Tower of London

Do you have the courage to spend 83 minutes in the Tower of London?

6.0
19621h 20m

The twisted Richard III is haunted by the ghosts of those he has murdered in his attempt to become the King of England.

Production

Logo for United Artists

Cast

Photo of Vincent Price

Vincent Price

Richard of Gloucester

Photo of Michael Pate

Michael Pate

Sir Ratcliffe

Photo of Joan Freeman

Joan Freeman

Lady Margaret

Photo of Robert Brown

Robert Brown

Sir Justin

Photo of Bruce Gordon

Bruce Gordon

Earl of Buckingham

Photo of Sandra Knight

Sandra Knight

Mistress Shore

Photo of Sara Taft

Sara Taft

Richard's mother

Photo of Morris Ankrum

Morris Ankrum

The Archbishop

Photo of Gene Roth

Gene Roth

The Tailor

Photo of Leoda Richards

Leoda Richards

Royal court lady

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Reviews

T

talisencrw

8/10

This was great--having Vincent Price do Richard III in the midst of his great run for Roger Corman. Well worth seeing--mine was on my blu Vincent Price Collection, Volume III.

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I think this might have been Vincent Price's first leading role in a film here, and he actually carries it off quite well - if a little too hammily. His elder brother King Edward IV is dying and Prince Richard of Gloucester is determined to usurp his sons and claim the English crown for himself. What ensues now are three stories illustrating his ability to be cruel, to manipulate and to murder - but each act comes with it's own form of spiritual retribution from the victims. The first is a lady-in-waiting whom he wants to discredit the paternity of the new Edward V, then his own brother, the Duke of Clarence, (Charles Macaulay) before, finally, the reckoning with the victims the blame for which history is still uncertain it can lay at his door. It's a bit wordy but the simple visual effects have a suitably haunting feel to them and Price exudes a malevolent vulnerability that plays very much to the Shakespearean interpretation of his character. Short and sweet with plenty going on, it passes the time quite effortlessly but an history lesson it isn't.

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