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IMDbPro

Nightmare in Wax

  • 1969
  • PG
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
920
YOUR RATING
Nightmare in Wax (1969)
Horror

The disfigured curator of a wax museum murders his enemies and then uses their bodies as exhibits in his museum.The disfigured curator of a wax museum murders his enemies and then uses their bodies as exhibits in his museum.The disfigured curator of a wax museum murders his enemies and then uses their bodies as exhibits in his museum.

  • Director
    • Bud Townsend
  • Writer
    • Rex Carlton
  • Stars
    • Cameron Mitchell
    • Anne Helm
    • Scott Brady
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.9/10
    920
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bud Townsend
    • Writer
      • Rex Carlton
    • Stars
      • Cameron Mitchell
      • Anne Helm
      • Scott Brady
    • 36User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos39

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Cameron Mitchell
    Cameron Mitchell
    • Vincent Rinard
    Anne Helm
    Anne Helm
    • Marie Morgan
    Scott Brady
    Scott Brady
    • Detective Haskell
    Berry Kroeger
    Berry Kroeger
    • Max Black
    Victoria Carroll
    Victoria Carroll
    • Theresa
    Phillip Baird
    • Tony Deen
    John 'Bud' Cardos
    John 'Bud' Cardos
    • Sergeant Carver
    • (as Johnny Cardos)
    Hollis Morrison
    Hollis Morrison
    • Nick
    James Forrest
    • Alfred Herman
    Virgil Frye
    Virgil Frye
    • Ralph Tenier
    Mercedes Alberti
    • Stella Costello
    Barry Donohue
    • Leslie
    Ingrid Dittmar
    • Secretary
    • (as Ingrid Dittman)
    Maria Polo
    • Nurse
    • (as Marie Polo)
    Lucio Pineda
    • Chauffeur
    Ken Osborne
    • Bartender
    • (as Kent Osborne)
    Rini Martin
    • Dancer
    The Gazzari Dancers
    • Themselves
    • Director
      • Bud Townsend
    • Writer
      • Rex Carlton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    3.9920
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    Featured reviews

    4kevinolzak

    Rare Hollywood lead for Cameron Mitchell

    1966's "Nightmare in Wax" and "Blood of Dracula's Castle" were destined to be paired together theatrically as both were scripted by producer Rex Carlton, whose May 1968 suicide resulted in their May 1969 issue under Crown International Pictures, one the first collaboration between John Carradine and Al Adamson, the other a rare Hollywood lead for Cameron Mitchell shot three months later in November 1966 as "Monster of the Wax Museum" or "Crimes in the Wax Museum." Even more than its human star, the film serves as a tribute to the Movieland Wax Museum in Buena Park, which existed from 1962 to 2005, seen to great advantage during its heyday with figures of stars like Rudolph Valentino and Gary Cooper (the building was eventually demolished in 2016). Berry Kroeger's Max Black is the head of Paragon Studios, in love with top starlet Marie Morgan (Anne Helm) and jealous of her various relationships, but sent into a blind rage at her engagement to Mitchell's makeup artist Vincent Rinard, tossing a glass of brandy into his rival's face while lighting a cigarette, his head engulfed in flames (half his face a bloody mess), to leave him a bitter, scarred misanthrope newly ensconced as wax museum proprietor. Though he keeps his former fiancée at a distance, Rinard has already laid the groundwork for Black's destruction, using a serum to induce paralysis in his kidnapped victims, all talents employed by Paragon Studios, turning them into rigid statues for his museum that can still be seen blinking on occasion. Scott Brady's Detective Haskell may be quick to recognize the figures as missing persons but he utterly fails to connect the dots in regard to his going nowhere investigation. Eventually the madman captures his longtime nemesis and taunts him about his impending fate, until a last second twist renders the whole thing rather pointless. Unlike those classic performances of Lionel Atwill in "Mystery of the Wax Museum" or Vincent Price in "House of Wax," Mitchell commands not an ounce of compassion as he goes about his sadistic business in self serving fashion, frequently talking to the inanimate figures and framing Max Black to mislead the easily duped cops. It's no better or worse than John Carradine's 1973 "Terror in the Wax Museum," which at least boasts a superior cast (Ray Milland, Elsa Lanchester) though it's really more a simple whodunit. This also marked the debut feature for TV director Bud Townsend, who actually worked with Carradine on a 1961 episode of DEATH VALLEY DAYS, "Miracle at Boot Hill," in which the venerable veteran was suitably cast as a mysterious stranger who announces that he is an emissary of the Lord able to restore life to the deceased, which does not sit well with the townspeople who have reason to let the dead on Boot Hill stay buried. Townsend had to wait six years for a second movie, the not uninteresting "The Folks at Red Wolf Inn," producer Michael Macready's follow up to his Count Yorga films starring Robert Quarry, before one mainstream success with Cathy Lee Crosby's cult item "Coach." It was a noteworthy period of genre outings for Cameron Mitchell ("Blood and Black Lace," "Maneater of Hydra," "Autopsia de un Fantasma") that preceded his casting on the popular TV Western THE HIGH CHAPARRAL, effectively leaving him in heavy demand for low budget horrors by the following decade (not such a bad thing for an actor who twice was forced to declare bankruptcy). The part of Vincent Rinard was hardly a stretch but one that eerily foreshadowed his most notorious vehicle, 1977's "The Toolbox Murders," in each case offering up a warped murderer who enjoys terrorizing his victims before dispatching them. The stalking of pretty Victoria Carroll in particular recalls the fate of gorgeous Kelly Nichols from that later film, a larger role than usual for Victoria, whose mostly comedic career continued well into the 21st century. It's a mid 60s vibe in her introductory sequence, featuring the hip sounds of The T-Bones doing "Look for the Rainbows" to the engaging gyrations of Rini Martin and The Gazzari Dancers in chic go-go boots. This band had just scored a #3 hit months earlier with the instrumental "No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In)," three members of which would soon become Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds (Dan Hamilton, Joe Frank Carollo, and Tommy Reynolds), later enjoying more chart successes with "Don't Pull Your Love" (#4 in 1971) and "Fallin' in Love" (topping the Billboard charts in 1975).
    5edwoodjr2003

    Nightmare in Wax is better than the ad art would attest to.

