CAST:
Patrick Wymark (Judge), Linda Hayden (Angel
Blake), Barry Andrews (Ralph Gower), Wendy Padbury (Cathy Vespers),
Michele Dotrice (Margaret), Anthony Ainley (Reverend Fallowfield), Simon
Williams (Peter Edmonton), Howard Goorney (Doctor)
PRODUCTION:
Director/Additional Writing – Piers
Haggard, Screenplay – Robert Wynne-Simmons, Producers – Peter L. Andrews
& Malcolm B. Hayworth, Photography – Dick Bush, Music – Marc
Wilkinson, Makeup – Eddie Knight, Art Direction – Arnold Chapkis.
Production Company – Tigon/Chilton Films.
SYNOPSIS:
In 17th Century England, children
playing in the fields find a strange claw. Using the claw, the wanton
Angel Blake leads the children in Satanic rituals that leave each of
them possessed by strange patches of hair, the ‘Mark of Satan’.
COMMENTARY:
Matthew Hopkins – Witchfinder General/The Conqueror Worm
(1968) opened up the 17th Century witch-persecutions as a new horror
milieu. The continental horror market had been exploiting it for years
but suddenly everyone jumped in with items like Mark of the Devil (1970) and Ken Russell’s The Devils (1971), while Spain’s Jess Franco virtually made the period his home turf for several years. Many of the films, like Blood on Satan's Claw here, threw the witch persecutions in with occult elements from the post-Rosemary’s Baby (1968) and The Exorcist (1973) cycle. The point that most missed, and as the Witchfinder General
showed, was that the witches were not legitimate practitioners of magic
but persecuted victims – it is akin to saying that the Nazis had a
point with the concentration camps because there really was an
international Jewish conspiracy. Most films never even concerned
themselves with that and only became unpleasant catalogues of acts of
sadism and torture.
Blood on Satan's Claw
is a mostly muddled variation. The plot is hapharzedly assembled – its
principal protagonist (Patrick Wymark’s Judge) drops out part way
through and the ending is a anti-climax. The film is raised somewhat by a
superb score and in being directed with some effect by Piers Haggard.
Haggard creates some nice scenes with claws creeping up through
floorboards and Linda Hayden trying to tempt the local vicar. With
something like a script to hold it together, Blood on Satan's Claw could have been impressive.
Former Doctor Who
(1963-89) member Wendy Padbury is particularly noteworthy as a naive
flower-child and Michele Dotrice, daughter of Roy, is standout with her
haunting grasp of regional accent as the frightened Margaret. Linda
Hayden, a minor Anglo-horror queen, holds the show as the seductive
Angel.
Director Piers Haggard is the great-grandson of the adventure writer H. Rider Haggard, author of books like King Solomon’s Mines (1885) and She (1887). Blood on Satan's Claw
was Piers Haggard’s debut as a director. Haggard has since floated
around the genre in film and tv with efforts such as the Dennis Potter
mini-series Pennies from Heaven (1978), Quatermass/The Quatermass Conclusion (1979), The Fiendish Plot of Dr Fu Manchu (1980), Venom (1982) and The Breakthrough/The Lifeforce Experiment (1994).
KEY BOOK STILLS GALLERY TO FOLLOW NEXT!
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