERROR 1928

    The universal opinion of London critics is that The Terror is so bad that it is almost suicidal. They claim that it is monotonous, slow, dragging, fatiguing and boring, and I am not sure that I do not in large measure agree with them. What is more important, Edgar Wallace, who wrote the film, seems to agree with them also. "Well," was his comment, "I have never thought the talkies would be a serious rival to the stage."

    Preservation status

    Two versions of the film were prepared, as most theaters had yet to convert to sound. The "all-talking" sound version, featuring a Vitaphone sound-on-disc soundtrack, was released on September 6, 1928, and a silent version, which used screen-filling printed "titles" (as they were then commonly called) to supply the essential dialog, was released on October 20, 1928. Both versions have been considered lost films since the 1970s, though a complete set of the soundtrack discs still exists and is preserved at the UCLA Film and Television Archive.

    Remake

    The Terror was partially re-made by First National as Return of the Terror (1934).

    References

    The Terror (1928 film) Wikipedia
    The Terror (1928 film) IMDb The Terror (1928 film) themoviedb.org