    I'm not sure what the 80's repackaging with the burning skull has to do with it but............ It's like someone filmed a community play. What's wrong with that? Definitely some good shoe clicking foley artist work. It's good to see a movie where people smoke cigarettes as they work/act - improv smoking. Cameron Mitchell movies are always watchable. Especially when there is an eye-patch involved. Some people called this a "Z" Movie and that's what it is, but good still under proper conditions. Would be good in IMAX 3-D. Gave it a "5" because it's definitely one of those get it or not movies. I think I bought a lawnmower from that detective guy in scene 29 over at ACE in 1974. Would actually be good at a drive-in with a six pack.
    Dethcharm

    "You Just Say Yes, And I Get Goosebumps All Over!"...

    THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (1933) with Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray was remade in 1953 as HOUSE OF WAX with Vincent Price. Both of these films are horror classics in their own right. NIGHTMARE IN WAX is a remake of the remake, with Cameron Mitchel in the role of bitter, disfigured, wax figure creator, Vincent Renard.

    True to the original plot, people are disappearing, shortly before new wax dummies appear in Vincent's studio. There's a new "twist", in that these are more like zombies than corpses dipped in wax. Vengeful and totally bananas, Mitchell plays Renard like he's channeling eeevil Captain Kirk in an eye patch, with oatmeal on his face!

    Absurd and thuddingly boring, enduring this movie is like swimming through mud. Sans any terror, drama, or suspense, even its attempts at humor fall dead. Seemingly made over a long weekend, the production values are much like those found in TV commercials of the period. This is cinematic cruelty, a dull knife through the viewer's brainpan...
    4gavin6942

    Really Not Worth Your Time

    A scarred, embittered owner of a wax museum with a twisted mind devises horrible fates for those who cross him.

    This piece of trash was written by the prolific Rex Carlton, and directed by Bud Townsend (who went on to direct the much more memorable film, "Alice in Wonderland" -- the porn version). It comes to us with below average film quality, at least on the Mill Creek disc. Star Cameron Mitchell ("Blood and Black Lace") probably regretted appearing in this one.

    There is an interesting, bulky head bandage with the victim smoking... unintentionally scary... but that's like the only nice thing i can say about it. There is a pointless go-go dancing scene with a band called the T-Bones... really dates the film, for better or worse.

    There is no point in ever seeing this movie.
    5hawklinemonster

    Please can we have the restored double-DVD of Nightmare in Wax and Island of the Doomed

    I enjoyed Nightmare in Wax, taking it on the pulpy level that it intends and achieves. It's fun. It's not mindlessly sadistic (so if you want that, look elsewhere). Not hopelessly incompetent, either (just a bit, maybe, but hope is there).

    I admit that at first I confused it with a wax museum horror featuring a curator with a false hand, which is interchangeable with a hook or a cleaver. Were there two versions of this film? No; the man with the cleaver was Patrick O'Neal in Chamber of Horrors (1966). It gave me a restless night figuring that one out. These things worry horror fans.

    The Patrick O'Neal film is a classier offering. The photography is much glossier, and Wilfred Hyde-White adds his own charm to the proceedings. But Cameron Mitchell in Nightmare in Wax adds his own special (if not too refined) touch of wickedness, pursuing Anne Helm through his Faustian workshop, hypodermic in hand. That chase between tottering dummies and bubbling vats doesn't quite elevate the film into the realms of horror achieved by Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray... but it's pretty good, all the same.

    A couple of years before Nightmare in Wax, Cameron Mitchell starred in a Spanish/West German co-production of Island of the Doomed (1967) (a.k.a. The Bloodsuckers, The Maneater of Hydra, etc.) I was fortunate enough to see that sharing a double-bill with Slaughter of the Vampires. That was in my long-ago teens. Much more recently I bought it on DVD (with the widescreen sadly cropped). Now wouldn't it be great if someone had the discrimination (I shan't say the taste) to bring out a restored widescreen double-DVD of both Nightmare in Wax and Island of the Doomed. We can only hope!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Waxworks scenes filmed in Movieland Wax Museum, Buena Park California.
    • Goofs
      On screen the go go number ends, the girls stop dancing and exit the stage as the audience applauds, but on the soundtrack, the band continues playing mid-song, no applause heard.
    • Quotes

      Theresa: Vinnie, what are you gonna do with me?

      Vincent Renard: Kill you.

    • Connections
      Featured in TJ and the All Night Theatre: When Worlds Collide + Nightmare in Wax (1980)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 14, 1969 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Crown International Pictures
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Monster of the Wax Museum
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, California, USA(location)
    • Production companies
      • Paragon International Pictures
      • Productions Enterprises Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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