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Showing posts with label lobby stills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lobby stills. Show all posts

Monday, 11 March 2013

FEATURE AND GALLERY: 'TRUST ME, I'M A DOCTOR' PETER CUSHING AND VERONICA CARLSON : HAMMER FILMS: FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED (1969)


In 1969, Hammer Films was in a precarious position. The company had long occupied a secure position in the British film industry, with one box office success after another. They had helped to revitalize the public’s interest in Gothic horror, and in the process they helped to make Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee icons of the genre. However, change was in the air - and Hammer simply wasn’t prepared to deal with it. 1968 saw the release of two watershed horror films, each signalling a major shift in the genre as a whole. On the one end of the spectrum, Rosemary’s Baby, directed by Polish expatriate Roman Polanski, showed that horror was no longer the province of B-level filmmaking.

 
At the opposite end, Pittsburgh-based George A. Romero demonstrated what spit, polish, no small amount of technical know-how and sheer determination could do in lieu of adequate resources with Night of the Living Dead. The former demonstrated that it was possible for horror movies to be blockbuster successes, even netting Oscar nominations (and one win) in the process. The latter signalled a new interest in graphic violence. If Hammer previously seemed edgy, they suddenly seemed quaint. Even in the UK, rival company Tigon Productions managed to out-Hammer Hammer with their brutal expose of one of the darkest chapters of British history, in Witchfinder General. Up until that point, Hammer was still espousing the natural superiority of good versus evil; these films rejected quaint moralizing in favor of painting a grimmer portrait of fate and its wrong doings. Hammer held firm in their conviction that audiences were still interested in Dracula and Frankenstein films, however, and while box office receipts would begin to taper off, they managed to deliver a late period return to form with their latest instalments in these respective franchises: Taste the Blood of Dracula and Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed. Of the two, however, only the latter seems genuinely in-tune with the pessimism of the era.


The screenplay by long time assistant director Bert Batt, with some assistance from associate producer Anthony Nelson Keys (as well as some uncredited input by director Terence Fisher), is uncommonly complex, especially in light of Anthony Hinds’ more genteel approach to the subject matter in The Evil of Frankenstein (1964) and Frankenstein Created Woman (1966). Here, the Baron (Cushing) has been reduced to the status of villain - but given the world he inhabits, one is reluctant to fall back on such labels. The hypocrisy of the society at large is exposed at every turn, with the indignant Baron seizing every opportunity to exploit those around him in the effort to find a final validation in his work. After the more overtly fantastical narrative leaps of Frankenstein Created Woman - wherein the Baron is engaged in the transplantation of human souls - he is here “merely” concerned with advanced brain surgery. Looking to pick the brain of a colleague driven to insanity by the derision of his colleagues, the Baron determines to abduct said colleague from the madhouse and transplant his brain into the body of another scientist. In so doing, he hopes to cure the colleague’s insanity - and have concrete, living proof of the validity of their research and years of hard work. Needless to say, it does not go well…


In Hammer’s original “crack” at Mary Shelley’s story, The Curse of Frankenstein, the Baron was presented as a dandy with a sadistic streak - a sort of spoiled child desperate for attention at any cost, and one who is willing to stoop to anything to prove his genius to the world. The character evolved through the ensuing entries, with screenwriter Jimmy Sangster bringing the story to an effective close in the very first sequel, Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), which climaxes with the Baron - whose close brush with the guillotine has made him a kinder, more tolerant individual - literally becoming his own creation. Sangster refused the option to continue writing Frankenstein sequels, and his successor, producer/writer Anthony Hinds, really had nowhere to go - but back to the drawing board. He effectively rebooted the series with Evil of Frankenstein, making the Baron into something of a hero in the process. The trend continued with Frankenstein Created Woman, but things take a far darker turn in Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed. Whether by accident or by design, Batt and his collaborators created a take on the character which was far more in tune with Sangster’s, and the end result can certainly be viewed as something of a denouement to the initial saga.


