House of WaxYear: 1953 Director: Andre De Toth Written by: Crane Wilbur Threat: Psychopath Weapon of Choice: Rope Based upon: story - "The House of Wax" - Charles Belden |
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Rish Outfield's reviews
In glorious 3-D(!!), Professor Jarrod is a wax sculptor who loves his creations as if they're his own children. But when his
treacherous partner at the wax museum sets it ablaze (and Jarrod with it), he is unable to sculpt anymore (and is missing
his face). Well, after a few mysterious murders (including said doublecrossing partner), Jarrod opens a new wax museum,
filled with figures so incredibly lifelike, you'd swear you saw these faces before. At their funeral, perhaps?
This was apparently the first film released in 3-D by a major studio (a hint was the poster which read, "The first feature
brought to you by a major studio in 3-D!"), and it was the first film in 3-D I've gone to (I don't think Captain Eo
counts). The pleasure of putting on the glasses and seeing everything, from the Warner Bros. logo to the chandeliers poke
outward is hard to describe. Even if I had hated this film, I don't know if I could give it a bad review. But then again,
Freddy's Dead had some 3-D in it, and that didn't stop me from hating that. The only truly negative thing I can say
was that it seemed long, even though it only clocks in at ninety minutes, probably reminding me that my generation has no
attention span.
Set in the 1920's, this had some very strange moments. Women were flighty, fainting things with corseted waists the size of
their necks. Men were brash, chauvinistic things ("Only a skirt could think up such nonsense"). One of said corseted women
(Carolyn Jones) was a golddigger with a high, squeaky voice and she seemed to typify the attitude of the times. It was a
romantic period (if I can go by the film, which had moments that seemed to be out of the 1800's) and one I'd like to see
more of. The story wasn't particularly original, and miles away from complex, but what this film had going for it was that
it was fun. The 3-D, though distracting every once in a while while you're brain tried to make sense of the images, was
exciting and new. The scene where a barker hits a paddleball into the camera has to be seen to be believed, especially
since it is so gratuitous. We enjoyed it, though–-there was even a bit of applause from the audience, which is always nice
(back home, a movie character could fly right out of the screen, walk up the aisle, and buy everybody a bag of popcorn, and
no one would applaud). Vincent Price, as usual, is just too likable for words whether slinking about and saying nothing or
stuck in a wheelchair and speaking smoothly and craftily. When we know he is the killer and we know he is deformed, we find
him more likable than the heroes. And I still rooted for him even though I knew he would plunge to his death. Or did
he--there was never a Return to the House of Wax, was there?
Best Scare: One of the Can Can dancers sticks her . . . can directly into the camera–-and your face.
I'd Recommend It To: If you can see it in a theater in 3-D, don't walk, RUN. On video it's probably pretty average.
Note: Are there still houses of wax? Besides ones featuring fake Elvises and Liza Minellis. Maybe it's just that, because we
see department store mannequins every single day, wax figures don't hold novelty. It could be that with television, movies
and video games, people find sculpted figures as dull as imagination and books. I don't know. Perhaps the era of wax
museums is gone forever, much like the era of movies in 3-D.
Total Skulls: 8
Sequel | ||
Sequel setup | ||
Rips off earlier film | ||
Horror film showing on TV/in theater in movie | ||
Future celebrity appears | Charles Bronson | |
Former celebrity appears | ||
Bad title | ||
Bad premise | ||
Bad acting | ||
Bad dialogue | ||
Bad execution | ||
MTV Editing | ||
OTS | ||
Girl unnecessarily gets naked | ||
Wanton sex | ||
Death associated with sex | ||
Unfulfilled promise of nudity | ||
Characters forget about threat | ||
Secluded location | ||
Power is cut | ||
Phone lines are cut | ||
Someone investigates a strange noise | ||
Someone runs up stairs instead of going out front door | ||
Camera is the killer | ||
Victims cower in front of a window/door | ||
Victim locks self in with killer | ||
Victim running from killer inexplicably falls | ||
Toilet stall scene | ||
Shower/bath scene | ||
Car stalls or won't start | ||
Cat jumps out | ||
Fake scare | ||
Laughable scare | ||
Stupid discovery of corpse | ||
Dream sequence | ||
Hallucination/Vision | ||
No one believes only witness | ||
Crazy, drunk, old man knows the truth | ||
Music detracts from scene | ||
Death in first five minutes | ||
x years before/later | ||
Flashback sequence | ||
Dark and stormy night | ||
Killer doesn't stay dead | ||
Killer wears a mask | ||
Killer is in closet | ||
Killer is in car with victim | ||
Villain is more sympathetic than heroes | ||
Unscary villain/monster | ||
Beheading | ||
Blood fountain | ||
Blood hits camera | ||
Poor death effect | ||
Excessive gore | ||
No one dies at all | ||
Virgin survives | ||
Geek/Nerd survives | ||
Little kid lamely survives | ||
Dog/Pet miraculously survives | ||
Unresolved subplots | ||
"It was all a dream" ending | ||
Unbelievably happy ending | ||
Unbelievably crappy ending | ||
What the hell? |