Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe spirit of an executed murderer enters the body of a physician, and forces him to do its bidding--namely, murder.The spirit of an executed murderer enters the body of a physician, and forces him to do its bidding--namely, murder.The spirit of an executed murderer enters the body of a physician, and forces him to do its bidding--namely, murder.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Marion Martin
- Betty Hanzel
- (as Marian Martin)
Melva Anstead
- Dancer
- (non crédité)
Steve Benton
- Police Officer
- (non crédité)
Lulu Mae Bohrman
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
Forest Burns
- Execution Witness
- (non crédité)
Tom Chatterton
- Prison Chaplain
- (non crédité)
Edmund Cobb
- Execution Official
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The film starts with Tom Powers (Bogardus) killing someone in a park and walking away. It's not about whether or not he gets away with it – he doesn't – but what happens afterwards. Psychic doctor Stanley Ridges (Paul) believes Powers has the strongest will that the world has known and so is a prime candidate for his experiment. The plan is for Powers to will himself to return after his execution. Uh-oh, guess what
.?
The film runs for an hour and so there is never any real time to develop tension, especially given the amount of revenge that Powers and his willpower want to engage in. As a result, it is a matter-of-fact story where this happens and then that happens and things carry along until the end. It's not bad and there are moments of good acting, eg, when Powers is waiting in Death Row and receives an audience with Ridges.
The film runs for an hour and so there is never any real time to develop tension, especially given the amount of revenge that Powers and his willpower want to engage in. As a result, it is a matter-of-fact story where this happens and then that happens and things carry along until the end. It's not bad and there are moments of good acting, eg, when Powers is waiting in Death Row and receives an audience with Ridges.
Excellent B supernatural thriller from Republic about an executed killer (Tom Powers in a strong performance) who returns from the grave to possess a paranormal researcher (Stanley Ridges) in order to get revenge on those who wronged him. This story is similar to the earlier Universal crime/horror mashup Black Friday, which also starred Ridges. Richard Arlen plays the reporter out to get to the bottom of everything. He's ok but Powers and Ridges are the real stars. Definitely worth a look for the classic horror fan who thinks he's seen everything.
1945's "The Phantom Speaks" fared no better than other Republic horror films, avoiding the stars utilized by Universal, Monogram, or PRC for contract players with little affinity for the genre. On this occasion, they not only rip off the Karloff-Lugosi vehicle "Black Friday," they actually signed the actor playing the tortured dual role, Stanley Ridges, who yet again is just not himself as he proves unable to resist the impulse to kill. Instead of a college professor granted half the brain of a dead gangster out for revenge, he's a psychic investigator delving into the separation of mind, body, and soul, finding the perfect test subject in a condemned man set to be executed but not finished avenging himself on the people that testified against him to seal his conviction. Once he falls under the dead man's overpowering influence, a gun is used to target the lawyer who failed to get him off, the faithless wife who lied on the witness stand, and the hapless witness who saw him shoot down his wife's lover in the park. During his lucid moments, Ridges has no memory of committing misdeeds and has a devoted housekeeper willing to cover up for him. Richard Arlen gets top billing as a newshound who discovers evidence of the living dead but chooses not to believe it, Tom Powers as the executed killer whose task is not yet finished. If only the climax weren't so similar to "Black Friday," another execution before the usual gathering of expressionless yet eager vultures.
10wdixon
I just caught up with THE PHANTOM SPEAKS yesterday, and it's one of a group of disturbing, yet riveting hour long thrillers that Republic produced in the mid 1940s, along with such films as VALLEY OF THE ZOMBIES, THE MYSTERIOUS MR. VALENTINE, and THE VAMPIRE'S GHOST; short, evocative, and deeply atmospheric. While Republic's serials dealt in nonstop action, and their Westerns offered up the artificially cheerful spectacle of Roy Roger and family in a seemingly endless series of singing westerns, Republic's hour long programmers are melancholy, paranoid, world weary, and genuinely disturbing. Directed by such superb veterans as Phil Ford, Leslie Selander, and in this case, John English, Republic's "B" films offered the viewer a vision of the world as a vast, bleak, and friendless place, inhabited only the corrupt and powerful, and their unwilling victims. Superb direction by English, with Tom Powers excellent as the ruthless killer, and the ever reliable Stanley Ridges both sympathetic and harrowing as his dupe. Watch for an uncredited Kenne Duncan in the opening scene as Powers's victim. All of these films, needless to say, should be available on DVD.
In order to prove his theories about the human spirit, scientist Dr. Paul Renwick (Stanley Ridges) talks to Harvey Bogardus (Tom Powers), a killer on death row who has the will strong enough for him to cross the barrier between the dead and the living. Renwick tells the murderer that he will be in touch after his execution has been carried out.
When Renwick does make contact with Bogardus's spirit, the killer possesses the scientist in order to exact revenge on those who sent him to the electric chair.
This entertaining supernatural thriller does beg the question 'Why didn't Renwick find a strong-willed person with a terminal disease rather than a cold-blooded killer?' but then we wouldn't have much of a film if that had been the case. Accept the rather goofy premise, and there's a lot of fun to be had with this film. That said, The Phantom Speaks was actually banned in Britain at the time, probably thanks to a harrowing scene where a little girl tries to wake up her murdered father and a surprisingly downbeat ending, so maybe not everyone had as much fun with the film as I did.
When Renwick does make contact with Bogardus's spirit, the killer possesses the scientist in order to exact revenge on those who sent him to the electric chair.
This entertaining supernatural thriller does beg the question 'Why didn't Renwick find a strong-willed person with a terminal disease rather than a cold-blooded killer?' but then we wouldn't have much of a film if that had been the case. Accept the rather goofy premise, and there's a lot of fun to be had with this film. That said, The Phantom Speaks was actually banned in Britain at the time, probably thanks to a harrowing scene where a little girl tries to wake up her murdered father and a surprisingly downbeat ending, so maybe not everyone had as much fun with the film as I did.
Le saviez-vous
- Anecdotes"The Texarkana Moonlight Murders", where eight people were attacked (and five killed) in Texarkana in the mid 1940s, named their attacker 'The Phantom Killer" or "Phantom Slayer", supposedly after this film, which was showing at the time of the attacks.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Horrible Horror (1986)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 9 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Phantom Speaks (1945) officially released in India in English?
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