Director Terence Fisher brings his A game to the proceedings. Fisher often referred to this as his favorite of the films he directed, and it’s easy to see why. Despite a few narrative hiccups - more on that in a moment - he displays a customarily sure and steady hand with plot and character development. Fisher’s horror films work because he makes the audience believe in them - they are not overly fantastical or even stylized in nature, and even if the situations the characters are in are outlandish, how they react within them seems totally credible. As a stylist, Fisher tended to be more “prosaic” than some of his contemporaries within the genre, but his decision to foreground emotion and characterization over baroque affect was definitely a conscious one. Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed sees him working from a screenplay he cared passionately about, and he responds with some of the most exquisite and beautifully rendered staging and blocking of his career. Interestingly, the film came at something of a lull in his life and career - he had been denied the opportunity to continue the Dracula series with Dracula Has Risen From the Grave (1968), owing to an alcohol-related traffic accident. After a period of enforced rest and rehabilitation, he clearly attacked Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed with the renewed vigor of an artist with something to say. Sadly, for Fisher, the comeback would prove short-lived - after the release of this film, he found himself in exactly the same position (the story goes that he had a love of playing “chicken” with passing cars while he was drinking; advancing age didn’t improve his speed), and he would only be able to complete one more feature - Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1972) - before spending his remaining years in enforced retirement. He died in 1980. 


The cast assembled is absolutely perfect, and Fisher definitely deserves credit in this as well. Cushing was, of course, the only man to carry the picture - and it can be argued that this was his finest screen performance. The character, as written, is complex and rife with potential - and Cushing exploits every nuance to its full effect. The Baron’s ability to turn on the charm, thus masking his moral deterioration, comes through very strongly, notably during the scene where he puts off a concerned woman with unctuous assurances that her husband is safe and sound - only to close the door and turn into a steely close-up, barking orders to his compatriots that they need to get the hell out of dodge (I’m paraphrasing, but you get the idea). The Baron remains every bit the fastidious dandy conceived in the initial entries, but he has no difficulty resorting the blackmail, murder, even rape (more on that, as well!) to achieve his ends. In order to assist with his venture, he enlists the aid of a pitiable couple played by Simon Ward and Veronica Carlson. 


The recently deceased Ward was apparently hired by Fisher himself, who had seen the young actor in a television play. Ward brings considerably more depth to the role than the usual bland stooge who is duped into assisting the Baron. Carlson was then riding high as Hammer’s new “star discovery,” having already appeared opposite Christopher Lee in Dracula Has Risen From the Grave. In addition to possessing beautiful looks and a killer body, Carlson also had genuine acting ability - she was used more for decorative purposes in Risen, perhaps, but she really comes into her own here. Fisher’s other casting master stroke was Freddie Jones, later to become something of a favorite of iconic “cult” filmmaker David Lynch, who would cast him in The Elephant Man, Dune, and Wild at Heart. Jones, a twitchy, idiosyncratic character actor of the Charles Laughton school, could slice ham with the best of them - but when properly reigned in, as he is here, he was capable of tremendous depth. He plays the Baron’s latest “creature,” and he is arguably the saddest and most heart-rending of them all. 


The narrative proceeds smoothly, but for the intrusion of some rather gratuitous police procedural scenes. These scenes really seem to have no narrative justifcation beyond allowing Fisher favorite Thorley Walters an opportunity to inject some humor into the proceedings. True, this is a very grim film - but the scenes in question do little but restate the obvious; tellingly, the subplot is dropped before the climax


Much has been written about the inclusion of a rape scene, and while it is definitely an uncomfortable sequence, it does not feel like a hasty, last minute addition. Carlson, for her part, has always maintained that it was added in at the behest of Hammer executive Sir James Carreras, who felt the film needed some “sex appeal.” The notion of adding a rape scene for sex appeal is, of course, the epitome of bad taste. Carlson has always pointed to her character’s reactions to the Baron, following the assault, as proof of her argument. Truthfully, her reactions seem entirely in keeping with what has happened, as she reacts with fear and revulsion towards the Baron from that point on. It could be that Carlson simply wasn’t keen on the scene from the start, but it seems unlikely that it was added in so hastily. Not only is the scene appropriately harrowing, but there is nothing leering in how it is staged; there isn’t even any nudity on display, and Hammer was already flirting with adding such material into their films, as evidenced by Taste the Blood of Dracula. While the scene was removed from US prints for a number of years, it is now visible in seemingly every home video release of the film. One can theorize as much as one wants, but to this reviewer the scene seems wholly consistent with the film’s depiction of the Baron - for whom this is an act of cruelty and control, not of lust - and if anybody had a mind to tack it on for the purposes of crass exploitation, it does not come across that way in Fisher’s handling of the material.


