Film notes
Director Roger Corman described The Terror as “one of the weirdest films I’ve ever been connected with. It was made only because it rained on a Sunday.” The entire production began almost accidentally, as a challenge. With sets from The Raven still standing and Boris Karloff available for two days, Corman devised a rough sketch of a feature and quickly began shooting a week after forming the initial idea. Lost Napoleonic officer André Duvalier, played by a young Jack Nicholson, encounters a mysterious woman on a deserted coastline and is drawn into the orbit of a decaying castle ruled by Boris Karloff’s melancholy Baron Von Leppe. The Terror became notorious for its chaotic production and disjointed story. The film was shot over the course of many months whenever money, time, and collaborators were available. Francis Ford Coppola, Monte Hellman, Jack Hill, Dennis Jakob, and Nicholson himself all directed portions of the film. Corman later joked that “half the young filmmakers in Hollywood did pieces on The Terror.” The film gradually took shape, evolving with each iteration of the production. Despite the initial two-day shooting schedule, The Terror became one of Corman’s longest productions. This fractured production history results in a film that continually reinvents itself. It feels perpetually unfinished and alive. The Terror anticipates the dream logic of later American independent cinema more than it resembles classical studio horror. Low-budget necessity opened the door to experimentation.
Mary Corman