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IMDbPro

L'étrange histoire du juge Cordier

Original title: Diary of a Madman
  • 1963
  • 12
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Vincent Price and Nancy Kovack in L'étrange histoire du juge Cordier (1963)
Trailer 1
Play trailer3:22
2 Videos
31 Photos
Horror

An evil spirit leaves the body of his human host, a criminal on death-row, and sneaks into the body of his next human host, a French magistrate.An evil spirit leaves the body of his human host, a criminal on death-row, and sneaks into the body of his next human host, a French magistrate.An evil spirit leaves the body of his human host, a criminal on death-row, and sneaks into the body of his next human host, a French magistrate.

  • Director
    • Reginald Le Borg
  • Writers
    • Guy de Maupassant
    • Robert E. Kent
  • Stars
    • Vincent Price
    • Nancy Kovack
    • Chris Warfield
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Reginald Le Borg
    • Writers
      • Guy de Maupassant
      • Robert E. Kent
    • Stars
      • Vincent Price
      • Nancy Kovack
      • Chris Warfield
    • 63User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Diary of a Madman
    Trailer 3:22
    Diary of a Madman
    Diary Of A Madman: I've Paid For My Sins
    Clip 3:09
    Diary Of A Madman: I've Paid For My Sins
    Diary Of A Madman: I've Paid For My Sins
    Clip 3:09
    Diary Of A Madman: I've Paid For My Sins

    Photos31

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    + 27
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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Vincent Price
    Vincent Price
    • Magistrate Simon Cordier
    Nancy Kovack
    Nancy Kovack
    • Odette Mallotte
    Chris Warfield
    • Paul Duclasse
    Elaine Devry
    Elaine Devry
    • Jeanne D'Arville
    Ian Wolfe
    Ian Wolfe
    • Pierre
    Stephen Roberts
    Stephen Roberts
    • Police Captain Robert Rennedon
    Lewis Martin
    Lewis Martin
    • Father Raymonde
    Mary Adams
    Mary Adams
    • Louise
    Edward Colmans
    Edward Colmans
    • Andre D'Arville
    Nelson Olmsted
    Nelson Olmsted
    • Dr. Borman
    Harvey Stephens
    Harvey Stephens
    • Louis Girot
    Dick Wilson
    Dick Wilson
    • Martin
    Wayne Collier
    • Arguing Cafe Couple
    Gloria Clark
    • Arguing Cafe Couple
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Marcel the Postman
    George Sawaya
    • Wagon Driver
    Joseph Del Nostro Jr.
    • Coachman
    Joseph Ruskin
    Joseph Ruskin
    • The Horla
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Reginald Le Borg
    • Writers
      • Guy de Maupassant
      • Robert E. Kent
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.33.2K
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    Featured reviews

    StuOz

    Vincent Price Vs Invisible Monster

    Badly titled but very entertaining Price horror film.

    For a while I had seen this movie floating around but since the title reveals zero about what the movie is about - I never bothered with it! Just had my first viewing. Better late than never!

    Despite being too studiobound and needing about 20 minutes of dull footage cut out, Diary of a Madman is a knockout movie. And frankly, a very odd one, but odd in a good way.

    We are missing the wonderfully campy Price dialogue we got in House of Wax and House on Haunted Hill, but instead we get a deadly serious Price who is very pleasing.

    Having no location filming gives it a television movie look but the rich Richard LaSalle score makes the whole thing seem rather grand.

    If you think you have heard some of the LaSalle cues before, you have, in TV's Lost In Space (1965) and Land of the Giants (1968).

