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词条 I Bury the Living
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Production

  4. Release

  5. Reception

  6. Legacy

  7. References

  8. External links

{{Infobox film
| name = I Bury the Living
| image = IBuryTheLiving.jpg
| image_size =
| caption =
| director = Albert Band
| producer = Louis Garfinkle
Albert Band
| writer = Louis Garfinkle
| narrator =
| starring = Richard Boone
Theodore Bikel
| music = Gerald Fried
| cinematography = Frederick Gately
| editing = Frank Sullivan
| distributor = United Artists
| released = {{Film date|1958|07}}
| runtime = 76 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget =
}}

I Bury the Living is a 1958 horror film directed by famed B movie director Albert Band (father of Charles Band), and starring Richard Boone and Theodore Bikel. It was written by Louis Garfinkle and produced by Garfinkle and Band.

Plot

Robert Kraft (Boone) is the newly appointed chairman of a committee that oversees a large cemetery. The cemetery caretaker, Andy MacKee (Bikel), keeps a map in the cemetery office displaying the grounds and each gravesite. Filled graves are marked by black pins and unoccupied but sold graves are marked with white pins. New to the position and unobservant, Kraft accidentally places a pair of black pins where they don't belong, only to discover later that the young couple who had bought the grave sites in question died in an automobile accident soon afterwards. He believes that he marked them for death.

Hoping it will give him peace of mind, Robert replaces a random white pin with a black pin. When that person dies later in the week, however, he becomes increasingly convinced that either he or the map wield some kind of dark power. Repeated experiments, undertaken upon the insistence of skeptical friends and co-workers, yield the same result. Kraft slips into deep guilt and depression and believes he is cursed.

The police, who are initially skeptical, eventually begin to take notice and, in the hopes that it will reveal the cause of the deaths, ask Robert to place a black pin on the grave of a person who is known to be in France. Although he does so, Robert continues his slide into despair. That same night, he decides that if black pins give him the power of death, white pins might give him the power of life. He replaces all of the recently placed black pins with white pins. When he goes to the associated grave sites later that night, he discovers that they have all been dug up, with the bodies gone.

Upon returning to the cemetery office, Robert receives a call informing him of the death of the man in France. As he hangs up the phone, the cemetery caretaker comes up behind him, covered in dirt. He reveals that he has been killing all of the marked people as revenge for being forced to retire. However, when Robert informs him of the passing of the man in France, the caretaker, who couldn't have killed the man, begins to lose his mind. When the police arrive, they find the caretaker dead and tell Robert that the news of the man's death was all a ruse to flush out the cemetery caretaker.

Cast

  • Richard Boone as Robert Kraft
  • Theodore Bikel as Andy McKee
  • Peggy Maurer as Ann Craig
  • Howard Smith as George Kraft
  • Herbert Anderson as Jess Jessup
  • Robert Osterloh as Lt. Clayborne.

Production

The film's music was composed by Gerald Fried. It was shot by Frederick Gately and edited by Frank Sullivan.

Release

I Bury the Living was released in July 1958 by United Artists.

Reception

SFX critic Ian Berriman noted that I Bury the Living was "basically just like an extended episode of The Twilight Zone, but that's no bad thing, since it's like a good episode".[1]Film Threat said, "With a title like I Bury the Living (1958), one would think this picture should be sleazy 50’s horror fare; a product of Corman or at least AIP, but it is actually a pretty tense little psychological thriller". The review expressed disappointment with the film's ending, but praised its "dark, moody cinematography", "sometimes striking if sparse visual design" and "ominous music".[2]

Legacy

Horror author Stephen King listed I Bury the Living as one of his favorite films in his 1981 non-fiction book Danse Macabre, but criticized the ending.[3] In the forward to King's short story "Obits", published in 2015 in his The Bazaar of Bad Dreams collection, he referenced I Bury the Living and noted that the story was inspired by the film.

References

1. ^https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/i_bury_the_living/
2. ^http://filmthreat.com/uncategorized/i-bury-the-living/
3. ^https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051755/trivia?ref_=tt_trv_trv

External links

  • {{IMDb title|id=0051755|title=I Bury the Living}}
  • {{Internet Archive film|id=IBuryTheLiving1958|name=I Bury the Living}}
  • {{Amg movie|24022|I Bury the Living}}
  • Filmschatten film online

9 : 1950s horror films|1958 films|American films|American psychological horror films|Cemeteries in fiction|English-language films|Films scored by Gerald Fried|United Artists films|Films directed by Albert Band

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