Night of the Eagle

Night of the Eagle

1962
★★★☆☆ 6.7/10
⏱️ 90 minutes
📅 Released
🌐 EN
Horror
A woman who may be a witch defends her husband from forces attempting to harm him.

Where to Watch (US)

Stream

ScreenPix Apple TV Channel
ScreenPix Amazon Channel

Rent

Fandango At Home

Buy

Fandango At Home

User Reviews

John Chard
★ 8.5/10
The Devil: The Principle of Evil. Night of the Eagle (AKA: Burn, Witch, Burn!) is directed by Sidney Hayers and adapted to screenplay by Charles Beaumont, Richard Matheson and George Baxt from the novel "Conjure Wife" written by Fritz Leiber. It stars Peter Wyngarde, Janet Blair, Margaret Johnston, Anthony Nicholls and Colin Gordon. Music is by William Alwyn and cinematography by Reginald Wyer. Psychologist Norman Taylor (Wyngarde) is rocked when he discovers that his wife Tansy has been dabbling in witchcraft. She is adamant that it keeps them from harm and is the reason why his career is flourishing. Not convinced at all, Norman sets about destroying all of Tansy's paraphernalia and soon finds his life taking a drastic downturn… What is neurosis? A nerve-change, the physical basis of consciousness as distinguished from psychosis. This, the second of three adaptations of the Leiber novel to get the big screen treatment, is easily the best, a smouldering suspenser ripe with paranoia and atmospheric unease. Subtle in pacing, it's a marked lesson in gaining the most out of suggestion and understated story telling. Clearly not armed with a gargantuan budget, Hayers and his team rely on the strength of writing and acting to let this Eagle soar, and soar it does. Rites and Practice in Black Magic. The back drop is a place of academic studies, where the faculty indulge in get togethers, of drinks, snacks and card games, but this is all a false veneer. Lurking underneath is a veritable hot-bed of spitefulness, jealousies and bitter rivalries that come to the fore once the black magic forces of evil gather to destroy the Taylors. I do (not) believe. It builds with ambiguity lurking overhead, ensuring the belief system of Norman Taylor and the audience is constantly tested, and then the coiled spring is unleashed. The effects work may not be up to much, but it matters not, the impact is considerably suspenseful, even frightening. No gore or histrionics here, just damn great supernatural film making. 8.5/10
April 9, 2014

Crew

Director
Sidney Hayers
Writer
Charles Beaumont, Richard Matheson, George Baxt
Producer
Samuel Z. Arkoff, Albert Fennell

Production

Independent Artists

Keywords

firehusband wife relationshipbased on novel or bookprofessortarot cardssupernaturalspidereaglegiant birdfireplace