Scream of Fear (1961) Poster

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8/10
Superb chilly chiller mystery from the house of Hammer.
hitchcockthelegend26 March 2010
God bless the internet and god bless DVD. The reason I say that is because once hidden gems like this film are now being discovered by a bigger audience. Taste Of Fear (AKA:Scream Of Fear) is produced out of that bastion of British horror, Hammer Films, it's directed by Seth Holt (The Nanny), written by Jimmy Sangster (X:The Unknown/The Curse Of Frankenstein) and stars Susan Strasberg, Ronald Lewis, Ann Todd & that cornerstone of Hammer Horror, Christopher Lee.

Shot in moody black & white by Holt and cinematographer Douglas Slocombe, and eerily scored by Clifton Parker, the story sees a young paralysed woman return to her family home in France to visit her father who she hasn't seen for years; and to finally meet her new step-mother. Upon arrival she is informed that her father has had to go away on business, which becomes a problem as she starts to see his dead body, first in the summer house, then in the lounge! The mind can play tricks, especially to the traumatised, but she's convinced that what she is seeing is real. Even the family doctor (Lee in a suitably suspicious role) thinks there are mental issues here. Undaunted she enlists the help of friendly chauffeur Bob and sets about unravelling either her mind, or the mystery that lurks at the Appleby home.

The film opens with an attention grabbing sequence as police drag a lake for a body, from there on the film becomes essentially a four character piece. Now it's been said in some quarters that this structure telegraphs where the film is going to end up. There's a tiny bit of truth in that but there are at least three twisty kickers here to steer this far away from charges of predictability. In fact the finale has a double whammy that is most rewarding. The whole film pulses with atmosphere and is cloaked in shadows and low tone conversations. The sound work here is also top quality, the constant jabber of the crickets gnaw away at the ears, while the swish of the nearby sea instills a calm that ultimately sets up a false sense of security. The acting is on the money too, be it Strasberg perfectly conveying a multitude of emotions from her wheelchair, or Todd doing a nice line in the "too good to be true?" wholesome step-mom routine. All parties ensure that the story is built up right and that the pay off provides maximum impact.

Christopher Lee once said that this was one of the best Hammer Horror film's he was ever involved with, that's a fine selling point to be sure. A different kind of Hammer Horror, one that drips with dread and thrives on its mystery elements. Taste Of Fear is highly recommended to genre fans who prefer psychological chillers over blood letting and overkilled boo jump movies. 8/10
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8/10
Excellent B&W Hammer
bensonmum24 February 2005
Scream of Fear aka Taste of Fear (1961) is a marvelous, unknown (at least to me) Hammer film. The story concerns a girl in a wheelchair going to live with her Dad whom she hasn't seen in years. Upon arrival, she meets her stepmother for the first time and is informed that her Dad is away on business. That night, she investigates a strange light in the summer house and discovers here dead father. In her horrified state, she falls into the pool. After she's revived, an investigation of the summer house reveals nothing. As the strange events continue to occur, the local doctor begins to doubt her sanity. But, with the help of the chauffeur, she's determined to get to the bottom of the mystery before she is either killed or driven insane. Anymore of the story would ruin it for anyone who hasn't seen the movie.

I've seen some call Scream of Fear "predictable". While I agree to a certain extent, there are enough twists and turns in the plot to keep most anyone guessing. While I may have seen some of the events coming, I could have never guessed the ending. To me, it was an "edge of the seat" movie from start to finish.

The acting is first rate. All four of the major characters are brilliantly played. Susan Strasberg is convincingly fragile as the wheelchair-bound Penny Appleby. Ronald Lewis and Ann Todd are perfect as the chauffeur and stepmother, respectively. And, although all he does is come to dinner and talk psycho mumbo jumbo, Christoper Lee is mysterious and convincing as Dr. Gerrard.

