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Legendary producer / director Dan Curtis (DARK SHADOWS, THE NIGHT STALKER) teams up with writers Richard Matheson (I AM LEGEND, THE TWILIGHT ZONE) and William F. Nolan (LOGAN’S RUN, BURNT OFFERINGS) to present three tales of horrific suspense in this made-for-television anthology that also showcases the tremendous acting talent of Karen Black (FIVE EASY PIECES, THE DAY OF THE LOCUST), who plays no less than four distinct roles. In "Julie," an aggressive college student seduces and ultimately blackmails his seemingly shy English professor. In "Millicent and Therese," two polar-opposite sisters become increasingly hell-bent on the undoing of one another. And in "Amelia," a woman falls prey to a murderous Zuni fetish doll.
Dan Curtis, the creator and producer of such out-of-the-ordinary TV classics as the willfully offbeat gothic soap opera Dark Shadows and the proto-X-Files series The Night Stalker, remains best known for the Zuni fetish doll that terrorizes Karen Black in Trilogy of Terror. The wild-eyed doll, with its snapping jaws and screeching yells, borders on camp, yet its relentless attacks and single-minded, homicidal drive make it an absolutely terrifying figure in the climactic chapter of this trilogy of short films based on stories by Richard Matheson. In the first story, "Julie," Karen Black plays a mousy college professor blackmailed by an obsessed student, and in "Millicent and Therese" she plays sisters consumed with an intense hatred of one another that comes to a head when their father dies. Both of these films conclude with Twilight Zone-ish twists and are more clever than gripping, kept alive mostly by Black's gleefully theatrical performances. With "Amelia," however, Black delivers an almost solo show, playing against the famous Zuni fetish doll, a wooden statue that comes to life when the a protective chain slips off the figure and releases the evil spirit. Curtis turns her apartment into a claustrophobic cage trapping the increasingly hysterical woman as the unstoppable figure hacks at her legs with a kitchen knife and chomps down on her arms and neck with the relentless intensity of a bulldog. It's still a classic of small-screen horror. --Sean Axmaker
Trilogy of TerrorReviewed by Patti Phillips, 2010-02-13
One of my all time favorite Horror Movies. I have been waiting for years for this to come out on DVD.
Trilogy of TerrorReviewed by J. Reina, 2010-01-31
I have been looking for this movie and warrior doll for a long time. I finally found it at Amazon. The movies are classic and the warrior doll is really neat. But, you don't want to take it out of the box! Watch the movie and find out why.
Hasn't lost it's "bite"...Reviewed by Jake Kincaid, 2010-01-12
I, like so many other reviewers, first saw this as a kid in the 70s
on late night TV, and it likewise scared the living hell out of
me.
The first two stories, admittedly, didn't stand out in my memory
from that time...but upon rewatching, I find them both to be
entertaining and creepy in their own way, but more of dark
"Twilight Zone" stories than "terror" tales. They do show the
versatility of Karen Black, and that versatility carries over to
the last chapter.
The third installment, "Amelia", is what got me then and still gets
me now. I'm not going into lurid detail (that's already been done
on these pages), but suffice to say that while the visual effects
from this little short are showing their age (although I still find
them effective), it's the SOUND: both from my childhood memory and
watching it now, that provokes the sleeplessness and the nightmares
when sleep finally comes. It struck me as funny how that sound
brought all that terror from my youth back to me.
My daughter enjoyed this DVD with me, and whereas she suffers from
being jaded by modern entertainment and finds classic movies that
chilled me like "The Entity" rather dull, THIS one actually had her
fidgiting and visibly uncomfortable.
That to me said it all...across two generations of MY family at
least, this one is a frightener.
trilogy of terrorReviewed by Kathy M. Javens, 2009-11-25
i waited years to find this movie and leave it to amazon to have it!bravo!!! i love amazon and you can depend on my repeat business. thank you.....kathy javens
Still scary since the 70'sReviewed by Brittisl, 2009-11-24
I first saw this movie when I was in college. I could not sleep after watching the 3rd story thinking the creature was going to get me during the night. I find it still as scary after these years since I do still have fears that something is going to get my feet in the dark :)