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Un baquet de sang

Titre original : A Bucket of Blood
  • 1959
  • 12
  • 1h 6min
NOTE IMDb
6,7/10
8,6 k
MA NOTE
Un baquet de sang (1959)
A dim-witted busboy finds acclaim as an artist for a plaster-covered dead cat that is mistaken as a skillful statuette. The desire for more praise soon leads to an increasingly deadly series of works.
Lire trailer2:00
1 Video
73 photos
ComedyCrimeHorror

Un garçon de café stupide fait passer pour une sculpture un chat qu'il a accidentellement tué et recouvert de plâtre. L'œuvre remporte alors un vif succès, obligeant le jeune homme à tuer à ... Tout lireUn garçon de café stupide fait passer pour une sculpture un chat qu'il a accidentellement tué et recouvert de plâtre. L'œuvre remporte alors un vif succès, obligeant le jeune homme à tuer à nouveau.Un garçon de café stupide fait passer pour une sculpture un chat qu'il a accidentellement tué et recouvert de plâtre. L'œuvre remporte alors un vif succès, obligeant le jeune homme à tuer à nouveau.

  • Réalisation
    • Roger Corman
  • Scénario
    • Charles B. Griffith
  • Casting principal
    • Dick Miller
    • Barboura Morris
    • Antony Carbone
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,7/10
    8,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Roger Corman
    • Scénario
      • Charles B. Griffith
    • Casting principal
      • Dick Miller
      • Barboura Morris
      • Antony Carbone
    • 124avis d'utilisateurs
    • 92avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Blu-ray Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Blu-ray Trailer

    Photos73

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 67
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    Rôles principaux24

    Modifier
    Dick Miller
    Dick Miller
    • Walter Paisley
    Barboura Morris
    • Carla
    Antony Carbone
    Antony Carbone
    • Leonard de Santis
    Julian Burton
    Julian Burton
    • Maxwell H. Brock
    Ed Nelson
    Ed Nelson
    • Art Lacroix
    John Brinkley
    • Will
    John Herman Shaner
    • Oscar
    • (as John Shaner)
    Judy Bamber
    Judy Bamber
    • Alice
    Myrtle Vail
    Myrtle Vail
    • Mrs. Swickert
    • (as Myrtle Damerel)
    Bert Convy
    Bert Convy
    • Lou Raby
    • (as Burt Convy)
    Jhean Burton
    • Naolia
    Bruno VeSota
    Bruno VeSota
    • Art Collector
    • (as Bruno Ve Soto)
    Lynn Storey
    • Sylvia
    • (as Lynne Storey)
    Tom Daly
    • Coffee-House patron
    • (non crédité)
    Alex Hassilev
    • Singer-Guitarist
    • (non crédité)
    George Hoagland
    George Hoagland
    • Art Exhibit Patron
    • (non crédité)
    Paul Horn
    • Beatnik Saxophonist
    • (non crédité)
    Kenner G. Kemp
    Kenner G. Kemp
    • Art Exhibit Patron
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Roger Corman
    • Scénario
      • Charles B. Griffith
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs124

    6,78.5K
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    Avis à la une

    7bensonmum2

    "But if you'd have shot me, you'd be moppin' up my blood now."

    A Bucket of Blood is a nice little Corman horror film. It plays better than many of his other non-Poe, non-Price films. It's the story of a "backwards" busboy in a beatnik dive trying to fit in by becoming an artist. His creations are the talk of the joint. But just how is the seemingly talentless busboy able to create such realistic images of death?

    Dick Miller plays the busboy in one of the few feature roles I remember seeing him in. The mix of emotions he imbibes into his character is a highlight of the film. At one moment he's confused, the next a raving lunatic. Corman kept the screenplay simple and it works. I've seen too many low budget directors try to creative effects, etc. that their budgets just do not allow. Corman doesn't do this. This one is definitely recommended to fans of the 50s quickie horror films.
    silentgpaleo

    Corman's first black comedy

    In Roger Corman's autobiography, he credits himself to creating the sub-genre "black comedy". His version of "black comedy" featured gruesome elements, that were sometimes played for laughs. With BUCKET OF BLOOD and LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS, he furthered this along, and although I'm not sure if he did indeed invent the "black comedy", he sure had a good run with it.