Everything else about this film, from the beautiful black & white photography to the creepy score, is perfect. I've really got nothing bad to say.
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7/10
Neat, clever thriller
gridoon202411 March 2019
Atmospheric Hammer thriller with great sets (including a deceptively deep pool!). It feels a little slow in the middle, as it covers familiar "Gaslight"-type territory, but the final stretch has several clever twists which are worth waiting for, and a killer ending (no pun intended). Susan Strasberg is very good in the lead; perhaps the movie's only mistake is Christopher Lee's French accent! *** out of 4.
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10/10
A stylish chilling little thriller
ben-7279 May 2007
Yes, this is indeed a very nice little horror film. It is chilling and suspense. The acting of the three major actors is really well done, they all fit the roles, and the whole atmosphere of the film has maked it rather stylish. Using Susan Strasberg for that role is a good choice. She's rather pretty charming actually, especially when compared with those star actresses of nowadays. This is a small production of the early 60's, but none of the big budget Hollywood horror films can compare with it even though they might have tried to copy part of its shadow. I do not know how to explain, but you if have watched the movie, you will feel something, you will feel the film having the style in its own way. You simply cannot find such kind of stylish production often on TV or in theaters. Like the other film fan from UK, I have recorded it down few weeks ago, and watched it in the afternoon the day after. It's good that I have not watched it alone at night. I am really glad that I have now the whole movie in its original theatrical wide screen format on my own DVD. Here I specially thank for the TV-listing information of the Dutch inter net site and the film information in IMDb. They made me have a chance to know and discover this nice film and take action to record it down. If you have a chance to watch this film, don't miss it! You will surely like it in a way!
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Almost Forgotten Classic
bs3dc22 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
As my title suggests, "Scream of Fear" (UK title) is barely known and this is hardly surprising since the film is very rarely shown in the UK and last time was put on at half past three in the morning - therefore unlikely to pick up many new admirers. I consider this to be very poor treatment of a movie that serves as a great example of the sort of thriller we used to be able to produce in this country.

A brief summary of the story is that wheel-chair bound Penny Appleby travels to France to re-unite with her father who she has not seen for some nine years and to meet her new step-mother. Her father is not there when she arrives however and she begins to get suspicious that all is not as it seems...

This can arguably be ranked among the best of the Hammer Horror series (though of course there are some other worthy contenders) with more emphasis on the cinematography, the script, the chilling atmosphere and great acting than things like painfully obvious plastic bats on strings that mar other efforts. The story is a little predictable and cliché, but it is well-worked and contains some genuine surprises and real chills. I saw some twists coming, but certainly not all. The similarity to Psycho is clear, but the tone also reminded me a little of another Hitchcock classic, Rebecca. The setting of the creepy French villa adds a great macabre touch to the proceedings, but the brilliant swimming pool scene is the one that sticks in the mind long after viewing. The filming of it in black and white is very effective and the lack of gaudy primary colours that dominate many of the Hammer films (due to the fact they were the first horror films in colour) is welcome. Of course this was filmed in Black Park in Buckinghamshire and not France but the production looks deceptively expensive.

For anybody who hasn't seen it, do not expect this to be a Christopher Lee film (though it has been billed as such on the BBC) per se as his actual screen time is limited at best, though he makes a solid contribution as always. Instead it is left to Susan Strasberg, Ann Todd and Ronald Lewis to carry the film and they play their parts to perfection.

"Scream of Fear" not available on DVD anywhere as far as I know except Japan, but this is well worth looking up for anybody who enjoys a good thriller or horror.
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9/10
A major highlight for Hammer studios!
The_Void18 August 2006
Whenever I think of Hammer Horror, I think of bright colourful camp films; but Hammer also made a handful of black and white mysteries, and many of these stand up as some of their best films. Hysteria, Nightmare and Paranoiac are all very good films; but Seth Holt's Taste of Fear tops the lot! This suspenseful mystery draws the viewer in from the start and doesn't let go until the credits role. The film introduces the wheelchair bound character Penny Appleby; an amiable young girl who strives for independence in spite of her disability. The story picks up upon her return home to the French Riviera for the first time in ten years at the request of her father. Her nightmare starts when she begins seeing the corpse of her father at random places around the house and grounds of the place where she's staying. The friendly chauffeur Bob decides to help the girl get to the bottom of the mystery, but everything is turned upside down when it becomes obvious that nobody in the film is what they appear.

