• In 1944, the syndicated radio anthology series
The Weird Circle aired an episode based on the story, in which Montresor is depicted as being kidnapped and sold into years of slavery by agents hired by Fortunato, who steals his fiancée and wealth in his absence, as motive for entombing Fortunato alive. The author of the adaptation was not credited. • In 1946, "The Cask of Amontillado" was adapted for a radio show by Robert E. Lee and Jerome Lawrence, narrated by
Sydney Greenstreet, with music by Victor Young. The recording was released that year on the Decca phonograph record label, DA-479. In 1955, it also appeared on the Brunswick label, OE 9171. • On October 11, 1949, the
Suspense television show aired an adaptation titled "A Cask of Amontillado", starring
Bela Lugosi as "General Fortunato". • The 1949 French anthology film
Histoires extraordinaires à faire peur ou à faire rire... by director Jean Faurez features a faithful and atmospheric adaptation of the story with Fernand Ledoux as Montresor and Jules Berry as Fortunato. The film also features an adaptation of Poe's "Tell-tale Heart" alongside two tales by Thomas de Quincey. • In 1951,
EC Comics published an adaptation in
Crime Suspenstories #3, under the title "Blood Red Wine". The adaptation was written by
Al Feldstein, with art by
Graham Ingels and a cover by
Johnny Craig. The ending was changed from Poe's original to show the murderer drown in wine moments after the crime, due to the walled-up man having shot the vats of wine before being walled up, while aiming for the murderer. It was reprinted in 1993 by Russ Cochran. • In 1951, Gilberton's
Classics Illustrated #84 featured a faithful adaptation, with art by Jim Lavery. It has been reprinted multiple times over the years. • In 1953, classical composer
Julia Perry wrote a one act opera based on the story entitled
The Bottle. • In 1959, "The Cask of Amontillado" was retold through a
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar episode, entitled "The Cask of Death Matter". The episode was broadcast on May 24, 1959, and starred
Bob Bailey as the eponymous Johnny Dollar. • In 1960, Editora Continental (Brazil) published an adaptation in
Classicos De Terror #1 by
Gedeone Malagola. •
Roger Corman's 1962 anthology film
Tales of Terror combines the story with another Poe story, "
The Black Cat". This loosely adapted version is decidedly comic in tone, and stars
Peter Lorre as Montresor (given the name Montresor Herringbone) and
Vincent Price as Fortunato Luchresi. The amalgamation of the two stories provides a motive for the murderer: Fortunato has an affair with Montresor's wife. • In 1970,
Vincent Price included a solo recitation of the story in the anthology film
An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe. The production features Montresor recounting the story to an unseen guest in a vast, empty dining room. • "The Cask of Amontillado" was made into a Polish
television film in 1971, directed by Leon Jeannot and starring
Franciszek Pieczka as Fortunato. • "The Merciful", a 1971 episode of
Night Gallery, features the story with a twist: an old couple in a basement, with the wife (
Imogene Coca) building the wall and quoting from the Poe story, while the husband (
King Donovan) sits passively in a rocking chair. Once she has finished, he gets up from the chair and walks up the stairs. The wife has sealed
herself in. • In 1975,
CBS Radio Mystery Theater did an extended adaptation which invented new details not original to the story, episode number 203, January 12, 1975. • In 1975, the story appeared illustrated on
Creepy #70, adapted by
Archie Goodwin. The comic also continues the original story: after the final scene in which an elder Montresor stands in front of the wall fifty years after entombing Fortunato, the wall suddenly collapses under the weight of the water that has seeped into the niche over the years, and Montresor is dragged underwater by Fortunato's skeleton. • In 1995,
American Masters aired an episode called "Edgar Allan Poe: Terror Of The Soul", which included a 15-minute adaptation of the story starring
John Heard as Montresor and
René Auberjonois as Fortunato. • "The Cask of Amontillado" was made into a British film in 1998, directed by Mario Cavalli, screenplay by Richard Deakin and starring Anton Blake as Montresor and Patrick Monckton as Fortunato. • In 2003,
Lou Reed included an adaptation on the extended edition of his Poe-themed album
The Raven, titled "The Cask" and performed by
Willem Dafoe (as Montresor) and
Steve Buscemi (as Fortunato). • ''Edgar Allan Poe's The Cask of Amontillado'' (2011) stars David JM Bielewicz and Frank Tirio, Jr. It was directed by Thad Ciechanowski, produced by Joe Serkoch, by production company DijitMedia, LLC/Orionvega. It was a winner of 2013 regional
Emmy Award. • In 2013, Lance Tait's stage adaptation located the action of the story in Nice, France. • in 2014,
Keith Carradine starred in
Terroir, a feature-length film adaptation by
John Charles Jopson. • In 2014, the
Comedy Bang! Bang! TV series included a parody adaptation in a segment titled "Tragedy is Comedy Plus Slime" in their Halloween episode with
Wayne Coyne. In this version, Fortunato is kept alive and is paid as the show's head writer while remaining immured. • On October 17, 2017,
Udon Entertainment's Manga Classics line published
The Stories of Edgar Allan Poe, which included a manga format adaptation of "The Cask of Amontillado". It was planned to release in Spring 2017. • In the 2023
Netflix series
The Fall of the House of Usher, created by
Mike Flanagan, "The Cask of Amontillado" is one of several Edgar Allan Poe stories loosely adapted throughout the narrative. Elements of the story are used to depict the downfall of the fictional Fortunato Pharmaceuticals empire. In the series,
Rufus Griswold, the CEO of Fortunato, serves as an antagonist figure. Siblings Roderick and Madeline Usher, standing in for the
original story’s narrator, conspire to murder Rufus after he seizes control of the family business. Their revenge ultimately mirrors the method of entombment found in "The Cask of Amontillado." ==References==