1962

THE BRAIN THAT WOULDN’T DIE: SEVERING THE BONDS OF MORALITY IN MAD SCIENCE HORROR

“I can’t let you die; I won’t let you die”: A Grisly Tale of Love and Obsession In the 1962 black-and-white horror film “The Brain That Wouldn’t Die,” director Joseph Green takes viewers on a chilling journey that pushes the boundaries of science and tests the limits of love. This cinematic oddity presents us with…

TALES OF TERROR: VINCENT PRICE’S TRIUMVIRATE OF GOTHIC MACABRE

A Chilling Ménage à Trois of Terror “Death is the truest form of love.” Such a chilling proposition sets the tone for Roger Corman’s 1962 triptych of horror, Tales of Terror. This anthology adapts the macabre imaginings of Edgar Allan Poe into a three-course meal of the gruesome and the supernatural, each segment aiming to…