Showing posts with label gothic horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gothic horror. Show all posts

Monday 14 December 2015

THE LEGACY OF FRANKENSTEIN : FRANKENSTEINFRIDAYS


Here and at the FACEBOOK FAN PAGE EVERY #Frankensteinfriday


You can find a series of features written for us by Bruce Hallenbeck, entitled, 'THAT FEMININE TOUCH: WOMEN IN GOTHIC: The Actresses of the Hammer Frankenstein Series' here on this website. Below are some links to a few from the series: 


THAT FEMININE TOUCH: WOMEN IN GOTHIC: PART FOUR SUSAN DENBERG: HERE 


THAT FEMININE TOUCH: WOMEN IN GOTHIC: PART FIVE VERONICA CARLSON : HERE 



THAT FEMININE TOUCH: WOMEN IN GOTHIC : PART ONE: HAZEL COURT AND VALERIE GAUNT : CLICK HERE

Just CLICK HERE

Thursday 23 July 2015

CHRISTOPHER LEE REMEMBERS HORROR OF DRACULA OPENING NIGHT


It all could have turned out quite differently...had Hammer films, Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing and Terence Fisher and all...not made a CLASSIC!



                        JUST CLICK  HERE TO FIND US                             

Wednesday 6 May 2015

DRACULA : 130 YEARS SINCE HARKER WALKED INTO THE VAMPIRE LAIR


This month, One Hundred and Thirty years ago, Jonathan Harker first walked into the place where angels feared to tread... Castle Dracula! Here illustrated with a little seen press photograph of John Van Eyssen as Jonathan Harker and a colour transparency of Christopher Lee as Count Dracula from Hammer films, 'Dracula / Horror of Dracula (1958) Starring Peter Cushing as Van Helsing.


Friday 30 January 2015

SIR JAMES CARRERAS REMEMBERED TODAY


Remembering : Sir James Carreras, born today in 1909. Son of Enrique Carreras, the co-founder of Hammer Films and the Blue Hall theatre chain... and father of Hammer film producer and director, Michael Carreras. It was JC who hit on the formula of '..design a poster for a potential film, for the backers to actually see!' A simple but very effect method.

It is said that he, '..judged the success of his films not by critical plaudits, but strictly on the basis of box office returns.' Maybe so, but for a long time his approached worked, making very large profits for the backers, giving Hammer films the Queens Award to Industry Award back in 1968 and a loyal fan base that remains to this day. He is remembered each year by Variety: The Children's Charity, with The Sir James Carreras Award. '...This Award honors the name of Sir James Carreras MBE, who served Variety International with great distinction as one of its past International Presidents. It is presented annually to a physician who has demonstrated exceptional dedication and skill in the field of pediatrics'.

Monday 29 December 2014

'COME MY PRECIOUS! THE MASTER IS WAITING!' FREDA JACKSON REMEMBERED


REMEMBERING: Freda Jackson, Born Today 29th December 1907. Was there ever a more frightening actresses in a Peter Cushing Hammer film? Here we see her as the 'hair-raising' Greta in 'The Brides of Dracula' (1960) starring Peter Cushing, Yvonne Monlaur and David Peel. Happy Birthday, Freda!

Friday 17 October 2014

50 YEARS OLD TODAY: HAPPY BIRTHDAY 'THE GORGON'


It's a very HAPPY BIRTHDAY to a grand ol lady! It's 50 years today that Hammer films 'THE GORGON' hit the big screen. Starring Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Barbara Shelley and Richard Pasco it certainly qualifies as one of Hammer films marquee titles. Made at Bray studios and directed by Terence Fisher. This post is dedicated to our 'number one' resident Gorgon fan, Joshua 'Mageara' Kennedy!

Saturday 30 August 2014

MAYBE THE MOST CELEBRATED CHASE SCENE IN HAMMER FILMS' HISTORY


Maybe the most celebrated chase scene in Hammer film history... Peter Cushing as Van Helsing and Christopher Lee as Count Dracula in 'Dracula' / 'Horror of Dracula' (1958 Director Terence Fisher)

Chase to the death!
Dracula (1958)

Saturday 7 June 2014

#ONTHESETSATURDAY: FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN #HAMMERFILMS


Large scans of Peter Cushing, Thorley Walters and director Terence Fisher, during the making of #hammerfilms 'Frankenstein Created Woman' at Bray Studios in 1967


Monday 12 May 2014

SIX COPIES OF RUE MORGUE MAGAZINE: 'MONSTER FROM HELL' COVER AND FEATURE ISSUE TO BE WON!


