IMDb RATING
6.3/10
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A group of convicted felons take over a suburban house to escape the ongoing police manhunt, turning the life of the family living there into a nightmare.A group of convicted felons take over a suburban house to escape the ongoing police manhunt, turning the life of the family living there into a nightmare.A group of convicted felons take over a suburban house to escape the ongoing police manhunt, turning the life of the family living there into a nightmare.
Eddie Marr
- Captain Cole
- (as Edward Marr)
Stanley Andrews
- Mr. Courtier
- (uncredited)
Tom Coleman
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
Oliver Cross
- Detective
- (uncredited)
Roy Damron
- Detective
- (uncredited)
Charles Herbert
- Steven Courtier
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
The Night Holds Terror doesn't have a whole lot going for it except for tension but maybe that's enough. Like Detour (which may be a distant ancestor), it's the story of how a whim, a twist of fate, can turn lives upside down. Driving home from his job at Edwards Air Force Base, Jack Kelly picks up a hitch-hiker (Vince Edwards) who pulls a gun on him. The rest of Edwards' gang (John Cassavettes and David Gross) join up, but spare Kelly's life when he has only 10 bucks on him. Deciding that trading in his car for cash is a better deal, they take over Kelly's knotty-pine home he has a wife (Hildy Parks) and two kids until the following day.
From then on in it's a standard family-held-hostage suspenser, with Edwards putting the moves on the wife and the inevitable sorting out of the pecking order among the gang members. When they depart next morning, taking Kelly along for insurance, Parks disobeys orders and calls the police. But will the police locate the gang before they kill Kelly?
His five years of glory as Ben Casey, M.D. still down the road, Edwards, smoldering and stretching the seams of his T-shirt, makes the strongest impression in the movie maybe the only impression. Cassavettes (occasionally looking like Jerry Lewis at about the same time) delivers an unremarkable performance, and the rest of the cast is no more than passable. Photography is the flat, 50s style until the end, when some night shots in driving rain add atmosphere. The story unfolds in the semi-documentary style common to its times, complete with voice-over narration (first by Kelly, then by an anonymous authority figure).
The Night Holds Terror gets compared frequently to The Desperate Hours, a better production but a stagier one as well. For all its low-budget look and low-price acting, the movie retains some authenticity. At times it almost seems like cinema-verité like those edgy little films Cassavettes himself would soon be making.
From then on in it's a standard family-held-hostage suspenser, with Edwards putting the moves on the wife and the inevitable sorting out of the pecking order among the gang members. When they depart next morning, taking Kelly along for insurance, Parks disobeys orders and calls the police. But will the police locate the gang before they kill Kelly?
His five years of glory as Ben Casey, M.D. still down the road, Edwards, smoldering and stretching the seams of his T-shirt, makes the strongest impression in the movie maybe the only impression. Cassavettes (occasionally looking like Jerry Lewis at about the same time) delivers an unremarkable performance, and the rest of the cast is no more than passable. Photography is the flat, 50s style until the end, when some night shots in driving rain add atmosphere. The story unfolds in the semi-documentary style common to its times, complete with voice-over narration (first by Kelly, then by an anonymous authority figure).
The Night Holds Terror gets compared frequently to The Desperate Hours, a better production but a stagier one as well. For all its low-budget look and low-price acting, the movie retains some authenticity. At times it almost seems like cinema-verité like those edgy little films Cassavettes himself would soon be making.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBased on a true story that happened in February 1953.
- GoofsIn the extended scene where Robert Batsford is in a telephone booth inside the Thrifty Drug Store, a member of the camera crew's reflection can be seen on the glass side throughout.
- Crazy creditsThe five lead actors not only receive optical billing in the opening credits, but the narrator speaks both their actual names and their characters' names.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)
- SoundtracksEvery Now and Then
Written by Virginia L. Stone (as Virginia Stone)
- How long is The Night Holds Terror?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Terror in the Night
- Filming locations
- Lancaster, California, USA(town scenes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was The Night Holds Terror (1955) officially released in India in English?
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