Stark Fear (1962) – Ned Hochmann.
Following the sudden disappearance of paranoiac husband Gerald (Skip Homeier), his increasingly tormented wife Ellen (Beverly Garland) plummets ever more disturbingly into the furtive, scheming, desperately tawdry machinations of her congenitally abusive hubby. This zippy, engaging low-budget psychodrama is given an additional jolt of electricity by the dynamic presence of luscious, powerhouse Thespian Beverly Garland, and, to be fair, her boys put on a darn good show too! Stark Fear is crisply shot in B/W, the jagged, Neo-Noirish edges being occasionally muted by a saccharine score, yet Ellen's desperate search, and painful awakening to the sickening depths of her husband's iniquity proved appropriately stark and fearful. The film's mystery elements are robustly handled, the mawkish, melodramatic content is leavened by a number of palpably dark, surprising mean-spirited sequences, giving Stark Fear the pulse-pounding intensity of a vintage B-horror potboiler.






































.jpg)