COMPETITION NOW CLOSED: WE'LL BE ANNOUNCING THE WINNERS AT 10PM TODAY.

Here's your chance to win one of the SIX copies of the 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell' cover and feature edition of RUE MORGUE magazine!

It's easy to enter our competitions and they are open to anyone, wherever in the world you may be! You just EMAIL YOUR ANSWER TO US AT THEBLACKBOXCLUB@GMAIL.COM. Couldn't be easier!

COMPETITION QUESTION:
During the duration of the shooting of #hammerfilms 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell' at Elstree studios in 1972, WHICH LONDON HOTEL did Peter Cushing stay at? 


(Chose ONE of the following options)

A) The Dorchester Hotel 
B) The Conaught Hotel 
D) Brown's Hotel
E) Lord Jim's Hotel 
F) The Grosvenor Hotel 
G)  The Langham Hotel

All you have to do is answer the question ABOVE and send us your answer by EMAIL, as described above.

The competition closes TOMORROW 9PM GMT. Winners names will be drawn and announced ONE HOUR LATER AT 10PM GMT AND POSTED HERE. GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!

REMEMBER: THERE IS AN EXCLUSIVE PETER CUSHING CELEBRATION THIS WEEK and We'll be marking it with a superb COMPETITION DURING THIS WEEK. So, keep checking the page for details!

Wednesday 18 September 2013

THE COLLINSON TWINS PUT THE BITE INTO HAMMER FILMS 'TWINS OF EVIL' REVIEW AND GALLERY


Twin sisters Maria and Frieda (Mary and Madeleine Collinson) are sent to live with their stern Uncle Gustav (Peter Cushing), who also happens to be the head of a strict religious sect which is devoted to persecuting witches and other minions of the devil.  When Frieda becomes infatuated with the debauched Count Karnstein (Damien Thomas), she incurs her uncle’s wrath… but there are worse horrors still in store…


Carmilla, written by the Irish author Sheridan LeFanu, was first published in serial form from 1871 to 1872.  It told the story of a beautiful young girl who turns out to be a vampire; she is eventually dispatched, but not before she claims several victims.  The story contained undercurrents of lesbianism, and indeed its subtle reference to this has caused some readers to miss this aspect of Carmilla’s character altogether.  The story was first brought to the screen, albeit obliquely, in Carl Theodor Dreyer’s dreamlike “art” horror film, Vampyr (1930).  With its deliberately off kilter imagery and sparse use of dialogue and sound effects, Dreyer’s film failed to find much of an audience, but has since become embraced as one of the few truly successful attempts at rendering a dream state on screen.  In 1960, French director Roger Vadim brought the story to the screen again, with his French-Italian production Blood and Roses.  The film sought to explore the lesbian subtext of LeFanu’s novella, but its delicate approach and slow pacing made it something of a disappointment for many horror fans of the period.


In Italy, director Camillo Mastrocinque and screenwriter Ernesto Gastaldi collaborated on another version, Crypt of the Vampire (1964), which cast Christopher Lee in the sympathetic role of Count Ludwig Karnstein.  This version also contained hints of lesbianism, but it failed to capture the lyricism and intensity of the best Italian horror films of the period. In Britain, the series Mystery and Imagination added LeFanu’s story to their roster of chillers in 1966, with an adaptation starring Jane Merrow in the title role.  Sadly, this is one of the early episodes of the series which has failed to survive into the new millennium, leaving one to speculate how Merrow (who would go on to play a plum supporting role in Terence Fisher’s Night of the Big Heat, 1967, starring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing) fared in the role.


Hammer Films inevitably caught up with the story, putting The Vampire Lovers (co-produced with their American “rival,” AIP) into production in 1969.  Hammer and AIP sought to capitalize on the loosening censorship standards of the period by introducing a great deal of graphic sex and nudity, though director Roy Ward Baker (who always insisted that LeFanu’s story contained nary a whiff of lesbianism) sought to down peddle this.  The final result was uneasily couched between Gothic drawing room melodrama and brassiere ripping exploitation, but it was a financial success, prompting Hammer to further explore the potential of LeFanu’s characters.  The ill-fated Lust for a Vampire followed in 1970, while Twins of Evil would emerge in 1971 (or 1972, if you lived in the US).