In addition to a strong script and stellar performances, the film is graced with excellent production values. By 1970, Hammer’s QC would be on the decline - as evidenced by such bargain basement productions as Scars of Dracula, Lust for a Vampire and The Horror of Frankenstein - but at this stage in the game, they were still able to offer real production gloss. The film marked the final work of Hammer’s great production designer Bernard Robinson, whose abilities to craft a silk purse out of the proverbial sow’s ear was as instrumental as anything in establishing the Hammer aesthetic. He delivers some realistically detailed sets, and the Baron’s makeshift “mad labs” are in keeping with the more grounded approach. James Bernard contributes one of his finest soundtracks, as well. From the pounding opening theme to the final, triumphant strains as all hell breaks loose, he complements the mood and action beautifully. Cinematographer Arthur Grant, normally given to the efficient rather than the inspired, provides some excellent, low key lighting. Together with Fisher’s keen sense of framing and camera movement, the lighting helps to give the film a strong sense of mood and atmosphere.


Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed may not have capped the series altogether, but it is, in a sense, the ultimate “final word” in all things Frankenstein, at least so far as Hammer is concerned. It remains one of the finest films they ever produced - and arguably the apex of their Gothic movement. 

 

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

WILLIAM CASTLE: VINCENT PRICE 'THE TINGLER' GALLERY AND REVIEW

CAST:
Vincent Price (Dr Warren Chapin), Philip Coolidge (Ollie Higgins), Patricia Cutts (Isabel Chapin), Judith Evelyn (Martha Higgins), Pamela Lincoln (Lucy Stevens), Darryl Hickman (David Morris)

PRODUCTION:
Director/Producer – William Castle, Screenplay – Robb White, Photography (b&w + one sequence colour) – Wilfrid M. Cline, Music – Von Dexter, Art Direction – Phil Bennett. Production Company – Columbia. USA. 1959.  


SYNOPSIS:
Ollie Higgins visits coroner Dr Warren Chapin to claim the body of his wife’s brother, following his execution by electric chair. Chapin notes how the body died in a state of great fear and the spine has been snapped by an incredible force. He believes that this was caused by a living creature that he has named The Tingler. Chapin believes that a Tingler is a parasite that lives inside every human’s body and feeds on fear but can be destroyed by screaming. Chapin wants to capture a living Tingler. He locks himself in his lab and takes some LSD but is unable to prevent himself from screaming and thus killing his Tingler. Chapin then decides to use Higgins’s deaf-mute wife Martha as a subject in an experiment. He wants to scare her and because she cannot scream, she will be unable destroy her Tingler, meaning that he will be able to capture it. He sets about scaring Martha with various staged phenomena but instead this kills her. Chapin succeeds in extracting a live Tingler from her dead body. Meanwhile, Chapin and his unfaithful wife Isabel have been blackmailing one another. She now seeks to dispose of him by unleashing the captured Tingler.


COMMENTARY:
William Castle was one of the great genre producers and directors of the 1950s/60s. Castle was not a terribly great filmmaker but what he specialised in was promotional gimmicks. With Macabre (1958), he issued an insurance policy with Lloyd’s of London against audience members dying of fright; in House on Haunted Hill (1959), cinemas were equipped with a skeleton that was winched across the theatre at an appropriate point; in 13 Ghosts (1960), audiences were given ghost viewers – glasses with pieces of coloured cellophane over them that allowed them to see the ghosts; in Homicidal (1961) there was a Fright Break where the faint of heart could leave the theatre; while Mr. Sardonicus (1961) had the opportunity for audiences to vote on an ending where the title character would either be saved or doomed. (See bottom of the page for a full listing of William Castle’s genre films).


The Tingler was William Castle’s greatest moment of triumph (unless you count Rosemary’s Baby (1968) – but he was only producer on that). The Tingler has become a cult classic. Watching it you can see why – it has everything including an outrageously entertaining premise, Vincent Price, William Castle at the height of his gimmick-based ingenuity, wonderfully torrid scenes of marital in-battling between Price and his calculating tramp of a wife Patricia Cutts, even LSD trips (The Tingler was the first film to ever depict an acid trip). It is a wonderful little B film that lives up to its cult reputation in every way.