Initially, the film plays out like it's going to be quite predictable; and indeed, my prediction for what is going to happen actually does happen...but director Seth Holt doesn't show his hand too early, and there is a major twist at the end that I certainly didn't see coming. Director Seth Holt does a really good job with this film, as he gets good performances out of all his cast, the twists are well worked; and best of all, the atmosphere is scintillating! Holt continually imposes an oppressive air of foreboding over the film, and the creepy house provides a fantastic location for a film like this to take place. The film features a relatively small role for Hammer regular, Christopher Lee, who gets to don a silly accent while remaining mysterious. Lead actress Susan Strasberg is the pick of the cast, however, as aside from being stunning; she's not a bad actress either. The film works principally because it keeps the focus on the mystery, and this means that it retains its thriller intentions throughout. Overall, this might be a lesser known Hammer film; but it's not lesser in quality, and I wouldn't hesitate to name this as one of the best films the studio ever produced.
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7/10
Well made little gem
rosscinema17 December 2003
Warning: Spoilers
While Hammer Studios usually made horror/sci-fi films occasionally they would make thrillers that were reminiscent of Hitchcock. This story starts out with a female body being dragged out of a Scandinavian lake but later a woman in a wheelchair arrives in France where a hired driver is waiting to pick her up. Susan Strasberg plays Penny Appleby and she had sustained an injury while horse riding so she is now paralyzed. Her parents were divorced when she was young and she has been living with her mother but she died and now she has come to see her father. She hasn't seen him in ten years and he has remarried to a woman named Jane (Ann Todd). Penny is picked up at the airport by Bob (Ronald Lewis) who is very friendly and during the drive he mentions that her father is sick but doesn't know how badly. She arrives and meets Jane who informs her that her father has gone out of town on business.

*****SPOILER ALERT*****

Once Penny starts to stay on her father's estate she starts to see lights going on in a cabin and when she enters to see what it is she is horrified to see the corpse of her father. No one believes her and Doctor Gerrard (Christopher Lee) suggests that she has an overly active imagination. But Penny keeps seeing her father and Bob tells her that he is probably dead and his body is kept hidden away. Penny and Bob figure out that Jane is out to get the inheritance if she can get Penny out of the way.

This film was made by Hammer Studio veterans and it was directed by Seth Holt who does a very good job of creating an eerie atmosphere right up until the very end. One of the things that I enjoyed were the scenes where there was no music or sound at all. In a very creepy scene Bob goes underwater to check the bottom of a pool that is dark and cluttered with debris and he finds the body of Penny's father. This scene has no music or sound as Bob sifts through the darkness with only rays of light shining down and the suspense that builds during all this could be cut with a knife. Its an incredibly effective scene that may be the best in the whole film. Small parts of the script are a little predictable but there is a pretty neat twist at the end that I didn't see coming. Strasberg is good as the frail Penny and she was a very talented actress that never received enough quality roles. This film is a hidden gem and a lot of fun to watch and it would be perfect to view on a rainy night.
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9/10
Good, atmospheric chiller
vivalarsx4 October 2001
Warning: Spoilers
I had this movie so idealized in my mind from childhood, that I was afraid when I finally found it on video (after 4 solid years of searching!), that it wouldn't be as good as I remembered, but it holds up surprisingly well, thanks to director Holt's atmospheric direction and the crisp performances. What I recalled as the movie's biggest fright (the swimming pool) isn't all that scary, but the twist-ending surprise (no spoilers here!) still caught me off guard, and the last couple of minutes of the movie are genuinely suspenseful and more than cap the film's slow, steady buildup. All in all, a wonderful little chiller. Now, if I could only find my other, hard-to-find treasure, "Twisted Nerve"--anyone know if it holds up well? Anyone know where to find it on video or DVD?
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7/10
Brilliant little horror film
nickodgers22 July 2010
Back in 1973 I had a Bell and Howell 16mm projector and used to hire films to show to family and others.

This film was one of them and I can remember it scaring people back then.

Yesterday I watched it again through a modern projector, as BBC 2 had shown it recently, and thought it was just as good now as back in 1973.

It benefits from being shot in black and white, the acting is very good from all the cast, and there are some scary moments, the swimming pool being an obvious one.

