Beryl Reid Dr Phibes Rises Again

1972 film by Robert Fuest

Dr. Phibes Rises Again
Drphibesrisesagainposter.png

Theatrical release affiche

Directed past Robert Fuest
Written by
  • Robert Blees
  • Robert Fuest
Produced by Louis M. Heyward
Starring
  • Vincent Price
  • Robert Quarry
  • Peter Jeffrey
  • Valli Kemp
  • Fiona Lewis
Cinematography Alex Thomson
Edited by Tristam Five. Cones
Music past John Gale

Production
company

American International Pictures

Distributed by Anglo-EMI Film Distributors Ltd./MGM-EMI (U.K.)

Release appointment

  • July 1972 (1972-07)

Running fourth dimension

88 minutes
Country United kingdom
Language English

Dr. Phibes Rises Over again is a 1972 British horror-nighttime one-act pic, produced by Louis Chiliad. Heyward, directed by Robert Fuest, that stars Vincent Price and Robert Quarry. The film is a sequel to The Beastly Dr. Phibes (1971). Subsequently seeking vengeance on the doctors whom he blamed for his wife's expiry in the first film, Phibes returns to seek eternal life in Egypt, while he pursues a centuries-old human being who holds the ancient secrets that Phibes needs.

Plot [edit]

Following his murderous quest for vengeance in the previous moving picture, Dr. Anton Phibes eludes capture by placing himself in suspended animation in a sarcophagus shared with his wife'due south torso. He plans to render when the Moon enters into a specific alignment with the planets not seen in 2,000 years. 3 years later on, the conjunction occurs and Phibes rises from his sarcophagus. Summoning his silent banana Vulnavia (Valli Kemp, replacing Virginia Northward), Phibes prepares to have Victoria'southward trunk to Arab republic of egypt; there, in a hidden temple, flows the River of Life, promising resurrection for Victoria and eternal life for them both. Emerging from his basement, Phibes discovers that his mansion has been demolished. A safe, containing an ancient papyrus map to the river, is now empty.

Phibes knows of simply ane person who could be seeking the same goal: Darius Biederbeck (Robert Quarry), a homo who has lived for centuries through the regular use of a special elixir. Afterward translating the papyrus, Biederbeck prepares to travel to Egypt to notice the River of Life for himself and his lover Diana (Fiona Lewis). Phibes and Vulnavia enter Biederbeck's firm, impale his manservant, and reclaim the papyrus; they leave for Southampton to take a send to Egypt. Biederbeck follows and travels on the aforementioned ship with Diana and his assistant Ambrose (Hugh Griffith). When Ambrose discovers Victoria's body stored in the concord, Phibes kills him. His trunk is stuffed in a giant canteen and thrown overboard. Inspector Trout (Peter Jeffrey) discovers the corpse when the bottle washes ashore near Southampton. He and Superintendent Waverley (John Cater) question aircraft agent Lombardo (Terry-Thomas); upon hearing the descriptions of the tall woman (Vulnavia) and a clockwork band being loaded aboard, they realize that Dr. Phibes has somehow returned.

Trout and Waverley pursue Phibes to Egypt, communicable up to Biederbeck's archaeological party near the mountain housing the subconscious temple. Phibes, having set upward residence within the temple, hides Victoria's torso in a hush-hush compartment of an empty sarcophagus. He also finds the silver key that opens the gates to the River of Life. Phibes kills each of Biederbeck'due south men using methods inspired by Egyptian mythology: one man is killed past a militarist, another is stung to expiry by scorpions. Biederbeck'south team eventually breaks into the temple and takes the sarcophagus, and Biederbeck discovers the key. Using a behemothic fan to simulate a windstorm, Vulnavia enters the tent with the sarcophagus and Phibes uses a behemothic screw press to crush the man guarding it. Though the sarcophagus is retrieved and Victoria'south body is rubber, Phibes discovers that the key is missing.

Biederbeck is unmoved by the murders and insists on continuing. He sends Diana and Hackett (Gerald Sim), the last remaining team fellow member, back to England. Hackett leaves his truck to contact a unit of British troops, only finds they are actually more of Phibes' clockwork men. When he returns to the truck, Diana is gone and he is sand-blasted to decease. His truck crashes into Biederbeck's tent.

Realizing Phibes must have taken Diana, Biederbeck confronts him. Phibes demands the key in exchange for Diana's life, claiming that thank you to the aboriginal builders of the temple, when the gate is opened the water will drain out of Diana'southward trap and flow through the gate thus making it possible to free her without injury. Unable to gratuitous her from Phibes' water trap, Biederbeck surrenders the key and gives up his quest. Phibes unlocks the gate to the River of Life, boats Victoria's coffin through it, and summons Vulnavia to join them on the other side.

Biederbeck returns to the gate simply as information technology closes, pleading through the bars for Phibes to take him along, but Phibes ignores him and poles the gunkhole down the ancient passageway. Diana attempts to comfort Biederbeck, but he begins to speedily age. On his boat that slowly fades from sight, Phibes sings "Over the Rainbow" as Biederbeck finally succumbs to extreme onetime age and dies.