    Despite some mild flaws, an outstanding and wonderfully oddball flick.
    6The_Void

    Not up to Price's usually high standard

    I'm a big fan of Vincent Price and all of his films are a must see for me. Normally, this endeavour leads me to see some of the finest horror films of the fifties, sixties and seventies; but every now and again, it will turn up a lesser entry in the great man's filmography, and unfortunately - this is the case here. Based on stories by Guy de Maupassant, Diary of a Madman is a film without much to differentiate it from a number of similar films, and so to someone like me who has seen a great many horror movies; this one does fall a bit flat. Other bad elements include a rather long running time, which ensures that the flimsy plot always feel far too drawn out. The plot follows judge/sculptor Simon Cordier, a man who goes to visit a man put to death in his cell. He was put to death for various murders that he committed, and which he claims were under the influence of evil spirit Horla. However, after the death of the murderer; the evil spirit has nowhere to go, and so decides to take up residence inside the judge...

    It's a seriously good job that this film stars Vincent Price, as with almost anyone else in the lead role it would have been a complete dead loss. Price doesn't excel himself here; but even an average Price performance is great to watch, and the great thespian continually saves the film from tedium. Price is the only real star of the film, and that's not a problem in a way as he has more than enough to carry a film on his own; a film like this could really do with a few more distractions. The locations look nice, however, and the Technicolor cinematography excellently captures them. There's not a great deal of actual horror in the film; sequences that see Vincent Price's mirror reflection disappear, and a few where he has green eyes are about as horrific as it gets. The idea of an evil demon possessing someone isn't exactly original, but the basics of the story get good handling here; so it's a shame that the rest of the film wasn't better. Overall, this has it's moments I suppose; but aside from Price's performance, there isn't much to recommend it for. Interesting fact, though; a quote towards the start of the film was used by Rob Zombie in his song "The Return of the Phantom Stranger"!
    5sc8031

    Price -- the brightest star of all!

    This is a Vincent Price vehicle that is loosely based on a Guy De Maupassant short story. The setup is eerie, speaking of how dark spiritual beings exist in our world, unseen by human eyes. "The Horla" is one such unseen supernatural being, one which has power over the minds of men and the natural world. Unfortunately, the film's pacing becomes quite grating by the end (was it really only 97 minutes?) and ends with some fairly predictable '50s/'60s cheesy horror.

    In this tale, Price plays Simon Cordier, a magistrate in a French court in the late 19th century. When the magistrate has one final conversation with a prisoner convicted of multiple murders, the man tells Cordier that he did not commit the murders, but was compelled to by some unspeakable evil entity (the Horla) which took control of his mind and body. Then, for some reason or another, the Horla begins to stalk Cordier (it's rather clumsily presented, but it works). Fearing for his sanity, Cordier takes a vacation from his work and takes up his old hobby of sculpting, which leads him to encounter the model and enchanting muse, Odette (Nancy Kovak). And it is here that the Horla begins to work his magic on Simon Cordier. The Horla plays the devil's advocate, blackmailing Cordier into following his weakest urges.

    A lot of Vincent Price films operated within a spectrum of horror-comedy, which is not to say that they were exactly funny, but had such an offbeat attitude it made them simultaneously amusing and creepy. Some of those vibes can be found here, and a number of Price's lines and expressions are totally charming (such as when he's smooth-talking Odette for the first time). And the way some of the "philosophical" ideas were presented -- they were so blunt it was comedic. I don't know if that much was intentional, but it did give the movie some color.

    But at the same time the plot, characters and story are all too simple for how long the film runs. And the villain or mysterious antagonist, the "Horla", becomes pretty lame by the end. He gets reduced to the sort of unimaginative pseudo-science-fiction horror that filled out B-movies in the '50s and '60s. The typical spiritual/philosophical elements which litter "mystical horror" stories are here either cliché (the crucifix is able to ward off evil... again!) or just boring (the conversations with the Police Chief about whether or not criminals are born evil). And my other main criticism is that the film would be pretty terrible without Vincent Price in the lead role. Only Price carries the film by the end.

    "Diary of a Madman" was a decent distraction for a lazy afternoon, but not a film that I'd watch again. Vincent Price has done some really excellent stuff, but this isn't one of his necessary works.
    8Boba_Fett1138

    Suprinsingly great.