    BUCKET OF BLOOD is near-perfect. Which is saying a lot when you think of some of Corman's films. BUCKET OF BLOOD stars Dick Miller in his only starring performance. He plays a struggling busboy/artist, whose only real desire in life is to impress the local beatnik girl (the talented Barboura Morris). Miller works at the same coffee house that Morris frequents. The place, run by Anthony Carbone, features poetry and art. There are also pretentious beatniks, drug dealers, and undercover detectives.

    I don't want to give much else away, aside from that the film itself has a life of its own. The energy is high, the camera and editing work are effectively polished, and the dialogue is uniformly crisp. Corman's direction is fluid. Next to LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS and maybe a few of his Poe films, BUCKET OF BLOOD is his best film.

    Dick Miller, has never received such a juicy part to play as this. He handles the jokes well, and his interplay with Carbone, and especially Ed Nelson, is great.

    The sets are cheap, the conclusion is rushed, but BUCKET OF BLOOD made me giggle, and unlike some horror films, it is supposed to.
    7Coventry

    Horror comedy of different clay!

    Not including almost every entry in the terrific Edgar Allen Poe cycle he did, "A Bucket of Blood" unquestionable is Roger Corman's best and most entertaining film. And – coincidentally or not – this movie also contains many references towards Poe (a walled-up cat!!), so maybe Corman simply needs the legendary horror author's oeuvre in order to deliver great movies? "A Bucket of Blood" is a truly slick and ingenious little quickie that terrifically blends the classic terror premise of "Mystery of the Wax Museum" with the typical psychotronic-humor that Corman largely invented himself. Corman regular Dick Miller (terribly underrated throughout his whole career) gives away a near-perfect performance as Walter Praisley, a clumsy waiter and wannabe artist whose biggest wish to get as famous as the talkative stars he serves coffee to every day. His dream accelerates rapidly and unexpectedly when he covers his landlady's dead cat in clay and people proclaim it an art-masterpiece. Walter naturally enjoys his easily earned artist-status but he also realizes that he'll have to move on to bigger (read: bloodier) projects if he wants to stay in the picture. Dick Miller's exhilarating acting together with Charles Griffith's wit scripting skills, makes this a very fun production that every cult-film fan will enjoy watching. Although chuckles clearly have the upper hand in "A Bucket of Blood", Corman doesn't ignore the horror entirely and some of the death-sequences are definitely more chilling than the ones featuring in other contemporary and "serious" horror movies.
    7secondtake

    Beats, Artists, and a Sweet Tempered Killer

    A Bucket of Blood (1959)

    Beats, Artists, and a Sweet Tempered Killer

    This is a romp, a riot, and a rebellious ripoff. Most of all it's rotten, so rotten it's terrific. It's a must see, in a way, for anyone into the beats, and into C-grade horror films.

    Is it good at all? Yes, yes! As clumsy as it is, Bucket of Blood has an innovative (if ridiculous) plot. It has an unlikely hero who meets an unlikely demise. It has real poetry, and real hep cat talk (of the lowest form, but hey, show me more fun). It has mood, heroes and villains, a chase scene (on foot), stupid broads and stupid cats and funny situations.

    One key to liking this kind of thing is to remember that the filmmakers, even if on a starvation budget, are no idiots. Director Roger Corman most of all. They know they are making a laugh-out-loud send up of horror films, and they know the beat slang is absurd, and they know the plot is crazy, man. So you can have fun with them, and really get a good laugh, and a little chill, and a weird reminder that in some sad sad happy way, this is what it was like in smaller city coffeehouses where Ginsberg never set foot but where Corman and crew did. Even the photography, led by Jacques R. Marquette (of Attack of the 50 Foot Woman fame, quote unquote), is really worth watching.