Twins of Evil is almost certainly the best of the so-called Karnstein trilogy.  Much of this can be attributed to director John Hough, making his first of several noteworthy horror and fantasy pictures.  Hough was only 30 years old, a very youthful age for a Hammer director, and he brought a renewed sense of vigor and experimentation to the proceedings.  Unlike Baker and most of Hammer’s other directors, he also had genuine enthusiasm for the genre and was determined to make the best picture possible.  Despite a few clumsy moments here and there (think no further than the guffaw-inducing scene wherein the Count’s mute lackey basically plays charades to convey that his master is in imminent danger), Hough delivered a sure footed film with rich gothic flavor.  He also proved to be no prude when it came to the erotic component, resulting in some of the more overtly blatant moments of sexuality in Hammer’s oeuvre.


The film is also well served by a fine cast.  Hammer was well known for employing stunt casting to help promote their pictures, and Twins was certainly no exception – the titular characters were played by Playboy’s first-ever twin centerfolds, the Maltese-born Collinson twins.  While the young women had very little experience in the thesping department, they certainly looked right – and the use of post synching helped to cover up their presumably hard to decipher accents and any difficulties they may have had with the dialogue.  Neither actress is really required to do a lot beyond look ravishing, so their contribution can be written up as successful where it counts.  To help compensate for this potential void at the center of the picture, Hough enlisted some top notch actors to help keep things credible.  Peter Cushing, of course, was almost a staple in the trilogy – “almost” only because he was forced to bow out of Lust for a Vampire when his wife became ill (his replacement, Ralph Bates, looks suitably ill at ease in a role intended for a much older man).  Indeed, Twins would mark Cushing’s return to the screen following his beloved Helen’s death in early 1971.  The change in the man is noticeable right away.  While Cushing had always been a thin man, here he appears positively gaunt – and he looks a good deal older, grayer and more severe, to boot.  Gustav Weil provides the actor with one of his least sympathetic characterizations.  He is a sadist and a hypocrite, hiding behind the word of God as a means of enacting his own special brand of “justice” on the young women who have offended him.


Cushing tries to bring a bit of pathos to the character late in the day (“I have tried… always… to be a good man.”) but it doesn’t ring entirely true – it could be that this was the actor’s attempt to convey some sense of decency in a character that was written to be totally, well, vile – but it’s a touch that does little to dispel memories of the cruelty he has engaged in through much of the picture.  Former matinee idol Dennis Price (Kind Hearts and Coronets, 1949) is on hand to play the Count’s slimy retainer, Dietrich, but he doesn’t have much in the way of screen time.  Price was a brilliant actor whose career was self-sabotaged due to alcoholism and an inability to come to grips with his own sexuality, but even at this stage of the game, doing quickie cameos in low budget horror and exploitation items for a paycheck, he brought a sense of droll humor to many of his characterizations.  Dietrich doesn’t provide him with any of the memorable bits of business which he was able to bring to his chatty grave robber in Jimmy Sangster’s Horror of Frankenstein (1970), but it’s still nice to have him on board.  Damien Thomas is terrific as the jaded Count Karnstein, who gives his soul to the devil and becomes a vampire in his pursuit of the ultimate thrill.  Some have carped that he is cowardly where he should be imposing, but this is precisely the point – even as a vampire, he’s very much the spineless sociopath, always looking for a new high but not willing to put his life on the line in the process.  Kathleen Byron, previously so memorable as the deranged Sister Ruth in Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s masterpiece Black Narcissus (1947), fares much the same as Price – an actor stuck in a role well beneath their talents, but still adding color and class to the proceedings.


Future Italian horror stalwart David Warbeck (Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond, 1981) gives a good account of himself as the usual colorless heroic figure, while Harvey Hall (the only actor who DID appear in all three of these Karnstein films), Alex Scott and Isobel Black all add to the air of cozy familiarity.

 



Unlike Lust for a Vampire, which had the misfortune of being part of a slate of lower-budgeted-than-usual Hammer titles filmed at Associated British Studios, Twins of Evil benefits from the larger resources available at Pinewood.  The sets are impressive, and cinematographer Dick Bush (who would go on to film Dracula AD 1972, before becoming Ken Russell’s DP of choice for a period of time) provides some striking images.  Composer Harry Robinson was also able to indulge his wish to score a western by providing a soundtrack which sometimes evokes the work of the great Ennio Morricone.  The combination of these inspired contributions help to make Twins of Evil a highlight in the later period of Hammer horror – and indeed, it is one of the ones which best evokes the style and flair of their classic period.




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