The shadow of the Tingler. Scream, scream for your life! |
2. House on Haunted Hill - If five guests can spent the night in Vincent Price's haunted house, each will receive $10,000. Castle's big gimmick, dubbed “Emergo” (love the name!), was simply a skeleton on a wire which projectionists dropped over unsuspecting viewers during the film’s big shock scene. Again, the gimmick was only used in selected theaters, although it was recreated for a New York City film festival in 2010.
3. Scent of Mystery - Mike Todd, Jr. produced this light mystery about a novelist trying to save an heiress (an unbilled Elizabeth Taylor) from a murder plot. In selected theatres, over 30 aromas were piped in via plastic tubes at appropriate points in the film--this was dubbed “Smell-O-Vision.” There have also been other attempts to create smelly movies, the most famous being John Waters' campy Polyester, which took the low-tech route with scratch-and-sniff cards (Waters, who has a great appreciation of "B" cinema history, called his gimmick Odorama).
If you can see these ghosts, you must be wearing your glasses! |
5. Earthquake - The most expensive and large-scale gimmick (short of 3-D) was Sensurround, in which a film's soundtrack was amplified in certain scenes to cause a rumbling sensation. It also caused headaches. The first Sensurround film was the disaster flick Earthquake in 1974. It was followed by Midway (1976) and Rollercoaster (1977).
Honorable Mentions: Macabre (Castle offered a $1000 life insurance policy if anyone died of fright while watching the movie); Homicidal and Ten Little Indians (1965) paused the action momentarily for a "Fright Break" and a "Murder Minute," respectively; the otherwise forgettable thriller Wicked, Wicked was shot in "Duovision," meaning that almost the entire movie was shown in split-screen so the audience could follow simultaneously-occurring events; and, finally, Robert Montgomery filmed all of the Philip Marlowe mystery The Lady in the Lake in first-person (Marlowe is only glimpsed via reflections).
THE TINGLER gimmick is probably the nest known...all were pretty dopey...I had the MISfortune of seeing the three WILLIAM CASLE debacles in the theater!!
ReplyDeleteRick, I have only seen one of these theatrically("Earthquake," which seemed awfully loud) but think I would have really had fun seeing the others at a movie theatre, too. The only entry I have not seen is "Scent of Mystery." My favorite of the list would have to be "The Tingler" because I always enjoy seeing Vincent Price. Gimmicks can be fun and your post was a blast!
ReplyDeleteThese are terrific gimmicks! Would have been so fun to experience first hand.
ReplyDeleteI'm a fan of all three Castle films--which are entertaining without their gimmicks. Of course, I've always been a fan of gimmicks, too, which explains why I saw all three Sensurround pics at the theatre.
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