    There is nothing like it.
    BaronBl00d

    "Walter Paisley Is Born"

    Purportedly made in five days, A Bucket of Blood is one of those films that just seems to grow on you after each viewing(beginning with the first!). Dick Miller plays his most substantial role in his long and varied career as a very stupid, amoral busboy for a beatnik cafe. His name is Walter Paisley and he wants to "fit" in with all the other cool cats at the cafe like the pompous Maxwell who recites poetry, the two clowns higher than kites that just take space and never order any coffee, the cafe owner Leonard that wears the trappings of being a beatnik but is more concerned about making a buck, the lovely artist Carla that wants to be surrounded by creative and artistic people, and a host of other beatnik types. Walter, by a set of bizarre and ridiculous circumstances, takes a cat he accidentally killed and covers it with clay. He brings it in to his "friends" and that laud him as a great and gifted artist. From there Walter works his way up to human sculptures. The story is filled with loads of black humour including a heavy dose of fun poked at the beatnik culture. Miller plays Paisley wonderfully with a certain innocence. All the acting is pretty good with a few stand-outs. Anthony Carbone as Leonard adds a lot of credibility to the film with his more realistic performance, and he has some of the best lines and facial expressions. Barboura Morris is beautiful and credible. But the top acting honors easily go to Julian Burton(where is this guy now?) as Maxwell. He is the poet that makes every word sound as if art were dripping from his tongue. He recites lines like, "Life is an obscure hobo bumming a free ride on the omnibus of art" and "ring rubber bells, clang cotton gongs, strike silken cymbols." He is wonderfully over-the-top in his whole portrayal and always makes me laugh with that garbage he utters. Director Roger Corman has little budget to work with here, but he makes a minor masterpiece with what he did have to work with. Walter Paisley is Born. And he lives on in video and dvd!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      At the time of its original release there was a promotion in the newspaper's movie section advertisements that made the offer, "If You Bring In A Bucket Of Blood To Your Local Theater's Management (Or Ticket Booth), You Will Be Given One Free Admission."
    • Gaffes
      Walter accidentally kills a cat in a wall with a knife, but when he takes it out of the wall, it is stiff, as if it has been dead at least an hour.
    • Citations

      [first lines]

      Maxwell H. Brock: I will talk to you of Art, for there is nothing else to talk about, for there is nothing else. Life is an obscure hobo bumming a ride on the omnibus of Art. Burn gas buggies, and whip your sour cream of circumstance and hope, and go ahead and sleep your bloody heads off. Creation is, all else is not. What is not creation, is graham crackers; let it all crumble to feed the creator. The Artist is, all others are not. A canvas is a canvas or a painting. A rock is a rock or a statue. A sound is a sound or is music. A preacher is a preacher, or an Artist. Where are John, Joe, Jake, Jim, jerk? Dead, dead, dead They were not born before they were born, they were not born. Where are Leonardo, Rembrandt, Ludwig? Alive! Alive! Alive! They were born! Bring on the multitude, the multitude of fishes: feed them with the fishes for liver oil to nourish the Artist, stretch their skin upon an easel to give him canvas, crush their bones into a paste that he might mold them. Let them die, and by their miserable deaths become the clay within his hands that he might form an ashtray or an ark. For all that is comes through the eye of the Artist. The rest are blind fish, swimming in the cave of aloneness. Swim on you maudlin, muddling, maddened fools, and dream that one bright and sunny night, some Artist will bait a hook and let you bite upon it! Bite hard - and die! In his stomach you are very close to immortality.

    • Versions alternatives
      The West German dubbed version produced by Schongerfilm, "Das Vermächtnis des Professor Bondi" (The Legacy of Professor Bondi), features a unique 9-minute long prologue. Ostensibly created to pad out the film's runtime to make it more suitable for playing in German theaters, it turns the film into a sequel to L'Homme au masque de cire (1953), which was released there as "Das Kabinett des Professor Bondi" (The Cabinet of Professor Bondi). The sequence follows Professor Henry Bondi (ie. Professor Henry Jarrod, the character originally played by Vincent Price), who survived his death in the earlier film, but now feels the ravages of time encroaching upon him and his Marie Antoinette wax figure. As a storm brews outside his dilapidated castle, he reluctantly decides that his last living relative, Walter Bondi (ie. Walter Paisley), must continue his work. Neither the crew who produced this prologue, nor the actor who plays Professor Bondi, have been identified.
    • Connexions
      Edited into FrightMare Theater: A Bucket of Blood (2016)
    • Bandes originales
      The Ballad of Tim Evans
      ("Go Down, You Murderer")

      Music & Lyrics by Ewan MacColl

      Performed by Alex Hassilev

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    FAQ16

    • How long is A Bucket of Blood?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 30 septembre 1970 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Un seau de sang
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Venice Beach, Venice, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Alta Vista Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 50 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 6 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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