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Incubus
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Directed by Leslie Stevens.
One of the strangest productions ever committed to celluloid, and the first feature with all dialogue recorded in Esperanto, this bizarre supernatural art-horror epic, hailed by Famous Monsters founder Forrest J. Ackerman as "the movie-watching event of a lifetime," actually benefits from the presence of a pre-Star Trek William Shatner, whose operatic style somehow conforms to the story's deranged logic. Shatner plays Marc, a man lost in the mythical land of Nomen Tuum where he comes under psychic attack from both the evil witch Kia (Allyson Ames) and the title demon (Milos Milos), who procures female souls for Satan. The filmmakers reportedly adopted the "universal language" of Esperanto to give the dialogue a mystical feel, but the end product may leave audiences wondering if the entire project is an elaborate put-on. Thoroughly strange, Incubus is certainly not without merit: the film's strength comes primarily from sumptuous location cinematography by Conrad Hall, who may have taken inspiration from the works of Ingmar Bergman and Akira Kurosawa. Believed lost, the only surviving negative of this oddity was eventually rescued from 30 years of oblivion and released to home video. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Incubus (1965, USA, Leslie Stev ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"Allmovie certainly got it right when it called Incubus "one of the strangest productions ever committed to celluiod". Why? Let us count the ways... 1. It stars William Shatner as man stalked by a witch. 2. It is seems like a collaboration between Igmar Bergman and Roger Corman. 3. It's entirley in Esperanto. What's that, you ask? Some linguist in the 1920's dreampt up Esperanto as a universal language (combined from existaning languages) that everyone would learn, but nobody except linguistic PhD's did. Leslie Stevens, the writer and director, apparently failed to do the crucial research and realized that no one spoke the langage and movie understandbly bombed at the box office. 4. The incubus looks like a sensitive painter in an art class and is not scary. This is not really a bad movie, but it's not as much fun as it seems and completly fails in its attemps to establish a Virgin Spring-like atmosphere. Stevens establishes some interesting ideas, but he can't execute it very ... " [More]
 



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