- Cast & crew
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Experiment in Terror
A man with an asthmatic voice telephones and assaults clerk Kelly Sherwood at home and coerces her into helping him steal a large sum from her bank. A man with an asthmatic voice telephones and assaults clerk Kelly Sherwood at home and coerces her into helping him steal a large sum from her bank. A man with an asthmatic voice telephones and assaults clerk Kelly Sherwood at home and coerces her into helping him steal a large sum from her bank.
- Blake Edwards
- Gordon Gordon
- Mildred Gordon
- Stefanie Powers
- 102 User reviews
- 62 Critic reviews
- 69 Metascore
- 1 nomination total
Top cast 61
- John Ripley
- Kelly Sherwood
- Toby Sherwood
- Nancy Ashton
- Special Agent
- Capt. Moreno
- Man Who Picks Up Kelly
- FBI Agent #1
- Tourist at Fishermans Wharf
- (uncredited)
- Police Lieutenant
- Cook at The Hangout
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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- Trivia As of 2023, Kelly's house at 120 St. Germain Ave. in San Francisco is still standing with the same architecture.
- Goofs There are official photos of President Dwight D. Eisenhower and President John F. Kennedy in different government offices. However, this picture was filmed in 1961, during a transition period from the Eisenhower to the Kennedy administration, so it is quite possible that there were portraits of both in some places. There also are 48-star flags in some scenes; sometimes those in authority didn't make changes as quickly as today.
Garland Humphrey 'Red' Lynch : Your sister's all right.
Toby Sherwood : You said she was dying.
Garland Humphrey 'Red' Lynch : I had to find some way to get you here. Take off your clothes. You want me to take them off for you?
Toby Sherwood : [shakes her head]
Garland Humphrey 'Red' Lynch : Then take them off.
- Crazy credits The end credits list only one person, the actor who played the villain, followed by "The End."
- Connections Edited into The Green Fog (2017)
- Soundtracks Nancy (uncredited) Written by Henry Mancini Performed by Jimmy Rowles
User reviews 102
Exciting thriller crackles with suspense , thrills , and first rate performances..
- Sep 19, 2010
- How long is Experiment in Terror? Powered by Alexa
- June 9, 1962 (Japan)
- United States
- Chantaje contra una mujer
- Candlestick Park - 602 Jamestown Avenue, San Francisco, California, USA (Night basebal game between Giants and Dodgers at the climax of the movie)
- Geoffrey-Kate Productions
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime 2 hours 3 minutes
- Black and White
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Experiment in Terror [DVD]
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Product Description
A shadowy, asthmatic psychopath demands a bank teller to rob her bank of $100,000 or her sister will die.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.85:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.75 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 3.2 ounces
- Director : Blake Edwards
- Media Format : DVD, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Black & White, Widescreen, NTSC, Subtitled
- Run time : 2 hours and 3 minutes
- Release date : June 10, 2003
- Actors : Glenn Ford, Lee Remick, Stefanie Powers, Ross Martin
- Subtitles: : English, Japanese, French
- Producers : Blake Edwards
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
- Studio : Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B000092T6C
- Number of discs : 1
- #5,419 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #17,103 in Drama DVDs
Customer reviews
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- 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 1 star 71% 19% 4% 2% 3% 3%
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Guilty Pleasure Favorite
5.0 out of 5 stars great movie scary.
4.0 out of 5 stars Two hot women, a G-Man, and a ruthless, asthmatic groper...
5.0 out of 5 stars but the blu ray disc was fine. picture and sound were very clear, 5.0 out of 5 stars great film noir movie, 5.0 out of 5 stars good story, 5.0 out of 5 stars intense, top reviews from other countries, 5.0 out of 5 stars good movie, 5.0 out of 5 stars 必見です, 5.0 out of 5 stars red scare: der mörder hat am meisten blut in sich.
5.0 out of 5 stars Operation Terror.
5.0 out of 5 stars five stars.
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Experiment in Terror
Time out says, release details.
- Duration: 122 mins
Cast and crew
- Director: Blake Edwards
- Screenwriter: The Gordons
- Stefanie Powers
- Ross Martin
- Clifton James
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The Brooklyn Rail
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Film June 2021
Blake Edwards’s Experiment in Terror
Since its release in 1962, experiment in terror has inspired artists from david lynch to lana del rey..
Almost 60 years ago, filmgoers were introduced to Experiment in Terror (1962). The film opens with a beautiful woman driving a convertible across the San Francisco Bay Bridge at night to Henry Mancini’s moody score. After the woman turns onto her street, a sign for “TWIN PEAKS” looms in the right-hand corner. The sign, referring to a real neighborhood in San Francisco, is not a coincidence, but an indication of the film’s broad influence on the noir genre and its descendants.
Since its release in 1962, Experiment in Terror has inspired artists from David Lynch to Lana Del Rey. Sometimes considered a “neo-noir” due to its production several years after the film noir’s heyday, the movie represents a bridge between the classic noir period of the 1940s and the glut of serial killer content which started arriving in the wake of The Silence of the Lambs (1991).
