Archive for the 'British and Eurohorror' Category

HAMMER FILMS: PETER CUSHING AND CHRISTOPHER LEE IN TERENCE FISHER’S THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN

1957/ Director: Terence Fisher/ Writers: Jimmy Sangster (screenplay), Mary Shelley (novel)

Cast: Peter Cushing, Hazel Court, Robert Urquhart, Christopher Lee, Melvyn Hayes, Valerie Gaunt, Paul Hardtmuth

The Curse of Frankenstein is truly a history making movie. Prior to Curse Hammer had had some success as a film studio and with the Quartermass films and X The Unknown found a niche in the horror genre. Curse was their first color film, and what a first it was. The scenes are lush and vibrant as well as chilling and nightmarish. Under the direction of the brilliant Terence Fisher the movie revived the gothic horror film. While it was a return to the classic, atmospheric horror themes established in the 30’s by Universal studios, Hammer would certainly tell the stories with their own style. Hammer screenwriter Jimmy Sangster would turn the focus of the story on the character of Victor Frankenstein rather than the monster. The obsessed doctor and his hideous creation are played by Hammer first timers Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Lee got the role basically because of his 6’4” height, a feature that almost prevented him from landing the role he would make legendary, that of Count Dracula. However it is Cushing that shines as the driven and insane Dr. Victor Frankenstein. He does frequent himself with hunchbacks as he robs graves but he aligns himself with his brilliant tutor. In later Hammer Frankenstein films the Igor type hunchback is eschewed for career driven young men who fall under Frankenstein’s evil charm. Cushing is dashingly handsome and his face conveys the doctor’s charisma and madness. He is a sociopath really who will let no one stand in the way of his ambitions.

MORE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN HERE >>

HAMMER’S GREATEST SCREAM QUEEN: INGRID PITT

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

I am in the middle of rewatching the Vampire Lovers and felt the need to do a quick post on the queen of sexy lesbo vamps, Ingrid Pitt. There are some mythic elements to the life of Ingrid Pitt that is sometimes conflicting, depending on what source you are reading. There is the fantastic story of how she was born Ingoushka Petrov in 1937, of Polish parents, while her mother was being transported to a concentration camp in Germany during the war. Another source keeps the concentration camp story but gives the date of 1943 for her birth, while yet another source claims Pitt herself lists her birth date as November of 1945, when the war was well over for Germany as well as Japan and the camps were abolished.

MORE INGRID PITT HERE >>

THE URANIUM CAFE DOUBLE FEATURE: THE BLOB AND X-THE UNKNOWN

Saturday, September 27th, 2008

THE BLOB

1958/ Director: Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr./ Writers: Kay Linaker (writer, as Kate Philips), Theodore Simonson, Irvine Millgate (story)

Cast:
Steve McQueen, Aneta Corsaut, Earl Rowe, Olin Howland, Alden ‘Stephen’ Chase, John Benson, Lee Paton, Vincent Barbi

The Blob is a successful combining of the horror and teenage delinquent film genres. While the teens in the film are not really ‘delinquents” in my opinion they are still teenagers and therefore what they say and do is always suspect to the local adults. The film was a success for the time at the box office, which must have really irked new leading man “Steven” McQueen who opted for a one lump payment of $2,500 to $3,000 (depending where you read) rather than 10% of the profits, which went over $4 million. Also it seems the young McQueen appeared promising enough to be offered a three film contract from the film’s producers, but he was so difficult to work with he was released from the contract. He would of course go on to become a film legend in Hollywood. The movie was made outside Hollywood (shot around Valley Forge Pennsylvania) by an independent film company, Valley Forge Films (formally Good News Productions, a company that made Christian films with director Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr ), and it is nicely shot film in deep colors and pretty well acted for a late 50′s horror film. (more…)

HAMMER’S INNOCENT SCREAM QUEEN VERONICA CARLSON

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

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One of the more enduring and endearing Hammer Queen legends Veronica Carlson was a talented art student who gained some popularity as a model after a few small film roles. She appeared here and there in the British tabloids with a few lines of gossip under a pin up style picture that usually focused on her legs. Hammer head James Carreras saw one such picture of Veronica and decided to cast in Dracula Has Risen from the Grave with Christopher Lee, to be directed by Freddie Frances, more renowned for his cinematography, especially his b/w work. This has become one of my all time favorite Hammer Films, if not my favorite. She also did Frankenstein Must be Destroyed with a thoroughly menacing Peter Cushing as a Dr Frankenstein who will let nothing or no one stand in the way of his goals, including hapless little Veronica. She and director Terrence Fisher were upset over a rape scene included in the film at the behest of the American distributor. I must say that the scene of Peter Cushing assaulting her is one of my lest favorite and unnecessary scenes in the Hammer catalog. It is totally incongruous with the way Frankenstein is portrayed in other Hammer films and not consistent with Pushing usual on screen personas. (more…)

TRAILER FOR BLOODY PIT OF HORROR

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

MICKEY HARGITAY’S CAREER PERFORMANCE AS THE CRIMSON EXECUTIONER IN BLOODY PIT OF HORROR

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

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Mickey Hargitay (Mr. Jayne Mansfield) had made a couple low budget Italian  films, including  the  pretty wachtable though campy peplum adventure Hercules vs. the Hydra (The Loves of Hercules) starring his future wife Miss Mansfield, when he made 1965’s Bloody Pit of Horror ( Il Boia Scarletto – The Crimson Executioner) with director Massimo Pupillo (called Max Hunter on the posters I saw). The movie is a must see for lovers of “bad movies” (not bad as in Pearl Harbor or Bonfire of the Vanities bad, but as in Astro Zombies and Invasion of the Saucermen bad) and predates much of what would come to known as the real Eurosleaze of the 70’s. Hargitay is simply (and thankfully) over the top running around in revealing (is that a cat of nine tails in his pants or is he just happy to be acting?) red tights and a Lone Ranger mask ranting about his perfect body as he knocks off a group of impure house guests on a photo shoot for a sleazy pulp magazine. The movie would not be worth watching really except for Hargitay’s fantastically campy performance as well as the often very brutal torture and death scenes. I found a batch of memorable quotes at IMBD. I hope these make you run right now and get this camp, sleaze classic (or you can see it online at http://www.flickbyflick.com/) and learn why Mickey must protect his perfect body from these decadent house guests.

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MARIO BAVA: ITALIAN MASTER OF THE MACABRE

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

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Mario Bava was born one day after the beginning of WWI in San Remo Italy in 1914. His father was Eugenio Bava and it was at the side of his father that Bava would learn the tricks of his trade in the world of set design and cinematography. Eugenio was a master film technician during the period of Italian silent cinema and a creator of film special effects. Mario would work for several years as his father’s assistant and apprentice. Like his highly creative father Mario was an artist who painted and sculpted and developed a fine sense of design that made him one of the great arrangers of the “mise en scene”, or what can be explained as the total scene one views in a film, as it is shot and framed by the camera. This includes the arrangement and placement of not only the actors but of all parts of the set as well as choices for color and position of props. It means in one sense that nothing you see on the screen is accidental in the same way nothing placed on a stage for a play is accidental or random. There is no denying that at his peak Bava’s stage sets were revolutionary in regards to lighting and shading, and yet at the same time they seem to pay homage to a bygone era of not only Italian cinema but of old Hollywood as well.

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