Friday, October 17, 2025

Stanwyck Saves ‘The Night Walker’ 1964

 

Barbara Stanwyck reunited professionally with ex-husband Robert Taylor in
William Castle's 1964 suspense starrer, "The Night Walker."


Cheap thrills artist William Castle’s The Night Walker, was really more suspense than shock. The flamboyant producer/director played up the scares to ride the early ‘60s wave of post-Psycho/Baby Jane style fright flicks, but this outing was light on horror.

The 1964 film was hardly “hag horror” as star Barbara Stanwyck played a perfectly normal person being tormented and looked quite attractive at age 57. Stanwyck was teamed opposite former husband Robert Taylor, who actually did look very haggard and prematurely aged at 53. They worked together as professionals and without feuding, unlike other stars with histrionic “history.” Five years later, Taylor would be dead of lung cancer, after a lifetime of chain-smoking.

Producer/Director William Castle with his stars, Robert Taylor &
Barbara Stanwyck,  for 1964's "The Night Walker."

The premise of this moody noir-like movie is that after the death of her unstable scientist husband (Hayden Rorke in disfigured makeup), Stanwyck’s Irene Trenton returns to her beauty salon to take her mind off hubby’s sudden death. Irene’s dreams have become increasingly romantic, which had inflamed her jealous husband, convinced that she had a lover. Well, we see at least in her dreams that she has one, played by that unctuous smoothie, Lloyd Bochner of Dynasty fame. At least he doesn’t wear his usual smoking jacket and ascot! He’s quite young and handsome, in his aquiline way.

That's quite a liplock dream lover Lloyd Bochner lays on
Barbara Stanwyck in 1964's "The Night Walker."

The dreams become more intense and dire, as Mr. McDreamy wants to marry her. Are the dreams becoming reality? Is Irene in danger? Or is she merely wigging out? With the rather small cast, there are not a lot of suspects to choose from. The plot of The Night Walker is as slim as Stanwyck’s figure. And you know that Barbara Stanwyck, one of the most sensible stars ever, is not going berserk like Joan Crawford or all “Baby”-ish like Bette Davis. So “the how” of this mystery is more the question than whodunit.

Stanwyck is supposed to go over the top in response to her mental torture, but acting a hysterical scream queen is not Barbara’s bag. “Stany” is best when she’s down to earth or cool and understated. In her best film noirs or suspense films, Barbara Stanwyck is the acting equivalent of Peggy Lee, slyly insinuating without going big. Overall, Stanwyck’s performance is her usual total pro turn, with natural empathy. But when she starts screaming and hollering, it feels false and falls flat.

Barbara Stanwyck bellowing hysterically was not a good look for the cool actress!

I think Stanwyck aged quite gracefully and strikingly, with her gray hair now silver, in a subtle hairstyle and makeup. This is a far cry from most of her contemporaries who were becoming increasingly cartoonish looking or just going to seed. Stanwyck looked her age, but with great style.

Barbara Stanwyck was subtle and stylish in her older years, here in 1964's "The Night Walker." Thankfully, "The Big Valley"was just around the corner, a big career boost.

As the family lawyer in The Night Walker, Robert Taylor acts like a sleep walker. As he aged in dog years, Bob looked increasingly dour, much like Alan Ladd. Taylor also didn’t have Gable’s strong personality or Tyrone Power’s warm charm. The long-time MGM star seemed to be put increasingly out to pasture in westerns. Still, this horror film was a hiccup in both Bob and Bab’s careers.

Robert Taylor was a rough-looking 53 when he made 1964's "The Night Walker."

Producer-director William Castle used great imagination to stretch his B-movie budgets. In The Night Castle, the intro, complete with spoken work creepiness by Paul Frees, is visually striking if not terribly related to the movie itself. The score is by Vic Mizzy, the prolific composer who famously came up with The Addams Family theme. One recurring riff sounds amazingly like “Food, Glorious Food” from the Broadway musical Oliver!, which made its Broadway debut around this time. Coincidence? Who can say?

No, Hayden Rorke and Robert Taylor aren't debating who's the hotter dude for Barbara Stanwyck! From 1964's "The Night Walker."

The dream scenes are stylishly done and subtly, too, except when the courtroom wedding scene is populated by puppets that look like life size versions of The Thunderbirds. Hilariously camp, especially when the chandeliers catch fire and spin, with Stanwyck’s smoky voice emitting raspy screams!

No, this isn't Raymond Burr with blonde hair from "Rear Window," it's one of the creepy puppets/mannequins from 1964's "The Night Walker." Bizzaro!

This film has a thin plot, low budget, and loony logic, typical of William Castle. As a mood piece, it’s quite entertaining and shows some style, along with some eye-rolling chills! The Night Walker pairs well with Stanwyck’s half-baked ‘40s WB thriller, Cry Wolf, with Barbara’s character dealing with the loony men in her life, and a secret lab!

Below is a link to "The Night Walker."
Enjoy!

Here is an excellent, free copy of The Night Walker to watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5RYClikxcc&t=5s


Below is the link to my review at Stanwyck's
"Sorry, Wrong Number."

Here’s my look at Barbara’s best “woman in jeopardy” role, 1948’s “Sorry, Wrong Number”:  https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2025/06/stanwycks-fatal-phone-call-sorry-wrong.html

 

 


2 comments:

  1. Robert Taylor’s role isn’t very big in this movie, and the casting of Lloyd Buchner is odd because he looks a lot like Taylor. It’s really Stanwyck’s picture. I think they could have used the Stanwyck-Taylor combination a little better.

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  2. Oddly enough they appeared in two films before they were married and one film after they had divorced. Stanwyck is always worth watching but I can take Taylor in small doses.

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