The concept of The Tingler and its being defeated by the “release of fear tensions” (ie. screaming) is positively ingenious (although the idea that something the size of what the Tingler is finally revealed to be could hide inside the human body undetected is preposterous). Frequent Castle collaborator Robb White turns in a tautly effective screenplay – there is a fine twist that reveals Philip Coolidge as having deliberately murdered his wife. Although the final seemingly tacked-on twist ending with her returning to life and coming after him makes no sense.


As a director, William Castle seemed driven by the crude sensationalistic approach of a P.T. Barnum more than anything. His actual direction was always flat and pedestrian. That said, some of the time here Castle’s brute force shock theatrics could prove effective. The scenes trying to scare deaf-mute Judith Evelyn – where she is pursued by a man in a mask waving a knife, hatchets being thrown and death certificates placed on bathroom mirrors – have a mechanical pedestrianness, but these are transcended by one wonderful scene where the water in a bath turns blood red (in a film that is otherwise shot in black-and-white) as a hand reaches up out of it. Where William Castle always succeeded was when it came to his gimmicks – not through any necessary imagination but more through his brazen hucksterism. With The Tingler, he was at the height of ingenuity after which he never achieved the same again. Castle’s inspired scheme here was the wiring up of theatres with electroshock buzzers beneath the seats, which would zap people at selected intervals (although the extent to which this was done and the number of theatres that were wired up was not as widespread as B movie myth would have it).


There is a marvellous prologue where William Castle himself appears to introduce the film: “At any time you are conscious of a tingling sensation, you may obtain immediate relief by screaming. Don’t be embarrassed about opening your mouth and letting rip with all you’ve got.” The finest moment in the film occurs near the end where Castle has The Tingler get loose in a silent movie theatre. There is that wonderful moment where the screen goes completely blank (this was probably the point where the electroshock buzzers were turned on and audiences jolted out of their wits). Castle’s voice again appears to assure audiences that there is no cause for alarm. A couple of moments later The Tingler is seen in silhouette entering the projection booth, whereupon Castle invokes the audience to scream for all they are worth and stun The Tingler. It is an absolutely glorious moment where both the film and the meta-filmic combine – the invocation is as much to the audience that is watching the film and being jolted as it is anything to do with what is going on on screen. The film ends with another blank screen and Castle’s voice: “Ladies and gentlemen, just a word of warning, if any of you are not convinced you have a Tingler of your own, the next time you are in the dark, don’t scream.” 


In recent years, there have been a number of remakes of William Castle films and a remake of The Tingler was at one point announced, although has yet to emerge.


William Castle’s other films of genre note as producer-director are:– as director of Crime Doctor’s Manhunt (1945), the sixth in a series of Columbia crime thrillers, of which Castle directed several, featuring a forensicologist against a split-personalitied killer; the psycho-thriller Macabre (1958); House on Haunted Hill (1959); the haunted house film 13 Ghosts (1960); the psycho-thriller Homicidal (1961); Mr. Sardonicus ((1961) about a man with his face caught in a grotesque frozen smile; the juvenile comedy Zotz! (1962) about a magical coin; the remake of The Old Dark House (1963) for Hammer; the Grand Guignol psycho-thriller Strait-Jacket (1964) with Joan Crawford; The Night Walker (1965), a psycho-thriller about a dream lover; the psycho-thriller I Saw What You Did (1965); the psycho-thriller Let’s Kill Uncle (1965); the ghost comedy The Spirit is Willing (1967); the reality-bending sf film Project X (1968); as producer of the classic occult film Rosemary’s Baby (1968); as producer of the anthology series Ghost Story (1972-3); Shanks (1974) with Marcel Marceau as a puppeteer who can resurrect the dead; and as producer of the firestarting insect film Bug! (1975).    
    

Monday, 12 November 2012

THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT : HAMMER FILMS REVIEW AND GALLERY


Director – Val Guest. Screenplay by Richard Landau & Val Guest, from the TV series scripted by Nigel Kneale. Producers: Anthony Hinds, Robert Lippert. Original Music by James Bernard. Cinematography by Walter Harvey. Edited by James Needs. Art Direction by J. Elder Wills. Makeup by Philip Leakey. Special Effects by Les Bowie and team.

With: Brian Donlevy, Jack Warner, Margie Dean, Richard Wordsworth

(MGM Archives) (1955) 82 mins. B&W. AR: 1.66:1.

