

The film ends with the final words of Poe's story: ". and the deep and dank tarn closed sullenly and silently over the fragments of the 'House of Usher'".

Philip alone escapes and watches the burning house sink into the swampy land surrounding it. Suddenly the house, already aflame due to fallen coals from the fire, begins to collapse, and the two Ushers and Bristol are consumed by the falling house, ending the Usher bloodline. She confronts her brother and attacks him, throttling him to death. Madeline revives inside her sealed coffin, goes insane from being buried alive, and breaks free. He desperately searches for her in the winding passages of the crypt but eventually collapses. Philip rips open Madeline's coffin and finds it empty. As Philip is preparing to leave following the entombment, the butler, Bristol (Harry Ellerbe), lets slip that Madeline suffered from catalepsy.


Philip becomes increasingly desperate to take Madeline away desperate to get away from her brother, she agrees to leave with him.ĭuring a heated argument with her brother, Madeline suddenly falls into catalepsy, a condition in which its sufferers appear dead her brother-who knows that she is still alive-convinces Winthrop that she is dead and rushes to have her entombed in the family crypt beneath the house. Roderick foresees the family evils being propagated into future generations with a marriage to Madeline and vehemently discourages the union. Madeline's brother Roderick ( Vincent Price) opposes Philip's intentions, telling the young man that the Usher family is afflicted by a cursed bloodline which has driven all their ancestors to madness and even affected the mansion itself, causing the surrounding countryside to become desolate. Philip Winthrop ( Mark Damon) travels to the House of Usher, a desolate mansion surrounded by a murky swamp, to see his fiancée Madeline Usher ( Myrna Fahey). In 2005, the film was listed with the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." Plot The film was the first of eight Corman/Poe feature films and stars Vincent Price, Myrna Fahey, Mark Damon and Harry Ellerbe. House of Usher (also known as The Fall of the House of Usher) is a 1960 American horror film directed by Roger Corman and written by Richard Matheson from the 1839 short story " The Fall of the House of Usher" by Edgar Allan Poe.
