Showing posts with label midnight marquee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label midnight marquee. Show all posts

Saturday 16 November 2013

PETER CUSHING: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND PAST FORGETTING : US MIDNIGHT MARQUEE RELEASES



Many celebrities approach writing their memoirs with a sense of trepidation, assuming they actually do any of the actual writing themselves.  Some use them as an opportunity boast and crow.  Some seize the chance to set the record straight, at least from their own (sometimes slightly jaundiced) point of view.  The end results can be varied in interest: sometimes they can be a very dull affair, even if they don’t end up using the form as an opportunity to throw muck and level accusations.  Anybody who has ever read the notorious memoirs of Klaus Kinski – alternatively known as All I Need is Love or Kinski Uncut, depending on the printing – will understand this only too well: sometimes the form is best approached and appreciated as performance art.  When Peter Cushing elected to write of his life in the mid-1980s, he did so on the bittersweet understanding that his time on life might be short – and that his opportunity continue acting might well also have become a thing of the past.

With this in mind, it’s amazing to find just how vibrant and upbeat “An Autobiography” really is – it is laced with pathos and tragedy, of course, with much emphasis on the devastating loss of his beloved wife Helen in January of 1971.  Helen was clearly the “rock” which gave his life meaning and he details their relationship in loving detail.  He also proves to be only too willing to address, however obliquely, his own shortcomings.  Helen was a sickly woman from the time they met and he undertook work in horror films simply as a means of providing steady income to pay for her various treatments.  He states that he “strayed” on multiple occasions and hints that this tormented him for many years.  Even more alarmingly, he paints a vivid and distressing portrait of his life spiraling out of control when she passed away – he attempted suicide that same night, but his firm religious convictions prevented him from following through.  One gets the sense in all of this that Cushing was a complicated man, given to indulging his whims when he felt like it, but also so intensely in love with his wife that it turned into an obsessive form of co-dependency.  Theirs was a loving but peculiar relationship, part husband and wife, part mother and son.  Cushing also details his health woes, which began in earnest in 1982 when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer.  The prognosis was not good and doctors informed him that he would likely be dead within a year … news which Cushing took in stride because, quite frankly, he had tired of life without Helen.  Needless to say, he beat the odds – and he would live for another 12 years.


Indeed, Cushing would spend so much of “An Autobiography” detailing his relationship with Helen, as well as his childhood, that he neglected to give a great deal of attention to his film work.  It made for a very intriguing and heart-felt personal account, but many fans felt a bit cheated by the lack of Hammer Horror talk and were open in saying so.  Always one to listen to his fans, Cushing responded with a second volume of memoirs, titled “Past Forgetting.”

“Past Forgetting” also works in plenty of personal information, but it seeks to quiet the fan base by discussing his many and varied film roles in greater detail.  Cushing doesn’t dish much in the way of gossip, being far too much of a gentleman, but he pays loving tribute to some of his best friends in the business – including fellow horror icons Christopher Lee and Vincent Price – and discusses the mostly harmonious relationship he had with the producers at Hammer and Amicus.  Cushing elects to gloss over a rather ugly (albeit temporary) falling out with James Carreras over his dropping out of The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959) at short notice but he was clearly appreciative of the steady work they supplied him down through the years and was never one – unlike Christopher Lee – to publicly slam the material they provided for him.

The combination of these two volumes paints a far more multi-faceted portrait of the great man than any of the available books on him.  Cushing does not shy away from admitting his failings.  He has his moments of vanity.  He could be difficult when he felt he was in the right.  All of this simply serves to paint him as an honest-to-God human being, albeit one with tremendous empathy, compassion, professionalism and good manners.  Cushing’s prose is clipped and precise, much like his diction, but the books never comes off as stodgy or ill-humored.  As a man, Cushing wore his heart on his sleeve – and these volumes make this aspect of his personality all too clear.

The two volumes were originally issued separately, of course, but have since been condensed into one handy volume by Midnight Marquee Press in America.  The volume is professionally laid out and offers up a nice selection of images, including documents and artwork penned by Cushing himself.  The book is topped off by a nice tribute to Cushing from his long-time secretary and assistant, Joyce Broughton.  The Midnight Marquee edition can be obtained directly from: http://www.midmar.com/bioscushing.html

Troy Howarth

Thursday 7 November 2013

TROY HOWARTH REVIEWS BRUCE HALLENBECK'S DOUBLE BILL ON HAMMER FILMS 'FRANKENSTEIN' AND 'VAMPIRES'


I must begin this review with a confession: I have known Bruce Hallenbeck, the author of The Hammer Vampire and The Hammer Frankenstein, for about 20 years now.  "Known" seems a misleading word, however, as we've never met in person.  I first came into contact with Bruce due to a letter I had written to the magazine Fangoria regarding the absence of Hammer films on home video in the United States.  At that time, most of the key Hammer films remained out of reach, and those that were available were often compromised in one way or another.  In those pre-internet days, it was wonderful to find somebody who shared my passion for these films and we maintained a steady correspondence until around the end of the decade.  After that, we lost track of each other for a time - and indeed I lost track of my passion for Hammer for a time, as my interests expanded into the realm of Italian and Spanish horror - until the wide world of Facebook brought us back into contact with one another.  I guess it would be unreasonable to expect me to have a truly objective and impartial view of the work of somebody I've been on good terms with for so long, but... I'll give it a try, anyway.


