AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,3/10
396
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA newly-married young woman is possessed by the evil spirit of her husband's deceased first wife. The possession turns her into a scheming killer who will stop at nothing to get what she wan... Ler tudoA newly-married young woman is possessed by the evil spirit of her husband's deceased first wife. The possession turns her into a scheming killer who will stop at nothing to get what she wants.A newly-married young woman is possessed by the evil spirit of her husband's deceased first wife. The possession turns her into a scheming killer who will stop at nothing to get what she wants.
Joan Bradshaw
- Redhead
- (não creditado)
Frances Turner
- Baby Sitter
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
I am clad, that i found out about this movie, surprised it not got many comment on it
A newly married young woman, is possessed by the evil spirit of her husband's deceased first wife.
I really enjoy this movie, it not scary or creepy but some how this movie dose have eerie moments in places.
I really enjoyed the plot of the movie, the dose not take to long to get going , the movie flows really well.
There was not one dull second in this movie, it kept intrude from start to the very end!
The acting was really good from the whole cast but there were some very wooden acting from some of the cast members
7 out of 10
A newly married young woman, is possessed by the evil spirit of her husband's deceased first wife.
I really enjoy this movie, it not scary or creepy but some how this movie dose have eerie moments in places.
I really enjoyed the plot of the movie, the dose not take to long to get going , the movie flows really well.
There was not one dull second in this movie, it kept intrude from start to the very end!
The acting was really good from the whole cast but there were some very wooden acting from some of the cast members
7 out of 10
1957's "Back from the Dead" paired Arthur Franz and Peggie Castle as husband and wife Dick and Mandy Anthony, accompanied by her sister Kate (Marsha Hunt) to his California seaside home because of Mandy's pregnancy. The raging sea offers little comfort to the apprehensive Mandy, something calling out to her before an epileptic seizure that causes an unfortunate miscarriage. She awakens to call her husband 'Dicken' and does not recognize her own sister, but when she refers to herself as 'Felicia' Dick recognizes her as his first wife, who was believed to have drowned six years earlier. Since he never once mentioned Felicia to his new wife it's a mystery as to what has occurred, and when she goes to see the dead woman's parents there can be no doubt that Felicia is indeed 'back from the dead.' The real star of the film is Marsha Hunt, easily out acting Franz and Castle, doggedly determined to free Mandy from the evil spell cast by local cult leader Maitre Renault (Otto Reichow), whose powers appear to be woefully inadequate if he's unable to dispatch the only person who's on to him. Virtually nothing is made of the Satanic cult, so it's less a case of "The Exorcist" than another run of the mill Bridey Murphy clone, reincarnation being such a hot topic at the time that author Catherine Turney only now was allowed to adapt her own 1952 novel into a sadly muddled script. Hunt herself correctly felt that it wasn't a good film but a solid premise that makes one stay tuned to see what happens; the main problem is that we never get to know the real Mandy before she's possessed by 'Felicia,' growing more predictable until the underwhelming climax. Double billed theatrically with "The Unknown Terror," another less than sturdy effort from Western specialist Charles Marquis Warren, both films quickly forgotten once TV residuals subsided.
One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Charles Marquis Warren; Produced by Robert Stabler for Regal Films; Released by 20th Century-Fox. Screenplay by Catherine Turney from her novel; Photography by Ernest Haller; Edited by Leslie Vidor; Music by Raoul Kraushaar. Starring Peggy Castle, Arthur Franz, Marsha Hunt, Evelyn Scott, Marianne Stewart and Don Haggerty.
Supernatural terror outing concerning a second wife who is haunted by the lingering presence of her predecessor. The film benefits from the extensive use of the "lady in a white nightgown" and the "waves pounding against the rocks" bits of Gothic schtick.
Supernatural terror outing concerning a second wife who is haunted by the lingering presence of her predecessor. The film benefits from the extensive use of the "lady in a white nightgown" and the "waves pounding against the rocks" bits of Gothic schtick.
The first and most important thing I want to say is that this movie is directed by a great western specialist for whom it is one of the TWO horror films - with also THE UNKNOWN TERROR - besides westerns, westerns and westerns. So this is maybe not a great horror film, but because and only because it is from this western maker Charles Marquis Warren, I was so curious to see it. And I think that's not bad at all. This kind of intrigue is not my cup of tea at all, I am a bit bored, but let's be fair, there have been far worse in this scheme. It is a small budget and that's even better to work hard on a good script. But this plot would have been better made by a director such as Lewis Allen for instance, for whom it was more his stuff - THE UNINVITED, THE UNSEEN -, more than westerns.
There are shades of Noël Coward in this clever little mystery, and though the cast are all a bit wooden, it's not a bad low-budget effort. We start with a distracted "Miranda" (Peggie Castle) who is distressing her new husband "Dick" (Arthur Franz) by going into hysterics, a coma, then emerging claiming her name is "Felicia". Her sister "Kate" (Marsha Hunt) is even more bemused when she learns that was the name of his late wife. Is she just over-stressed or might she actually be being possessed by the returning spirit of the deceased woman whose death saw her fall from a cliff into the murky waters beneath. It turns out that the mother of "Felicia" is adept in the dark arts and so she (Helen Wallace) is all too willing to accept the story, but her husband (James Bell) is much more sceptical. Seeking clarity, they send for "Renault" (Otto Reichow) who lives locally and might have a solution to this messy psychological conundrum - though he's clearly not a man to be trusted, either! What is going on? With the scene set, this plays out quite intriguingly for a time and had the cast just been a little more robust, it could have been quite a bit better. The leading roles are pretty much all disappointingly underplayed: Reichow sounds like he could have a future career as Arnold Schwarzenegger's dialogue coach; and the standard of the production isn't really up to much with scenes clearly shot against backdrop cinematographers that aren't always as well synched as they might have been. It's still quite an exciting watch, though, and with a soundtrack straight out of the "Outer Limits" and even a secret doorway, it's not too bad at all.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWas released theatrically in double-bill with the movie "The Unknown Terror", also from director Charles Marquis Warren.
- Citações
Maitre Renault: You have returned Felicia
[minor pause, beat]
Maitre Renault: I will never let you go again.
- ConexõesEdited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 9 (2002)
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Back from the Dead
- Locações de filme
- Moss Cove Beach, Laguna Beach, Califórnia, EUA(fall from cliff)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 19 min(79 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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