Die, Monster, Die (1965) starring Nick Adams, Suzan Farmer, Boris Karloff, Freda Jackson
The title, Die, Monster, Die is very misleading and the movie is much better than the title, or the movie poster would lead you to believe. It begins with a young man (Nick Adams) visiting a young woman that he knew in college (Suzan Farmer) at her house finding the townspeople unwelcoming, and the girl’s father (Boris Karloff) even more so, and he soon realizes that there is something strange happening something that may lead to death.
Review
Editorial review of Die, Monster, Die courtesy of Amazon.com
The girl’s father (Boris Karloff) demands his departure, warning of a curse by his warlock ancestor. Said curse is actually a radioactive meteor, which mutates not only the local flora and fauna (the zoo from hell sequence, where Adams and Farmer encounter monstrous creatures in a greenhouse, is a campy/creepy highlight), but Farmers mother (Freda Jackson), and eventually Karloff, who becomes a glowing zombie before the house burns in typical AIP fashion. Like the studio’s previous effort, Roger Corman’s The Haunted Palace, the picture is Lovecraft-lite, toning down the story’s sense of unearthly horror in favor of standard-issue spook-show shenanigans. But Karloff’s presence, though infirm, lends to the adequately chilly atmosphere, as does Haller’s eye for dark-and-dreary art direction. Haller later directed another uneven Lovecraft film, The Dunwich Horror. MGMs full-screen VHS (and widescreen DVD) print has aged gracefully, with only minor surface damage. Paul Gaita
Cast of Characters in Die, Monster, Die
- Stephen Reinhart (Nick Adams, Pillow Talk, Mr. Roberts). The young man who has come to Witley Manor to visit the beautiful young woman that he met in college, at her mother’s invitation
- Susan Witley (Suzan Farmer, Rasputin: The Mad Monk, Dracula; Prince of Darkness). That beautiful young woman, recently returned home from college. Her mother is ill, her father is wheelchair bound, and the family butler also seems ill.
- Letitia Witley (Freda Jackson, The Brides of Dracula, Clash of the Titans). The ill mother, laying in bed for most of the film, hidden by veils, who desperately wants Mr. Reinhart to take her daughter away from Witley Manor
Nahum Witley (Boris Karloff, Son of Frankenstein, Bedlam). The head of the house, an invalid in his wheelchair. He knows what is going on and believes that he can use it to overcome his father’s evil influence, and make the Witley name a positive force once again. At the end, he is willing to risk his own life to destroy it.- Merwyn (Terence de Marney, The Wreck of the Mary Deare) the Witleys’ faithful butler, who seems ill and eventually dies, leaving only trace ashes in the shape of a human being behind.
- Dr. Henderson (Patrick Magee, Dementia 13, The Masque of the Red Death) a secondary character; the doctor who attended Nahum Witleys’ dying father and whatever he saw drove him to alcoholism.