The Couch (film)
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''The Couch'' is a 1962 American
psychological horror film Psychological horror is a subgenre of horror and psychological fiction with a particular focus on mental, emotional, and psychological states to frighten, disturb, or unsettle its audience. The subgenre frequently overlaps with the related subgen ...
directed by
Owen Crump The 18th AAF Base Unit (Motion Picture Unit), originally known as the First Motion Picture Unit, Army Air Forces, was the primary film production unit of the U.S. Army Air Forces (AAF) during World War II, and was the first military unit mad ...
from a screenplay by
Robert Bloch Robert Albert Bloch (; April 5, 1917September 23, 1994) was an American fiction writer, primarily of crime, psychological horror and fantasy, much of which has been dramatized for radio, cinema and television. He also wrote a relatively small ...
and a story by Blake Edwards and Owen Crump. The film stars Grant Williams, Shirley Knight, and Onslow Stevens. The film was released by Warner Bros. on February 21, 1962.


Plot

A man phones the police and announces that a murder will be committed at seven o'clock. At the stroke of 7:00 p.m., he
stabs stabs (sometimes written STABS) is a debugging data format for storing information about computer programs for use by symbolic and source-level debuggers. (The information is stored in symbol table strings; hence the name "stabs".) Cygnus Suppor ...
a stranger on the streets with an icepick; escaping, he then reports to Dr. Janz for his daily psychiatric session. Although it is after 7:00, the young man tells the waiting receptionist, Terry, that it is exactly 7:00 – she has mislaid her watch and is unaware of the exact time. He returns the icepick to the bar in the practice, from where he had taken it. The man is revealed to be Charles Campbell, who has been paroled following a two-year prison term for rape on condition that he undergo daily psychiatric treatment. While for the most part maintaining a calm demeanour, he always approaches the analyst's couch with trepidation and occasionally becomes aggressive and shows signs of inner turmoil during sessions. Beyond being Janz's patient, he is carrying on a romantic relationship with Terry, who is also Janz's niece. As fraternization with patients is not permitted, they keep their relationship clandestine. On a walk together one night, Charles tells Terry, who is not privy to patient histories, that he is seeing Dr. Janz as a condition of parole following a
manslaughter Manslaughter is a common law legal term for homicide considered by law as less culpable than murder. The distinction between murder and manslaughter is sometimes said to have first been made by the ancient Athenian lawmaker Draco in the 7th cen ...
conviction in the death of his dear sister, Ruthie, and that he is tormented with guilt for being at the wheel in the car accident that claimed her life. Several days after the first murder, he commits another murder in the same manner, again announcing this in advance to the police. This sets off a cat-and-mouse game between the police and the murderer, but all attempts to track him down fail. The murders become daily fodder for the press. It is revealed that Campell had in fact stolen Terry's watch, enabling him to mislead her about the time. By telling Dr. Janz that he had been in the waiting room longer than he in fact had after committing the second murder, Charles has created alibis for himself for the times of the two murders; seemingly being at the practice at 7:00 on the nights in question, he cannot be what headlines have dubbed the "7:00 Killer." In another session when Charles makes mention of his deceased mother and wanting to kill his father, Dr. Janz confronts his delusion that his father is alive and his sister Ruthie is dead: in fact, his father is already dead, and his sister is alive, "dead" to him because her marriage and relocation represented the death of the love from an ersatz mother. Charles's next victim is Dr. Janz himself, who has become suspicious of him and the significance of 7:00 in the killings. After stabbing the doctor in a crowded passageway at a football stadium, Charles goes to Janz's office to meet Terry. The meeting had been arranged by the two in order to reveal their relationship and plans to marry to Dr. Janz; as Charles had falsely told her that Dr. Janz said he could discontinue treatment at any time, she believes there is no obstacle to their being together. Charles also lies to her that he has come from another meeting confirming a large inheritance, telling her he is now free to do anything. Terry asks him what he means, but Charles does not reveal more and instead attempts to
seduce Seduction has multiple meanings. Platonically, it can mean "to persuade to disobedience or disloyalty", or "to lead astray, usually by persuasion or false promises". Strategies of seduction include conversation and sexual scripts, paralingual ...
her. While she is trying to repel him, they are interrupted by a phone call notifying Terry that her uncle, following a stabbing, is alive but unconscious in a hospital. She and Charles race there and are told Janz is expected to recover, but that surgery must be performed. They become separated, and Terry learns from the investigators that a handbill found in her car reveals the car was in the area of the football match where Dr. Janz was stabbed. As Terry had lent her car to Charles just prior to the match, only he can have driven it there and received the handbill. Charles meanwhile explores the hospital, his identity concealed by an operating gown and mask taken from a supply room. After an unsuccessful attempt at killing Janz on the operating table, he enters the recovery room in which Dr. Janz is lying. When he has taken Dr. Janz on a
gurney A stretcher, gurney, litter, or pram is an apparatus used for moving patients who require medical care. A basic type (cot or litter) must be carried by two or more people. A wheeled stretcher (known as a gurney, trolley, bed or cart) is often ...
to a deserted area of the hospital, intending to kill him, he reveals to Janz that the other murders where simply to throw the police off the track so that he would not be suspected; the primary intended victim had always been Dr. Janz, who represents all father-like authority and whom Charles has confused with his hated father. Before the deranged killer can complete his third murder, however, he is apprehended by the police in the presence of Terry, who sees Charles for the deeply disturbed man he truly is.


Cast

* Grant Williams as Charles Campbell * Shirley Knight as Terry Ames * Onslow Stevens as Dr. Janz * William Leslie as Dr. David Lindsay * Anne Helm as Jean Quimby * Simon Scott as Lt. Kritzman *Michael Bachus as Sgt. Bonner *
John Alvin John Henry Alvin (November 24, 1948 – February 6, 2008) was an American cinematic artist and painter who illustrated many movie posters. Alvin created posters and key art for more than 135 films, beginning with the poster for Mel Brooks' ''Bl ...
as Sloan * Harry Holcombe as District Attorney * Hope Summers as Mrs. Quimby


Notes

Three of the performers in this film appeared in multiple episodes of '' The Andy Griffith Show'': Hope Summers (playing Clara Edwards in 32 episodes, 1961–1968, as well as five episodes in the series' follow-up '' Mayberry, R.F.D.'', 1968–1970), Hal Smith (
Otis Campbell Otis Campbell is the fictional "town drunk" in Mayberry on the American TV sitcom ''The Andy Griffith Show.'' Otis was played by Hal Smith and made frequent appearances on the show from 1960 to 1967 but stopped appearing toward the end of the s ...
, 32 episodes,1960-1966, as well as appearing in the follow-up film '' Return to Mayberry'', 1986) and Ronnie (a.k.a. Ronny) Dapo (Arnold Winkler/Pete, three episodes, 1963–1966). The latter two performers (playing the pitchman and a boy watching the pitchman, respectively) were uncredited in the film.IMDb, ''The Couch''
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See also

* List of American films of 1962


References


External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Couch 1962 films 1962 horror films 1960s serial killer films American psychological horror films American black-and-white films 1960s English-language films Films set in Los Angeles American serial killer films Warner Bros. films Films with screenplays by Robert Bloch 1960s American films