Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (November 29, 2023)
Ever wonder if Boris Karloff and Jack Nicholson worked together? You’re in luck!
As it happens, these two icons paired twice. Both occurred in 1963 under Roger Corman’s direction, with The Terror as the second of these flicks.
Set in France circa the Napoleonic Wars, Lieutenant Andre Duvalier (Nicholson) becomes detached from his regiment. As he searches for them, he encounters a beautiful young woman named Helene (Sandra Knight) but she disappears mysteriously into the surf.
Andre chases her and gets knocked unconscious by the waves. When he wakes, he finds himself in the care of elderly local villager Katrina (Dorothy Neumann) and her assistant Gustaf (Jonathan Haze).
Still disturbed by Helene’s strange vanishing act – and pestered by a bird Katrina actually calls “Helene” – Andre seeks answers, and he winds up in a castle owned by Baron Victor Frederick von Leppe (Karloff). There he encounters creepy mysteries, especially via Helene’s eerie resemblance to the Baron’s long-dead wife.
While Terror doesn’t stand as the only Karloff/Nicholson flick, it differs from The Raven via billing. Karloff got high credit for both, but whereas Nicholson resided sixth on the Raven list, he comes second to Boris for Terror.
Nicholson made his film debut in 1958 but wouldn’t lurch toward stardom until his prominent supporting part in 1969’s Easy Rider. Of course, the low-budget horror world of Terror seems miles away from the counter-culture realm of Rider, but this makes Nicholson’s early work all the more fascinating.
At some point Nicholson developed the JACK! persona that would become his calling card. We don’t see that here, however, as Nicholson plays Andre “straight” compared to his traditional style.
Not that we don’t see some signs of “Jack” here. We just find Nicholson more invested in the character than in his standard persona.
As one too young to enjoy awareness of Nicholson before the late 1970s, I find it fascinating to see him in these earlier roles. Not that I don’t enjoy those JACK! performances, but I also take pleasure from the ability to watch him in a more formative period.
Does Terror offer much beyond an early Nicholson performance? Not really, as it delivers a pretty standard Gothic thriller.
With Terror, we get a movie that came in the midst of Corman’s “Poe period”. From 1960-1964, Corman made a bunch of films based on the work of Edgar Allan Poe.
Terror uses an original script from Jack Hill and Leo Gordon, so it doesn’t stem from a Poe offering. However, the movie sure “feels like Edgar”, as it seems clear Corman and company wanted another project in that Poe vein.
They pull off that vibe, as viewers unfamiliar with the movie’s roots would assume Terror adapted a Poe tale. Whatever else I think about the film, I do believe it achieves that “Poe vibe”.
Unfortunately, it can’t find much else to make it intriguing, partly because it sets up the mystery in too clear a matter too early. Not that the movie lacks surprises, but a better-told story would create more suspense related to its supernatural elements and leave them less obvious.
While we may not know where these domains will lead off the bat, Terror ensures that we see something clearly amiss from the start. I think the narrative would fare better if it left the audience with more questions in its first act and kept the viewers off-guard.
Even for a 79-minute movie, Terror tends to drag. Like I noted, it comes from an original script, but it feels like a short story stretched to feature length, as it just doesn’t manifest enough real meat to fill its running time in a satisfactory manner.
This leaves viewers a bit bored as we wait for the inevitable Big Reveal. We know we’ll get some “shocking” material eventually, and the movie forces us to sit through a fair amount of tedium to get there.
I did enjoy the sight of legends Karloff and Nicholson together, and I also liked the chance to see veteran character actor Dick Miller in a relatively early part, even if his Bronx accent clashes with the setting. Other than as a curiosity, though, The Terror doesn’t deliver much of interest.