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The Tell-Tale Heart Poster

The Tell-Tale Heart

1953 | 8m | English

(2411 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Ted Parmelee
Writer: Fred Grable, Bill Scott
Staring:
Details

A man's sanity is a point of contention as he confesses to murdering an elderly man, driven by the victim's pale blue 'vulture eye', culminating in guilt-induced auditory hallucinations of the victim's beating heart.
Release Date: Dec 17, 1953
Director: Ted Parmelee
Writer: Fred Grable, Bill Scott
Genres: Animation, Crime, Horror
Keywords murder, tale, madman, short film
Production Companies Columbia Pictures, United Productions of America
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 28, 2026
Entered: Apr 15, 2024
Starring

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Full Credits

Name Character
James Mason Narrator
Name Job
Paul Julian Art Designer, Color Designer
Ted Parmelee Director
Boris Kremenliev Music
Herbert Klynn Production Manager
Jack Eckes Camera Operator
Pat Matthews Animation
Fred Grable Writer
Bill Scott Writer
Edgar Allan Poe Short Story
Name Title
Stephen Bosustow Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 7 4
2024 5 6 10 3
2024 6 6 11 4
2024 7 6 12 4
2024 8 6 9 4
2024 9 6 9 4
2024 10 6 11 3
2024 11 6 13 4
2024 12 4 6 3
2025 1 4 6 3
2025 2 4 6 2
2025 3 3 6 2
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 2 2 1
2025 11 1 2 0
2025 12 1 2 0
2026 1 1 3 0

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

I loved this. It’s a dark and eerily menacing story of a man, an eye, a murder and some great vocal characterisation from James Mason. Like many mad men, this one believed himself perfectly sane as he began to have issues with one is his elderly neighbours. This old fellow never troubled him, nor wa ... s probably even aware of his existence but gradually this obsession assumed dominating proportions. As this anxiety accumulated, his mind turned to more drastic action - but is there any way at all he can remove this psychological stain from his mind? It’s the kind of detailed and threatening animation that might have inspired a Roger Corman or Tim Burton film, and with the Kremenliev score adding loads to the increasingly frenzied atmosphere here it’s very far removed from any mainstream cartoon you’re ever likely to have seen before. Poe knew how to set a scene allowing our own imagination to take charge, and with the effective use of colour - especially the harlequin shaping towards the end, has created something that must have been quite shocking in 1953.

Jul 10, 2025