It is really good to see an old fashioned horror film with no over-the-top effects, just a genuinely chilling story, well worth waiting for it to be shown again as not sure if available on DVD or video.
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8/10
Recommended to Suspense/Horror Fans
Space_Mafune5 March 2003
Any fan of Hitchcock(ian) suspense and/or horror should track down this film...you won't be disappointed. This is one film where the actors really seemed to love being in their perspective roles...this is full of unexpected thrills! unpredictable twists and turns...this one will keep you guessing and watching. Don't miss it!
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7/10
Make it a 7.5!
AlsExGal31 December 2022
This is quite possibly the best of the Hammer films, it's labeled as 'horror', but is more of a classic psychological thriller. The plot revolves around Susan Strasberg's visit to her father's estate after a decade of estrangement. Her physical condition (in a wheelchair, unable to walk after a horseback riding accident) and the recent death of her long time companion set her up to be the 'perfect victim'.

Her step mother, Ann Todd, and the family chauffeur Ronald Lewis are oh-so accommodating and thoughtful, explaining that her father is out of town. But, Strasberg starts to see dead dad popping up all over, while Todd, Lewis, and family doctor Christopher Lee try to persuade her she's just stressed and overly-imaginative. Is she crazy? Are they gas-lighting her? Although the viewer will remain suspicious, we are wisely kept in the dark as to motives (of all the characters..) until the final twist. The black and white photography is really well done -moody, shadowy - and is probably as important as the characters which is not the usual Hammer screamer in intense shades of red.
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6/10
Memorable, compact chiller...
moonspinner5519 October 2007
Paralyzed young woman in a wheelchair comes to stay with her wealthy, estranged father and stepmother in France; upon her arrival however, Dad is mysteriously missing ("away on business", his wife says), but the girl thinks she sees his corpse late one night in the guest house. Marvelous derivation of "Les Diaboliques", with well-written dialogue passages and terrific black-and-white cinematography. Screenwriter Jimmy Sangster plays a bit fast and loose with the details--and upon second viewing, the premise pretty much falls apart under inspection--yet the solid cast and fun denouement make up for the lapses in logic. In the lead, Susan Strasberg is quite good (though, again, the character doesn't make much sense in retrospect); still, it's probably one of the very few roles Strasberg got which managed to show off her placid beauty and vulnerability (the daughter of famed acting teacher Lee Strasberg, Susan was faced with insurmountable expectations and never found her niche in films). As the family chauffeur, Ronald Lewis commendably pulls off a tough act, behaving curiously yet with great sensitivity to the girl's plight. In the end, it all seems rather silly, but it's certainly a compact thriller which only dawdles during the confusing prologue. *** from ****
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5/10
usual Hammer film
killercharm14 July 2022
Hammer flick about a wheelchair bound young lady who comes to her father's French Riviera home after not seeing him for nine years. She's told he's out of town by her new step-mother but she keeps seeing his dead body. She and the chauffeur hatch a plot to find the culprits out. This is your usual Hammer film, i.e., no real scares and little suspense. Other than that it's an ok story only with a momentary plot twist.
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Stunning!
melchior5 December 2003
I saw this movie with my brother when we were kids. It is absolutely stunning! I remember we have been so afraid about some scenes that it was hard to close the light in our room for sleeping. Some facts are revealed at the end of the movie which makes it fascinating too! A "must see" movie! Shame on the industries, cannot get it on DVD!
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8/10
An excellent Hammer thriller
Woodyanders21 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Sweet, fragile, but resilient wheelchair-bound cripple Penny Appleby (a beautifully warm and touching performance by the lovely Susan Strasberg) goes to France to see her father at a remote seaside villa. Alas, her dad turns out to be away on an errand. Penny starts to see the corpse of her father all over the place. However, her kindly stepmother Jane (well played by Ann Todd) insists that he's still alive. Has Penny lost her mind? Or is someone trying to drive the poor girl mad? Ably directed by Seth Holt, with a clever and compelling script by Jimmy Sangster, a genuinely spooky atmosphere (the scenes with the father's dead body are pretty creepy), handsome black and white cinematography by Douglas Slocombe, sturdy acting from a super cast, a properly shivery score by Clifton Parker, a gradual, yet steady pace, and one doozy of an unexpected surprise plot twist towards the very end, this tidy and absorbing thriller keeps the viewer guessing right to the stirring and startling conclusion. Strasberg simply shines in a rare substantial starring role; she makes for a charming and sympathetic heroine, cuts loose with a few great full-throated screams, and, of course, looks absolutely gorgeous throughout. Moreover, there are fine supporting contributions by Ronald Lewis as affable chauffeur Bob and Christopher Lee as mysterious, concerned physician Dr. Pierre Gerrard. A solid and satisfying winner that's well worth seeing.
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8/10
Predictable but very well done
preppy-310 March 2003
Crippled Susan Strasberg goes to France to visit her father (who she hasn't seen in 9 years) and her new stepmother (Ann Todd). When she gets there she's told her father is away on business. Suddenly, she starts seeing her father's dead body all over the house--but no one else does. Is she going mad or is her stepmother trying to drive her crazy and swindle her out of her inheritance? Handsome chauffeur Ronald Lewis tries to help her find out.