Experiment in Terror forms an uncharacteristic entry in the catalog of director Blake Edwards, a filmmaker better known for Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961), The Pink Panther (1963), and a lengthy list of comedies (including seven Panther sequels). But with Experiment in Terror , which came between Tiffany’s and the Pink Panther run, Edwards went into darker directions made possible by the success of Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960) two years before.
In the film, a criminal named Garland “Red” Lynch (Ross Martin) demands that Kelly Sherwood (Lee Remick), a young bank teller, rob her workplace. If she doesn’t assist in the bank job, Red Lynch will kill her—and her kid sister, Toby (Stefanie Powers). However, Sherwood enlists the help of trusty FBI agent John Ripley (Glenn Ford), who helps her negotiate with and resist the killer through a variety of schemes and encounters, culminating in an epic and climactic set piece—a chase and shootout during a Giants–Dodgers game at the then-new Candlestick Park. Adding to the film’s verisimilitude, the ballpark sequence features close-ups of Hall of Fame pitcher Don Drysdale and play-by-play narration by longtime Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully.
Taken as a whole, Experiment in Terror lives up to its name—decades later, it still scans as an experiment, but one that adopted Hitchcockian storytelling techniques and took them just a bit further, teeing up the neo-noirs that David Lynch, Ridley Scott, and Jonathan Demme made in the following decades.
The book from which Edwards’s “experiment” is adapted, Operation Terror (1960), has its own fascinating provenance. The book and its screenplay were written by husband-and-wife duo “the Gordons”—Mildred Gordon and Gordon Gordon (his actual name), who met and married after attending college at the University of Arizona. Many of their novels centered around the adventures of cool, confident FBI agent John “Rip” Ripley. Gordon Gordon was an FBI agent himself, serving as a counter-intelligence agent for the law-enforcement organization during World War II. According to Gordon Gordon, the theme of the “innocent person in the wrong place” usually informed their stories. “During our college and FBI days we encountered much of this and marveled at the innate courage and jaw-setting of even the quietest victims,” Gordon explained in an essay published in the St. James Guide to Crime and Mystery Writers.
After the couple realized the screenwriter who adapted their 1950 novel Make Haste to Live was paid 40,000 dollars by the studio, while they only received 5,000 dollars for the novel rights, they made sure to lobby for the screenwriting gig for any adaptations of their work.
Operation Terror , the basis for Experiment , was serialized in the Ladies’ Home Journal in 1960. Given that the Gordons adapted their own novel, the screenplay follows the novel’s plot almost exactly, except that the setting of the story was shifted from Los Angeles to San Francisco. The novel’s hardboiled style is over-the-top yet well rendered, peppered with narrative interiority such as, “A man’s face, [Sherwood] thought, was like the dust jacket of a book. You could read a lot in it, and you could usually tell when the cover was designed to lead you astray.”
Occasionally, flashes into a character’s backstory are incited by banal triggers, leading to a style that at once feels calculated and perhaps unintentionally parodic. In one scene, after the detective learns about an informant named “Popcorn,” Ripley remembers that “he’d eaten plenty of popcorn in college. That had been his last year, when cattle prices tumbled and his mother almost lost the ranch.” That’s the entire flashback. Though the book has long been out of print, its narrative is spare, concise, and elevated by the humor (intentional or not) of these asides, setting an intriguing template for the movie.
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Experiment in Terror’ s relationship to Hitchcock was noted at its release. New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther wrote in 1962 that “Mr. Edwards is a youthful director who has obviously studied Hitchcock, Huston, Reed, et al., and who knows how to make the fast cut and the shattering assault upon the ear.”
More recently, New Yorker critic Anthony Lane described Experiment in Terror as “a movie about movies, a very early American reflection of the methods and moods of the French New Wave realized as a mainstream Hollywood film.”
As Lane elaborated, though the film relies on Hitchcockian camera angles and suspense elements, Edwards “empties the schema of key Hitchcockian elements in order to make the film his own. The first thing that he removes is psychology. Where Norman Bates in Psycho is suffering from a particular mental illness with a specific clinical cause, the criminal in Experiment in Terror , Red Lynch, is just a bad guy built of a batch of character traits, some nasty and some noble, that don’t add up or fit together.”
As a result, Experiment in Terror feels more like an exercise in style than an exploration of psychological themes, as so many Hitchcock films ended up pursuing. “Edwards isn’t so much interested in the way things work as the way things look,” Lane concluded.
But the way Experiment in Terror looks is masterful for a film of its time, and particularly influential to David Lynch’s body of noir-inspired work. Not only is there a “Twin Peaks” sign in the opening sequence that seems to have inspired the title card and name of his hit show, but the villain, Garland “Red” Lynch, says he’s “killed twice before,” a line memorably echoed by the supernatural Twin Peaks (1990–91) villain, Bob, when he declared he would “kill again” in season one, episode three. The archetype of a trustworthy and assured FBI agent (a type increasingly, and many would say rightfully, challenged by more complex crime dramas) anticipates the example of Kyle MacLachlan’s upstanding FBI agent character, Dale Cooper. In addition to the striking coincidence that Edwards’s villain shares a surname with Lynch, the Twin Peaks character of Major Garland Briggs might also be named in homage to the villain of Experiment in Terror .
