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The Tingler (1959)
In 50s B-film director and impresario schlockmeister
William Castle's classic horror film:
- director William Castle presented his own introduction
in the film's prologue with this word of advice: "I am William
Castle, the director of the motion picture you are about to see.
I feel obligated to warn you that some of the sensations, some
of the physical reactions which the actors on the screen will feel,
will also be experienced for the first time in motion picture history,
by certain members of this audience. I say 'certain members' because
some people are more sensitive to these mysterious electronic impulses
than others. These, uh, unfortunate, sensitive people will at times
feel a strange, tingling sensation. Others will feel it less strongly.
Don't be alarmed - you can protect yourself. At any time you are
conscious of a tingling sensation, you may obtain immediate relief
by screaming. Don't be embarrassed about opening your mouth and
letting rip with all you've got, because the person in the seat
right next to you will probably be screaming too. And remember
this - a scream at the right time may save your life."
- Castle's speech was followed by zoomed-in examples
of disembodied screaming heads - three in all
- mad, part-time pathologist/scientist
Dr. Warren Chapin (Vincent Price) made the discovery that the
tingling sensation one felt running up and down one's spine when
afraid was actually a "living" parasite that grew and lived
in the vertebrae. When one couldn't scream or when one experienced
prolonged scary situations (without having the therapeutic release
of a primal scream), the parasite could grow to enormous size and
cripple a person: "We know that it exists...We know that fear
alone energizes it, gives it strength...The Tingler exists in every
living human being and it's extremely powerful...Fear causes the
Tingler to spread along the spinal column. And probably with those
arm-like things between the vertebrae forces it to become arched
and rigid...Screaming seems to stop the Tingler from bending the
spinal column. Screaming may even dissolve it, or if it's a living
organism, kill it...We now know that at the peak of terror, the Tingler
is a solid mass, extending from the coccyx to the cervicals. If someone
could stand the intense pain without screaming or otherwise releasing
their tension until they die, I think that an autopsy would give
us a Tingler that we could work with."
- a gruesome experiment was conducted on Chapin's deaf-mute
patient Mrs. Martha Higgins (Judith Evelyn), the wife of silent movie
theatre owner Oliver Higgins (Philip Coolidge) - a friend of Chapin's. She
was scared, literally to death, by repeated hallucinatory shocks in her
apartment's bedroom and throughout her house:
- the lights flicked off in her bedroom, and a window
shut on its own
- the movement of a rocking chair
- the squeaky closing of her bedroom door
- a corpse like, skull-faced figure on a bed that
rose up and wielded a machete
- more lights turning off by themselves in her apartment
- a hairy hand threw a hatchet at her
- red blood (in a B/W film) came out of the sink
faucet
- an arm rose up from a bloody bathtub (Martha's
back became arched and rigid - she couldn't scream, and the Tingler
took over her body)
- Martha's own death certificate was pinned to the
inside of the bathroom's medicine cabinet, announcing her demise
from extreme FRIGHT (in capital letters)
- [Note: Her husband was later revealed as the confessed
murderer. He knew if he scared his mute wife long enough, she would
die from fright due to her inability to scream.]
The Death of Martha
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Skull-Faced Figure
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With Machete
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Hatchet
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Red Blood From Sink Faucet
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Bloody Bathtub
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Bloody Arm
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Martha Unable to Scream
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Death From Extreme Fright
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- Dr.
Chapin performed an autopsy on Mrs. Martha Higgins; he extracted
the squirming, lobster-like centipede from her body, for a brief
moment, it attached itself to his arm; and as he napped on the couch,
the Tingler also crawled onto his chest and threatened to choke him;
it released itself when his socialite wife Isabel Stevens Chapin
(Patricia Cutts) returned home and screamed!
- the doctor surmised that if
he returned the Tingler to Martha's body, it would die: "The Tingler
exists in every human being, we now know. Look at that Tingler, Dave.
It's an ugly and dangerous thing. Ugly because it's the creation of
man's fear, which is ugly too. Dangerous because, because a frightened
man is dangerous. We can't destroy it because we've removed it from
its natural place...Fear made that Tingler grow from microscopic size
to this. We can only hope when it goes back where it came from, it
will also go back to a thing infinitely small - even die, because
it's creator is dead and all fear gone."
- later in the film's climax, Dr. Chapin planned to
place the Tingler back into Martha's corpse, but of course, the boxed
creature escaped and entered a crowded film theater showing the silent
film Tol'able David (1921); the creature scared one young female
by climbing up her leg
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Crawling Up a Woman's Leg in Film Theater
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- the Tingler crawled into the inattentive projectionist's
booth; in pitch black, Chapin tried to calm the theatre audience
with an announcement: "There's no cause for alarm. A young lady
has fainted. She is being attended to by a doctor and is quite alright.
So please remain seated. The movie will begin again right away"
The Silhouette of Tingler Moving Across Projection Beam
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The Projectionist Strangled by the Tingler
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The Tingler In Crowded Film Theater
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- on screen, the projected film broke as the silhouette
of the Tingler moved across the projection beam; the film theater
went pitch black; the film audience (within the film and watching
the film) were encouraged to scream to lessen the effects of tingling
fear during a long black-out section by the voice of Dr. Chapin:
"Ladies
and gentlemen, please do not panic. But scream! Scream for your lives!
The Tingler is loose in this theater! (Screams)..."
[Note: To enhance the effect when the Tingler was on
the loose in the theatre, seats were rigged with vibrating devices
to produce the tingling effect - a gimmick nicknamed Percepto.]
- after making another reassuring announcement, "The
Tingler has been paralyzed by your screaming. There's no more danger.
We will now resume the showing of the movie," Chapin rushed
to the projection booth where the projectionist was being strangled
by The Tingler; his screams caused the creature to drop to the
floor, where it was captured in a film canister
- in the film's conclusion, Higgins received the same
fate as his wife, who had the Tingler reinserted into her spine by
Dr. Chapin to neutralize its effects. The Tingler resurrected Martha
who rose up and caused her husband to also die of fright - with muted screams.
Dr. Chapin's words (in darkness) ended the film: "Ladies and
gentlemen, just a word of warning. If any of you are not convinced
that you have a Tingler of your own, the next time you are frightened
in the dark, don't scream."
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William Castle's Prologue Introduction
Disembodied Screaming Heads
Extraction of the Life-Sized Tingler During Autopsy
During a Nap, The Tingler Crawled Up Dr. Chapin's Chest
Resurrected Martha Higgins With The Tingler Reinserted
Into Her
Mrs. Higgins' Husband Dying of Fright
Mrs. Higgins' Reaction
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