Ships today if you order in the next Ships today if you order in the next 2h 38m
Returns:
60 days return. Buyer pays for return postage. If you use an eBay delivery label, it will be deducted from your refund amount.
Condition:
NewNew
Actor: Jack Nicholson. rance, 18th century. But the woman doesn't answer, doesn't even greet him and walks away. Eventually she takes him towards the sea, where she disappears in rough water. Andre loses consciousness while trying to follow her, and is attacked by a bird and awakes in a house where an old woman (Dorothy Neumann) claims never to have seen the woman.
Oops! Looks like we're having trouble connecting to our server.
Refresh your browser window to try again.
About this product
Product Information
An old witch is determined to drive a Baron to suicide. An officer in Napoleon's army becomes involved after he pursues a young woman to the Baron's castle...
Product Identifiers
EAN5060033472095
eBay Product ID (ePID)30588412
Product Key Features
ActorBoris Karloff, Dick Miller, Sandra Knight, Jack Nicholson
Film/TV TitleThe Terror
DirectorRoger Corman
FormatDVD
Release Year2004
LanguageEnglish
GenreHorror/Occult, General
Run Time81 Mins
Additional Product Features
Certificate12A/12
Number of Discs1
Additional InformationHorror legend Boris Karloff and a young Jack Nicholson team up in this disjointed but enjoyable Roger Corman quickie. Nicholson plays Lieutenant Andre Duvalier, an officer under Napoleon who finds himself lost along a stretch of beach, where he is seduced by the beautiful Helene (Sandra Knight), who may or may not be a ghost. His obsession leads him to the gloomy castle of Baron Von Leppe (Karloff), a recluse haunted by the ghost of his dead wife, Ilse, who Andre suspects is actually Helene, or vice versa. Longtime Corman regular Dick Miller plays Stefan, Von Leppe's trusty servant, and Dorothy Neumann is a witch who may be using Helene as a tool for revenge. All the characters do lots of skulking around the gloomy sets and outdoors along the beautiful Big Sur coastline, where the exteriors were filmed. Corman shot the interior scenes in two days, on sets left standing from his previous film, THE RAVEN. Though a little short on coherence, it's a lot of fun, and it's great to see Karloff and Nicholson together in a sort of passing of the machiavellian torch. A nicely ominous mood maintains itself with the help of Ronald Stein's robust score.