Bruce's overviews of the subject matter in these two books is comprehensive and passionate; it's truly the work of a fan who has devoured every bit of information he can on these films and their production histories.  The Vampire Film is probably the more ambitious of the two texts, simply because Hammer experimented so much more with that genre than they did with the Frankenstein saga.  Not only do we get an overview and critique of all seven "official" entries in the Dracula series (that is: [Horror of] Dracula; Dracula Prince of Darkness; Dracula Has Risen from the Grave; Taste the Blood of Dracula; Scars of Dracula; Dracula AD 1972; The Satanic Rites of Dracula; Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires - in other words, the ones that actually had the character of Dracula in them!), but there's also information and critical analyses of such popular titles as The Brides of Dracula, The Kiss of the Vampire, Vampire Circus and the "Karnstein Trilogy," comprised of The Vampire Lovers, Lust for a Vampire and Twins of Evil.  Hammer certainly knew how to offer variations on a theme and this comprehensive study gives ever title their due.


The Hammer Frankenstein covers a smaller terrain, as the series was only seven strong and didn't inspire any real spin-offs, but don't let that deter you: there's plenty of information in store here, as well.Both books provide a nice recap of the background of the novels which inspired these popular films - Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Bram Stoker's Dracula, naturally - and also offer a good, pithy overview of the treatment of these subjects in the cinema from the silent era to the modern day.  The books also contain forewords by veterans of their respective franchises: Jimmy Sangster, the screenwriter who helped to offer up a tighter, more modern treatment of Dracula, pens the foreword for The Hammer Vampire, while still-beautiful Veronica Carlson (the imperiled heroine of Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed and The Horror of Frankenstein) contributes to The Hammer Frankenstein.

Hallenbeck's prose is smooth and easy to follow throughout.  His enthusiasm for the films comes across in a genuine and unaffected manner and while I do not always agree with his assessments of the individual films - indeed, if I had one criticism to level, it's that I simply think he's too easy on some of these films! - there's no denying that he's a skillful writer who knows his stuff. Hallenbeck also had access to production documents and original scripts, thus allowing him to point out the way that directors like Terence Fisher deviated from what was on the page.  The critics who argue that Fisher was simply a working hack who shot whatever he was given should be given pause here, as Hallenbeck clearly outlines some subtle but crucial changes that he implemented in the filming: if he had stuck with Sangster's script and allowed Christopher Lee to make his grand entrance as Dracula in the 1958 original with the top hat and visible fangs which were specified, there's a damn good chance that Hammer Horror may have been struck dead, right then and there...

Both volumes have been published in the U.K. by Hemlock Film and are to be brought out in the U.S. by Midnight Marquee Press.  I cannot comment on the Midnight Marquee editions as I've not had the opportunity of seeing them, but the Hemlock books are handsomely designed and feature a nice mixture of the familiar and the rare with regards to images.  All told, these books - and Bruce's Hammer Sci-Fi - belong on the shelves of Hammer enthusiasts.

Find out about Troy Howarth's revised and updated 'The Haunted World of Mario Bava' here: 

Monday 4 November 2013

BOOK REVIEW: AMICUS HORRORS : TALES FROM THE FILMMAKERS CRYPT : BRIAN MCFADDEN


For many, the name Amicus doesn't really mean much of anything.  Unlike Hammer, they didn't really establish the same kind of "imprint" on the public consciousness - though they certain scored some major box office hits, thanks to lurid titles such as Dr. Terror's House of Horrors, Scream and Scream Again, The House That Dripped Blood and Tales from the Crypt.


The lack of name value has probably discouraged many writers from exploring their admittedly uneven output.  Fortunately for us fans, however, author Brian McFadden was able to channel his love of all things Amicus into the Midnight Marquee Press release Amicus Horrors: Tales from the Filmmaker's Crypt.


As usual with Midnight Marquee, this offers up an affordable, attractively laid out product.  McFadden proves to be a capable writer, going through the history of the studio and offering biographical information on the studio's founders, American producers Milton Subotsky and Max J. Rosenberg.  There's little doubt that Rosenberg was the businessman and Subotsky the wannabe artist in this particular arrangement, and McFadden - who got to know Subotsky and was invited to observe filming on one of their last horror films, Madhouse - does a good job of detailing their differing attitudes towards films and filmmaking. 


McFadden also provides some background on many of the key actors and directors associated with Amcius' output, including major players like Chrisotpher Lee, Peter Cushing and Freddie Francis, as well as lesser known names like Maurice Denham and Elisabeth Lutyens.  The write ups aren't terribly in depth, but they provide a satisfactory thumbnail portrait of the working actors, directors, writers, composers and so forth that helped to make Amicus something special. 


The writer also spends ample time discussing the studio's various films, inevitably going in to more detail on the more popular horror titles.  As such, less popular - but no less interesting - titles like Seth Holt's Danger Route and William Friedkin's The Birthday Party do sometimes get the short shrift.  One will inevitably not always agree with the author's take on individual titles (I, for one, happen to love Scream and Scream Again without reservation) but McFadden conveys his point of view in a concise, unpretentious fashion.



Fans of Amicus and British horror in general really should give this book a try.  It may not be the definitive account of Amicus and their pictures, but it's a loving tribute with some nice images.
Troy Howarth



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