Cast [edit]

  • Vincent Price as Dr. Anton Phibes
  • Robert Quarry every bit Darius Biederbeck
  • Valli Kemp as Vulnavia
  • Peter Jeffrey as Inspecter Trout
  • Fiona Lewis as Diana Trowbridge
  • Hugh Griffith equally Harry Ambrose
  • Peter Cushing every bit Helm
  • Beryl Reid equally Miss Ambrose
  • Terry-Thomas as Lombardo
  • John Cater as Superintendent Waverley
  • Gerald Sim equally Hackett
  • Lewis Fiander as Baker
  • John Thaw as Shavers
  • Keith Buckley as Stewart
  • Milton Reid equally Cheng
  • John Comer as Ship's Officeholder
  • Caroline Munro as photos of Victoria Regina Phibes

Production [edit]

Producer Heyward brought in Blees, as he felt Blees' sense of humor would work well with a Phibes film. Heyward said that writers Blees and Fuest did non agree on how to write the film, which forced Heyward to mediate. The ensuing debates between Blees and Fuest resulted in what Heyward said was "a very good script" that could be used for teaching purposes. AIP was grooming Quarry equally Price'due south replacement,[ane] and the 2 were rumored to not go along well;[2] nonetheless, Heyward said he was enlightened of no tension between the actors on set.[1] Quarry provided his version in a subsequent interview, stating that he was told he would exist Toll'due south replacement when his contract ran out, which was meant to be between him and the studio. He stated that Price was not particularly interested in working with the studio, and AIP did not appreciate the salary that was steadily rising for him while his features were not doing every bit well. It was a publicity outcome in England that Toll heard almost being replaced, since a publicist came up and asked him how information technology felt to be replaced by Quarry. In terms of production, Quarry stated that while Price and him had a rift, it did not affect the production of the film, saying it was "extremely pleasant. Our humor was the one bail that made working with him a pleasance."[three]

Vulnavia was not initially intended to return, simply AIP insisted on it. Since Virginia North was pregnant at the time, Valli Kemp was cast instead.[2] The desert scenes were shot in Ibiza, Spain.[ane] In addition to Toll, iv actors returned from the previous movie: Peter Jeffrey, John Cater in the same roles, and Hugh Griffith and Terry-Thomas in new ones. In add-on photographs of Caroline Munro equally Phibes wife Victoria were used as they had been in the previous film.

Release [edit]

AIP solicited scripts for a third film, merely Heyward said they never institute a suitable i.[1] Proposed titles included Phibes Resurrectus , The Bride of Dr. Phibes , and The Seven Fates of Dr. Phibes .[ii]

Reception [edit]

Diversity wrote that Vincent Price "delivers one of his priceless theatric performances" and that producer Louis M. Heyward had "lined up a start-charge per unit crew of technical assistants".[4] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the moving-picture show one star, criticizing the "cheapness of the production" and the "unmotivated, mostly unimaginative" violence.[v] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Those who enjoyed the campy horror of final year'southward Dr. Phibes are in for a peachy thwarting" and called the script "astonishingly slapdash".[6] Philip Strick of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Information technology's refreshing to find a sequel that'south better than its prototype. The return of the beastly Phibes, his pallor flushed with the success of his initial screen appearance, is accompanied both by a larger upkeep and, more than to the signal, by a greater brandish of confidence at all levels of the production".[7]

At the film review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, sixty% of xv surveyed critics gave the movie a positive review, with an average rating of five.7/ten.[eight] In Horror Movies of the 1970s, writer John Kenneth Muir described the moving-picture show equally "no ameliorate or worse than its predecessor".[9] In The Penguin Encyclopaedia of Horror and the Supernatural Kim Newman wrote: "Dr Phibes Rises Once more lacks the gleeful insanity of the first film, but is far more accomplished".[10]

Soundtrack [edit]

The flick score by John Gale was released on Perseverance Records 20 March 2003.

The vocal used at the end of the film, "Over the Rainbow," was written nearly ten years after the story's time frame.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Weaver, Tom (2000). Render of the B Scientific discipline Fiction and Horror Heroes. McFarland & Company. pp. 182–183. ISBN9780786407552.
  2. ^ a b c Hallenbeck, Bruce G. (2009). Comedy-Horror Films: A Chronological History, 1914-2008 . McFarland & Company. p. 96–98. ISBN9780786453788.
  3. ^ "Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972) – A Retrospective – Cinefantastique".
  4. ^ "Physician Phibes Rises Over again". Multifariousness: 14. 19 July 1972.
  5. ^ Siskel, Cistron (July 18, 1972). "Dr. Phibes..." Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 5.
  6. ^ Thomas, Kevin (Baronial 11, 1972). "'Dr. Phibes' Rides Over again". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 22.
  7. ^ Strick, Philip (Nov 1972). "Dr. Phibes Rises Again". The Monthly Picture Bulletin. 39 (466): 230.
  8. ^ "Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved eleven Apr 2016.
  9. ^ Muir, John Kenneth (2002). Horror Films of the 1970s. McFarland & Company. p. 191. ISBN9780786491568.
  10. ^ Sullivan, Jack, ed. (1986). Penguin Encyclopaedia of Horror and the Supernatural . Viking Penguin. p. 1. ISBN0670809020.

External links [edit]

  • Dr. Phibes Rises Again at IMDb
  • Dr. Phibes Rises Again at AllMovie
  • Dr. Phibes Rises Again at the TCM Flick Database

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Phibes_Rises_Again

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