 
Out in the middle of the English countryside, and a young couple are laughing and enjoying each other's company. They lie down next to a haystack and fall into each other's arms, but what's that noise? It sounds at first like a jet engine, but as it gets louder they begin to panic and head for the shelter of the woman's cottage. As they reach the building, an almighty crash is heard and the woman's father goes out to investigate brandishing a shotgun, only to find a huge space rocket with its nose plunged deep into the ground. An hour later, and a crowd has gathered, and so have the fire brigade, the police and an ambulance. There's one man on the way who has a better idea of what's going on than anyone else, however: a certain Professor Quatermass, Brian Donlevy... 


Before Doctor Who arrived on the scene, Nigel Kneale's creation Professor Bernard Quatermass was the main man in British television science fiction thanks to three sensationally popular serials on the BBC, all of which were adapted into films by Hammer studios. However, Kneale didn't write the script for this, the first of the films in the short series (spelled "Xperiment" to emphasise the then-new X certificate), that honour went to director Val Guest and Richard Landau, and so there were a few changes made, not only to cut the story down to feature length, but also in the incarnation of the main character.


No longer was Quatermass a British boffin, nope, he was now a harsh-talking American who inexplicably is heading the United Kingdom space exploration team, and with that alteration, and thanks to Donlevy's abrasiveness, the film has a more severe, blatant feeling than the more thoughtful television version. Not that it harms the story any, as Quatermass's blind devotion to science no matter what the cost conjures a panicky, out of control tone to the proceedings. In fact, the Professor is often sidelined by the other characters such as the police Inspector Lomax (Jack Warner sharing top billing) who has a determination of his own.


As it is his pet project, Quatermass is not happy about bringing in anyone into the investigation apart from, well, apart from himself really. The night of the rocket's "landing" the hatch was opened and only one man, Victor Caroon (Richard Wordsworth), emerged - not so much emerged as tumbled out, to be honest. So what happened to the other two astronauts? The mystery is well sustained, as various clues crop up; Caroon is in no shape to tell anyone what went on up there, and his only word in the whole film is a whispered "help" which we, the audience, never hear.


Wordsworth gives the best performance, a haunted, pathetic study in unease as he goes from lying in his hospital bed to wandering the streets on the lookout for food. But he's not going to snack in the conventional manner, whatever occurred up there has altered his metabolism and the only way he can gain sustenance is by draining life from other living things, leaving a trail of shrivelled corpses in his path (as well a trail of slime). There are still effective scenes of creepiness, such as Quatermass and his crew viewing the footage taken by the rocket's camera, or Caroon, his arm turned into a cactus, being approached by an innocent little girl (a young Jane Asher) at the river side. And of course, if it wasn't for this film, Hammer wouldn't have set out on its lucrative domination of the British horror film. Music by James Bernard. 

Review Graeme Clark



Friday, 5 October 2012

PETER CUSHING: UPDATED THROUGH OUT THE DAY


THE UK PETER CUSHING APPRECIATION SOCIETY ESTABLISHED IN 1956 AND STILL GOING STRONG ON FACEBOOK AND AT IT'S WEBSITE PETERCUSING.ORG. UPDATED THROUGH OUT THE DAY WITH RARE PHOTOGRAPHS, MEMORABILIA AND FEATURES. IF YOU HAVE A FACEBOOK ACCOUNT PLEASE GO AND SAY HELLO!

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

THE UK PETER CUSHING APPRECIATION SOCIETY: PETERCUSHINGAPPRECIATIONSOCIETY.COM AND PETER CUSHING APPRECIATION SOCIETY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE


You'll find quite a few features, photographs and posts on PETER CUSHING at theblackboxclub.com but if it's full features, whole galleries of lobby stills and publicity material you're after...then our companion sites at PETERCUSHINGAPPRECIATIONSOCIETY.COM and the PETER CUSHING APPRECIATION SOCIETY FACEBOOK FAN PAGE will keep you happy for many a long hour. 

The PETER CUSHING APPRECIATION SOCIETY is the oldest established PETER CUSHING society founded back in 1956. Many items have been colleted in all those years and both sites benefit from a vast collection to draw on. Do come and join us. You'll be most welcome! Please click here for the website: PETERCUSHING.ORG.UK   and here for the FACEBOOK FAN PAGE PETER CUSHING FACEBOOKFAN PAGE
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