Extraordinary Tales

    Extraordinary Tales
    2013

    Synopsis

    Five tales by Edgar Allan Poe come to life thanks to a pictorical style animation, five tales that exude madness, pestilence, murder and torture.

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    Cast

    • Christopher LeeNarrator (voice) (segment 'The Fall of the House of Usher')
    • Bela LugosiNarrator (voice) (segment 'The Tell-Tale Heart')
    • Julian SandsNarrator (voice) (segment 'The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar')
    • Guillermo del ToroNarrator (voice) (segment 'The Pit and the Pendulum')
    • Roger CormanPrince Prospero (voice) (segment 'The Masque of the Red Death')
    • Stephen HughesCrow / Poe (voice)
    • Cornelia FunkeDeath (voice)
    • Karla CervantesAdditional Voices
    • Raúl GarcíaAdditional Voices

    Recommendations

    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      Like "A Cat in Paris" or "Sita Sings the Blues," Extraordinary Tales reminds viewers that animation can enable an artist to realize an individual vision, even on a limited budget.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Harnessing a range of appropriately spooky-oddball narrators and striking visual styles — including graphic novels, early photography and Expressionist painting — the Spanish director and animator Raul Garcia simultaneously honors and reimagines.
    • 67

      The A.V. Club

      Each of the shorts has a markedly different visual approach, and they feel radically distinct in terms of pacing and editing as well. In spite of the common source material and tone of oppressive psychological horror, these shorts feel like they could be the work of five different people.
    • 63

      Boston Globe

      Perhaps Poe’s tone poses a problem; the edge-of-hysteria voice does not hold up well over the course of a feature-length film.
    • 63

      RogerEbert.com

      Both the source material and the man reading it are legendary. And that inherent cool factor in Extraordinary Tales carries the final product a very long way, although its shortcomings do sometimes force me to wonder if it could have been a masterpiece instead of a mere curiosity.
    • 50

      Slant Magazine

      It offers a CliffsNotes encapsulation of Edgar Allen Poe's most enduring works for viewers unacquainted with them.
    • 40

      The Guardian

      Animator Raul Garcia’s 70-minute anthology of five Poe stories, Extraordinary Tales, has its moments, and will be a welcome respite for any middle schooler sitting through a boring lecture. But if we were ever asked if we wanted a second viewing, we’d have to quoth the raven: nevermore.

    Loved by

    • blonderuby