The plot is old and some of the twists have become predictable since 1961, but this is still a very good suspense film. It's well-acted, there are some very scary moments (I jumped three times) and it's imaginatively directed in eerie black and white by Seth Holt. A scene done in a pool is downright horrifying. An early Hammer horror film that's been unfairly neglected. Also, there's an interesting scene with Lewis in a very skimpy bathing suit--surprising for its time and especially for Hammer-- they usually pushed female sexuality, not male.
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7/10
An Under-Appreciated Early Hammer Film
gavin69427 October 2008
Penny Appleby (Susan Strasberg) gets word from her father that she is to return home after many long years. Upon arrival, she finds that he is away on business and the house is being attended by a handful of people she's never met -- her stepmother, a mechanic, a doctor and the maid. Soon, she begins getting visions of her father's corpse and suspects that he has died and there is a cover-up. Is Penny going crazy or is one of these family friends a murderer? "Scream of Fear" (released in England with the better name "Taste of Fear") is certainly one of the better early Hammer films, being a full narrative and visual force even in black and white. The corpse is subtle, yet creepy, and the use of shadows in place of colors does something to add to the eerie factor of this film, most notably in the pool scene. An underwater shot in monochrome always seems to present more of a claustrophobic atmosphere.

Christopher Lee needs to be singled out here. I have come to believe in recent days (after seeing this and "The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll") that he is one of the most under-rated actors of all time, not just in horror. He makes a fairly convincing presentation of French doctor Pierre Gerrard in this film, and while I thought it was him, wasn't completely sure until I saw the credits... the accent is really, really good.

The film needs to be viewed twice, if not more. Not just because it's a great movie -- and it is -- but because what seems like a very simple plot becomes considerably more complex as the mystery deepens. By the halfway point of the film, the viewers will have long forgotten the opening scene... yet, it is this scene that ends up being most important down the line. And trying to follow people's allegiances isn't as simple as it appears. Watching it a second time with the end result known would change the whole way one views each character.

I'm pushing this film. I watched it in a four film collection of Hammer films, and I would recommend this method to others. The other films (the "Jekyll" film mentioned above, for example, or "The Gorgon") are pure greatness. So many films have been made poorly and long forgotten. But then, so many good films have been made and forgotten. These are in the second group... and shouldn't be passed over for newer, lesser fare.
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8/10
Unpredictable Plot Twists Highlight This Mystery Thriller
evanston_dad29 October 2008
Though it's listed here at IMDb as "Taste of Fear," the version I saw was titled "Scream of Fear." Either way, it's a generic title for what is actually a rather stylish little mystery thriller.

Susan Strasberg plays a wheelchair-bound accident victim who comes to stay with her father and his new wife at their French country manor. She begins to suspect the worst of her step-mother and her doctor friend (played by Christopher Lee), believing that they have killed her father and are trying to drive her insane, thus rendering her incompetent and ensuring that his estate will pass to the step-mother. But don't worry -- this rather predictable set up gets a few jolts of surprise with some clever plot twists late into the film. And the film makes the most of its small budget -- the black and white cinematography is executed well and creates a lot of moody atmosphere.

Grade: A-
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7/10
Constantly finding the wet corpse of her father really bothers young, shy Penny Appleby. She has to get over it
Terrell-415 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
It's a shame this tidy, clever A-quality movie has such a corny B-movie title. Of course, you might not be blamed for thinking Taste of Fear is just more of the same old murderous, jump-out-and-scare-the-wheelchair-bound young heroine. There's the creepy house, the stepmother, the leaf-strewn swimming pool, the dark and disused summer house and the movable old corpse. Maybe there's even an inheritance to think about. Taste of Fear has all this, but it also has an intelligent script full of misdirection (written by Jimmy Sangster, who also produced the movie), lots of shadowy atmosphere and some first-rate acting. Honors go to Ann Todd as the stepmother, Susan Strasberg as the shy heroine, Christopher Lee as a frequently visiting doctor and Ronald Lewis as the live-in chauffeur. Some are good guys, some are bad guys, and they all keep us guessing which is which.