    Most horror movies made between the '50's and '70's weren't very much psychological once and featured for instance monsters, gore and tons of blood. In that regard "Diary of a Madman" is a quite refreshing movie. It lies its emphasis on the psychological aspects of the movie and uses it for its tension, mystery and just overall horror, even though the movie still features a 'supernatural' horror theme.

    The movie has a well build up and constructed story, that only gets better and better as it heads toward the ending. The movie begins quite typical but soon becomes very intriguing when it becomes obvious that just is not just another average standard '60's horror flick, with Vincent Price in the lead role. The movie shows how the highly respected magistrate/sculptor slowly looses his mind when he is being possessed by a strange mysterious spirit called an Horla. Of course no one believes him at first when he starts to hear and see things. He starts to question his own sanity, until the Horla has him in his almost complete control. Good old Vincent Price however decides to fight back and we already at the start sort of know what has happened, since the movie is told in the past time, when people read his diary in which he described the strange events that had happened.

    So you don't really have to expect an horror movie with monster, gore and scare effects. This movie is mostly about its build-up and overall atmosphere. It's a psychological movie, though visually the movie is also a good one.

    The movie features quite some early and variating special effects and other cinematic tricks. It's quite clumsy looking all of course but at least you can say that they really tried and put some effort in it to making something new.

    Vincent Price of course always had been at his best in roles such as these, so this movie forms no exception to that. He is highly convincing as the respected magistrate but also as the 'madman'. Two of course total opposite elements, which Price perfectly knows to handle, without ever making anything look ridicules or totally unbelievable.

    It's a real surprisingly good and quite different '60's horror flick, that deserves to be seen and known better, starring genre-legend Vincent Price!

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    Wizard-8

    Okay, though somewhat stretched out

    Although I am a fan of Vincent Price, I only caught this particular effort of his today. Watching it, I think I know why it slipped past my attention for all of these years. Don't get me wrong - it is not a terrible or bad effort. Price is in top form as always, the low tech special effects are actually pretty good, and the script's basic idea is an intriguing (if a little familiar) one. However, the actual execution of this idea by the director and the screenwriter is kind of lacking. The main problem with the movie is that at 96 minutes it seems quite long and stretched out. It would have worked better at a much shorter pace; in fact, I think the story would fit very well as an episode of the television show "The Twilight Zone" than as a feature film. If you are a Vincent Price fan, the movie is adequate, though it doesn't match up to some of his other movies of this particular era like the Poe films directed by Roger Corman. For all other viewers, it passes the time painlessly, but that's about all.

    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Final theatrical film of Lewis Martin.
    • Goofs
      At the start of the movie the date in Magistrate Simon Cordier's diary states 1886 as the year. 18-19 minutes into the movie, when he returns the picture of his dead wife and son back to the trunk upstairs, the camera pans to the right after it's open and there is a Teddy Bear. Teddy Bears weren't around until shortly after the November 16, 1902 newspaper cartoon of "Teddy" Roosevelt's based on his bear hunting trip in Mississippi earlier in the month. ("Teddy" refused to kill a baby bear after its mother was killed). Steiff bears started at the Leipzig Toy Fair in March 1903.
    • Quotes

      [first title card]

      Title Card: "... the vulture has eaten the pigeon; the wolf has eaten the lamb; the lion has devoured the sharp-tongued buffalo; man has killed the lion with an arrow, with spear, with gun-powder; but the *"Horla"* will make of man what man has made of the horse and of the ox; His chattel, His slave, and His food, but the mere power of His will. Woe to us!"... Guy de Maupassant

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits are revealed by a knife cutting through red fabric.
    • Connections
      Featured in Creature Features: Diary of A Madman (1970)

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    • Where did the Horla come from?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 9, 1963 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El diario de un loco
    • Filming locations
      • Samuel Goldwyn Studios - 7200 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Admiral Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $350,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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