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==Score==
==Score==
[[Leigh Harline]]'s somber score makes use of another work inspired by Böcklin's painting, [[Rachmaninoff | Sergei Rachmaninoff]]'s tone poem, "[[Isle of the Dead (Rachmaninoff)|Isle of the Dead]]". Harline borrows themes and copies their orchestration, taking about as much as he can without violating copyright. Oddly, he makes no use of the public-domain "[[Dies Irae]]".{{disambiguation needed|date=August 2012}}
[[Leigh Harline]]'s somber score makes use of another work inspired by Böcklin's painting, [[Rachmaninoff | Sergei Rachmaninoff]]'s tone poem, "[[Isle of the Dead (Rachmaninoff)|Isle of the Dead]]". Harline borrows themes and copies their orchestration, taking about as much as he can without violating copyright. Oddly, he makes no use of the public-domain "[[Dies Irae]]".


==Reception==
==Reception==

Revision as of 03:46, 16 February 2013

Isle of the Dead
File:Isleofdead.jpg
theatrical poster
Directed byMark Robson
Written byArdel Wray
Val Lewton (uncredited)
Josef Mischel (uncredited)
Produced byVal Lewton
StarringBoris Karloff
Ellen Drew
CinematographyJack MacKenzie
Edited byLyle Boyer
Music byLeigh Harline
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
1 September 1945
Running time
72 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Isle of the Dead (1945) is one of producer Val Lewton's horror films made for RKO Radio Pictures. The movie had a script inspired by the painting Isle of the Dead by Arnold Böcklin, which appears behind the title credits, though the film was originally titled "Camilla" during production. (Another of Lewton's films, I Walked With a Zombie, has the painting hung in the main room of the movie.) It was written by frequent Lewton collaborator Ardel Wray; directed by Mark Robson, the fourth of five pictures he directed for Lewton; and starred Boris Karloff, the first of three pictures he made with Lewton (although the second released).

Plot

The story is set on a Greek isle during the First Balkan War in 1912–1913, when a plague forces a quarantine on the island's visitors. As they die one by one, a young woman is accused of being a vorvolakas, a sort of vampire.

Production

Filming began for about two weeks in July 1944 until production was suspended when Karloff required a back operation. It was completed in December 1944. In the interim, after Karloff had recovered from the surgery but before the cast of Isle of the Dead could be reassembled, he and Lewton made The Body Snatcher. The film had a troubled production, and the central female character of the original script (named "Catherine") was deleted entirely from the tale.

Score

Leigh Harline's somber score makes use of another work inspired by Böcklin's painting, Sergei Rachmaninoff's tone poem, "Isle of the Dead". Harline borrows themes and copies their orchestration, taking about as much as he can without violating copyright. Oddly, he makes no use of the public-domain "Dies Irae".

Reception

The film premiered in New York City on 7 September 1945. The cost of Isle of the Dead at completion was $246,000, the highest yet for a Lewton horror film, but with domestic rentals of $266,000, and foreign rentals of $117,000, it made only $13,000 in profit for RKO. It was re-issued in 1953 on a double bill with Mighty Joe Young, and made its television debut in 1959.

Director Martin Scorsese placed Isle of the Dead on his list of the 11 scariest horror films of all time.[1]

Cast

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Scorsese, Martin (October 28, 2009). "11 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time". The Daily Beast. Retrieved November 15, 2009.