Young Penny Appleby (Strasberg), confined to a wheelchair, arrives on the Riviera to stay with her father and his wife, Jane (Todd). Her nurse and close friend Maggie Frencham died in a boating accident three weeks previously. Penny still hasn't recovered. She hasn't seen her father in ten years and has never met her stepmother. On the drive from the airport to her father's mansion on the Cote d'Azur, Robert the chauffeur (Lewis) mentions that her father has been ill but has left the house. When she meets Jane, Penny is told her father isn't ill and is away on business. That night she's awakened by strange noises, struggles into her wheelchair and makes her way to the summer house because she sees candlelight...and there she meets her father sitting motionless in a large wicker chair. He's as dead as a corpse can be. She screams, she faints, and when she comes to the corpse has disappeared. Doctor Gerrard, however, is there to give her a sedative. The next morning Jane calls her to the phone to speak with her father. Is Penny Appleby going mad? Why is Jane Appleby so gracious, so bossy and yet looks so worried? Why is Dr. Gerrard always around? Why is Robert so solicitous?

One thing is for sure. You don't want to be Penny Appleby alone at night in the old mansion, not when the lighting is so weird you might think you were in a horror movie.

Ann Todd in the prime of her career was one of Britain's star actresses, cool, blonde and with a hint of deeper possibilities. She also could play effortlessly the kind of aristocratic, well- bred wife who would make a passionate man irritable. On balance, I liked her. You can see her at her best, if you like cool elegance, in The Seventh Veil and The Sound Barrier.
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9/10
Topnotch entertainment!
JohnHowardReid13 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Executive producer: Michael Carreras Producer: Jimmy Sangster. Copyright 1 September 1961 by Hammer Film Productions. Released through Columbia Pictures. New York opening simultaneously at the Forum and the Fine Arts: 22 August 1961. U.S. release: 22 August 1961. U.K. release: 4 June 1961. Australian release: 2 March 1962. Sydney opening at the Victory. 7,337 feet. 82 minutes. (Available on a 78-minutes Sony DVD).

SYNOPSIS: Paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair, beautiful young Penny Appleby visits her father's French Riviera villa for the first time since his second marriage; she meets her stepmother, Jane, Doctor Gerrard, her father's friend, and Bob, her father's chauffeur. Penny is told her father is away on business, but she is terrorized by the mysterious reappearance, in various places in the villa, of his dead body. Jane and Doctor Gerrard try to persuade Penny she is having hallucinations.

NOTES: Although it passed with little critical comment and only predictably moderate audience interest on first release in Britain and Australia, "Scream of Fear" was later to develop a considerable cult following, not only in London but worldwide.

COMMENT: I'm glad I saw this one on first release. Thoroughly enjoyed it too. High-voltage, edge-of-the-seat suspense, expertly delivered by an ingeniously tension-filled script, sharp, atmospheric direction, and a group of talented players headed by Susan Strasberg and Ann Todd. True, Christopher Lee's fans will be disappointed. He has a nothing role. But Fred Johnson! Absolutely unforgettable — the role of a death-time!

I liked Sangster's script. Very neatly constructed, packed with nightmarish incident, plenty of plot twists and shocks, yet believably realistic, thanks to solid characterization and skillful dialogue.

Seth Holt's highly imaginative direction, with its phenomenally sharp editing, not only built up the atmosphere to breaking point, but never muffed a single opportunity to hit the viewer right between the eyes. It came as no surprise to find — when Holt was adopted by the auteurists and the corduroy set — that his background was in editing, Scream/Taste of Fear being only his second film as director. (A promising career curtailed by ill-health. He died halfway through shooting "Blood from the Mummy's Tomb" in 1971.)
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7/10
Taut, Suspenseful and Well Acted, But Marred by Plot Holes
Bob-4518 April 2004
Warning: Spoilers
SCREAM OF FEAR will definitely keep you guessing, thanks to a great performance by Susan Strasberg, fine performances by Ann Todd and Ronald Lewis, expert direction by Seth Holt outstanding cinematograpy by Douglas Slocombe and a clever script by Jimmy Sangster. This movie would have been great, except for some horrendous, unnecessary plot holes.



