(Screen capture by TMP)

The favorite film:
The Tingler, a 1959 Columbia Pictures horror/sci-fi flick written by Robb White and directed by William Castle

The synopsis:
Dr. Warren Chapin has a solid job conducting autopsies on executed prisoners. On the side, he’s a bit of a mad scientist, formulating theories about fear. He sees fear as a creature living inside every single person – a creature he calls “the tingler,” because it sends a tingling sensation up your spine. He theorizes that our ability to scream suppresses the creature and keeps us from dying of fright? But how do you test such a theory? On a deaf woman, of course. Dr. Chapin meets Ollie Higgins, whose wife Martha just so happens to fit the criteria – the perfect test subject for his theory.

Mrs. Higgins ain’t the only one who has a bad LSD trip. Dr. Chapin injects himself with the drug, knowing that the hallucinations will scare him. (Screen capture by TMP)

The cast:
The incomparable Vincent Price as Dr. Warren Chapin
Judith Evelyn as Martha Higgins
Philip Coolidge as Ollie Higgins
Darryl Hickman as Chapin’s research assistance, David Morris
Pamela Lincoln as David’s lady love, Lucy Stevens
Patricia Cutts as Chapin’s slithering snake of a wife, Isabel Stevens Chapin

Fun facts:

  • First film to include an on-screen depiction of an LSD trip
  • The film’s budget is estimated at $250,000.
  • Judith Evelyn, who plays Dr. Chapin’s lab rat, was not actually deaf.
  • Golden Raspberry Award winner, landing on the “100 Most Amusingly Bad Movies Ever Made” list
  • William Castle had many ideas before deciding on the “Percepto” feature (of hidden buzzers in some of the theater’s seats). Some of the rejected tactics were leg tickling and small speakers that would give off a screeching sound when the tingler appeared on screen.
  • The tingler’s appearance is based on that of the velvet worm.
I sure don’t want one of these crawling up my spine. (Screen capture by TMP)
  • Pamela Lincoln and Darryl Hickman, who play lovers in the film, were married in real life from 1959 to 1982 and had two children.
  • The film was released on July 29, 1959 (which would have been my birthday, if I was alive in 1959!)
  • The film is parodied in 2007’s Trail of the Screaming Forehead (which I haven’t seen, but it looks kind of hilarious, so I might have to track down a copy soon).

Favorite things:

    • William Castle’s awesome introductory warning to the audience, in which he instructs us to scream. “These… unfortunate, sensitive people…”
    • Vincent Price is so completely perfect. He wins me over in every film, but this role is what really solidified him as a favorite of mine. He definitely gives his character a creep factor, but at the same time gives him an air of levelheadedness: not an easy feat when you’re playing a mad doctor. He’s one of the only actors that can rival the horror greats of Bela Lugosi, Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff.
    • Silent film references, aw yeah! You’ve got to love that the film features scenes from 1921’s Tol’able David, and that the Higgins’ own/operate a silent film theater.
    • Mr. Higgins refers to his wife as “deaf and dumb.” I know that the term was used at the time and it’s only because I’m a 21st century-dweller that I’m saying this, but it makes me hate him a little bit.
    • Judith Evelyn was also perfectly cast. She pulls off her silent role with the perfect amount of exaggeration to suit the film’s mood.
    • The dialogue between the characters of Dr. Chapin and Isabel is so friggin’ great. She reveals herself to be crazy – but so is he. The tension between them means big drama (and even a few laughs over the snide jabs that they take at each other).
A few favorite frames from Mrs. Higgins’ acid trip (Screen captures and edit by TMP; originally posted on Tumblr)
  • While widely regarded as a bit of a cheesefest, some of the scenes are legitimately creepy. The idea of a big ol’ bug crawling around in my back certainly gives me the heebie-jeebies!
  • Mrs. Higgins’ acid trip is probably my favorite horror scene of all time. The brilliant mix of black and white with color along with Evelyn’s performance and the use of super awesome, “movie monster” creatures always leaves me a bit stunned.
  • If the tingler is strong enough to kill a man, I’m pretty sure it’d be strong enough to break out of the dinky metal box that Dr. Chapin traps it in.
  • I can only imagine how much fun it must have been to see this film in the theater with all of Castle’s effects. (MAKE IT HAPPEN, TCM!) The theater scene in particular is BRILLIANT. The film is obviously gimmicky, but so much fun to watch.
  • Quotes:
    • William Castle: “A scream at the right time may save your life!”
    • Dr. Chapin: “There’s a force in all of us that science knows nothing about: the force of fear.”
    • Isabel: “There’s a word for you.”
      Dr. Chapin: “There’s several for you.”
    • Isabel: “The only way Dave Morris will marry my sister is over my dead body!”
      Dr. Chapin: “Unconventional, but not impossible.”
    • Dr. Chapin (to Isabel): “Stay awake a little longer. Who knows? The next time you sleep, it may be forever.”
    • Dr. Chapin (to Isabel, in reference to cat): “Have you two met? In the same alley, perhaps…”
    • Dr. Chapin: “Ladies and gentlemen, please do not panic, but SCREAM! Scream for your lives!”