Other Lynch projects bear significant resemblance. In Wild at Heart (1990), Willem Dafoe’s Bobby Peru grips and speaks to Laura Dern’s Lula Fortune in much the same way that Red Lynch clutches Kelly Sherwood in the opening sequence. Throughout the runtime of Experiment in Terror , Red Lynch is shown making phone calls in shots where only his lips and the bottom of his face are visible, a technique David Lynch used to unsettling effect in Mulholland Drive (2001).
Other scenes seem to have left an impact on the genre at large. A scene where a dressmaker (Patricia Huston) is found dead in an apartment full of mannequins seems to anticipate, or at least invoke, the trope of finding a dead body—or a killer—in a creepy space filled with mannequins, such as the storage unit in The Silence of the Lambs or the workshop of J. F. Sebastian in Blade Runner (1982) . More problematically, a startling cross-dressing scene with Red Lynch makes him one in a long line of serial killer characters in film that have contributed to harmful transphobic stereotypes (including Norman Bates in Psycho , Robert Elliot in Dressed to Kill, 1980, and Jame “Buffalo Bill” Gumb in The Silence of the Lambs ).
And yet Experiment in Terror continues to be reinterpreted by other artists. In 2018, Lana Del Rey used the Mancini score in a set-piece to her “LA to the Moon Tour,” her mid-century aesthetic and onstage persona lining up with the Sherwood character.
Experiment in Terror showcases the potential of experimentation. Blake Edwards took risks and went outside his mainstay comedy genre for this project, and the result was a film with a long and influential legacy that helped define the trajectory of the neo-noir and its serial killer cousins. The closest modern parallel might be Todd Phillips pivoting from comedy to comic book crime drama with Joker (2019). Courage in storytelling, not unlike the bravery which the Gordons admired in their innocent protagonists, usually generates interesting results.
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Harrison Blackman is a Fulbright scholar, a writer of fiction and nonfiction, and a TV and film project consultant.
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Experiment in Terror (1962)
Directed by blake edwards.
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Description by Wikipedia
Experiment in Terror is a 1962 suspense-thriller released by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Blake Edwards and written by Mildred Gordon and Gordon Gordon based on their 1961 novel Operation Terror. The film stars Glenn Ford, Lee Remick, Stefanie Powers, and Ross Martin.
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Experiment in Terror is a 1962 American neo-noir thriller film released by Columbia Pictures.It was directed by Blake Edwards and written by Mildred Gordon and Gordon ...
Experiment in Terror: Directed by Blake Edwards. With Glenn Ford, Lee Remick, Stefanie Powers, Roy Poole. A man with an asthmatic voice telephones and assaults clerk Kelly Sherwood at home and coerces her into helping him steal a large sum from her bank.
Jun 10, 2003 · Es ist das Jahr 1962, und Blake Edwards, ein Regisseur, den man gemeinhin eher im Zusammenhang mit Komödien – manchen guten, manchen eher durchwachsenen – kennt, dreht „Experiment in Terror“, einen stilistisch vollendeten Film, der eine vielleicht nicht gerade sehr komplexe, dabei aber gekonnt inszenierte Kriminalgeschichte erzählt ...
Mar 10, 2024 · Experiment in Terror is a 1962 American neo-noir thriller film released by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Blake Edwards and written by Mildred Gordon...
Producer: Blake Edwards Director: Blake Edwards Screenplay: Gordon Gordon, Mildred Gordon (screenplay and novel "Operation Terror"; credited as The Gordons Cinematography: Philip H. Lathrop Art Direction: Robert Peterson Music: Henry Mancini Film Editing: Patrick McCormack Cast: Glenn Ford (John 'Rip' Ripley), Lee Remick (Kelly Sherwood ...
Sep 10, 2012 · After seven lightish comedies and dramas, and directly following Breakfast at Tiffany's, Edwards launched himself in a new direction with this thriller: an experiment for him (although he had ...
Experiment in Terror is a 1962 American neo-noir thriller film released by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Blake Edwards and written by Mildred Gordon and ...
Experiment in Terror’s relationship to Hitchcock was noted at its release.New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther wrote in 1962 that “Mr. Edwards is a youthful director who has obviously studied Hitchcock, Huston, Reed, et al., and who knows how to make the fast cut and the shattering assault upon the ear.”
While the title might suggest a horror film, Edwards was more interested in keeping events grounded in reality and therefore a lot of locations shooting was employed, itself a hark back to Andrew L. Stone's Cry Terror! so you could trace this in a line running from the earliest form of the thriller right up to the present, though Experiment in ...
Experiment in Terror is a 1962 suspense-thriller released by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Blake Edwards and written by Mildred Gordon and Gordon Gordon based ...