WARNING: SPOILERS THAT WILL RUIN THE MOVIE IF YOU HAVE NOT SEEN IT

WHO called Penny, pretending to be her father? Penny discovers her father's dead body on a chair in the darkened den. She immediately races out on her wheelchair and calls Bob, who runs into the den. Bob sees Jane turn on the light as both enter the den. WHO moved the body? Jane is clearly not strong enough to do so; yet the body is missing. It's made fairly clear the Applebys have only two cars, a Rolls and a Simca. The Simca is missing, since the father is supposed to have taken it. However, when Jane invites Penny to go to town with her, Penny asks Bob to stay with her. So Jane says she will drive herself. However, when Bob discovers Penny's father's body, he takes her to the police in the Rolls. That should have set off alarm bells in Penny's head.

END OF SPOILERS The twist, ironic ending is on the level of THE SIXTH SENSE.It's too bad the plot holes keep this picture from ever rising to the level of that movie.

Nonetheless, for a great Strasberg performance and terrific atmosphere, I give SCREAM OF FEAR a "7".
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10/10
Scream of fear
vadapadava7 May 2013
I have watched the movie in French..and in German,where the title is "Ein Toter spielt Klavier",meaning :A Death plays the piano. Ufortunately, or- fortunately my father allowed me to watch this movie in 1983,when I was 11 years old...maybe too young for a movie like that..but this film has rested marked in my mind forever..and maybe is the reason today, why I'm so interested in old black and white movies..today,I own more than 20 copies of the movie.Ever since,I haven't found any other movie so suspenseful..This movie will always stay in my mind, impressing me so much until the day I die!Whoever has written the storyboard of this movie,was more than smart!!Every camera setting is made extremely smart!
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6/10
Good but quite illogical in places Warning: Spoilers
There is really nothing wrong the atmosphere in this flick. It is really tense and the black-and-white cinematography really helps a lot. And even though it eventually leads to some surprises I thought it was rather strange the chauffeur wanting to help the wheel-bound chair girl. The body of the dead father disappearing so quickly as if it were a ghost while it clearly wasn't was really exaggerated. Also if the girl wasn't handicapped at all than the accident where the falls in the pool with wheelchair is rather dumb. I don't think if you are in such state of panic you are still going to use that wheelchair if you can walk anyway. And I pretty much was sure she wouldn't be dead when she fell from that cliff. The bad guys were not going to get away with that, my gut feeling was right. All in all an enjoyable experience with a clever story but not for a re-watch.
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Scream of Fear
Scarecrow-8819 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
A wheel-chair bound cripple(a horse fell on top of her in a riding accident)comes to live with her father in France supposedly at his request. When Penny(Susan Strasberg)gets to the home of her father(her parents separated with Penny living with her mom in Italy)she's told by her step-mother Jane(Ann Todd)that he's away on business. The chauffeur Robert(Ronald Lewis)mentions in a slip that her dad was ill. Then, Penny begins seeing her father's dead corpse in a several rooms, but when others arrive at her screams, he's nowhere to be found. Through the assistance of Robert, there are signs that something isn't quite kosher about this whole situation. A Doctor Gerrard(Christopher Lee), said to have been a dear friend of her father's, is spending dinner evenings with Jane as he questions the idea that Penny might have mental health issues possibly stemming from her crippling accident. Certainly the first time she sees her father's corpse(in the summer room where he sat in a chair with a lit candle introducing his ominous figure to us)as she wheels so close to the dirty pool she falls in, with no one finding any man in there, Doc Gerrard does have at least a point it seems. The film, at first in seems, asks the question..is Gerrard and Jane secretly behind the murder of Penny's father and hiding the corpse somewhere or is Penny really going crazy? Are Gerrard and Jane purposely trying to frighten Penny into madness so she'll be locked up with them receiving the inheritance?

Trust me when I say that this film is slick and tricky..if you believe you've got the answers, think again! Things and people are not always what they might appear. Sometimes you come across a film that stuns the living daylights out of you..SCREAM OF FEAR is such a movie. The films has multiple twists that keep you on alert. Fantastic underrated Hammer film.
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