
 

 

 

 

 
Very obviously inspired 
by Georges Franju’s classic Eyes Without A Face, Robert Hartford-Davis’ 
1968 film Corruption (also known as Carnage) stars Peter Cushing as a 
surgeon named Sir John Rowan. When the movie begins, he and his fiancé, a
 model named Lynn Nolan (Sue Lloyd), are attending a party held by a 
photographer (Anthony Booth) friend of hers. It’s full of swinging 
sixties style beatniks shaking their rumps to the sounds of the day and 
it all seems to be going well until the photographer asks Lynn to pose 
for him. As he encourages her to sex it up a bit, she obliges but Rowan 
isn’t having any of this and before you know it he’s trying to pull the 
camera out of the photographer’s hands and in the ensuing skirmish, a 
flood light falls and lands on Lynn’s face.
 
Once she gets out of the hospital, she’s obviously got some serious burn
 wounds. Those flood lights run hot, but thankfully Rowan’s skills as a 
surgeon just might be able to provide a solution. He’s got access to a 
special laser that he uses on Lynn and before you know it, her face 
looks as lovely as ever. To celebrate they head to the coast but upon 
their return it seems that it didn’t work so well after all. As such, 
Rowan decides a skin graft is in order and so he sets out into the seedy
 side of town in search of supply which leads him to the apartment of a 
pretty blonde prostitute. She tells him he’s her last client of the 
evening and he cuts her up. After that, he does what he does and Lynn’s 
face is once again back to normal. Her sister, Val (Kate O’Mara), and 
her fiancé, a doctor named Harris (Noel Trevarthen), start to wonder 
just what exactly is going on but Rowan is clever and sneaky until 
Lynn’s face once again needs new flesh to retain its beauty. When the 
four of them head to the coast to relax, things go from bad to worse 
when Lynn once again needs new flesh and a young girl named Terry (Wendy
 Varnals) shows up just in time…
 
This one has got a bit of a reputation thanks in no small part to 
Cushing’s displeasure with the picture. This one, particularly in the 
seedier version presented here (more on that in a minute), is noticeable
 stronger than pretty much anything else you’re likely to see Peter 
Cushing in and the uncut murder of the prostitute finds him in a much 
nastier situation than he probably initially wanted to be. With that 
said, the movie is quite well made. Cushing’s performance here is a 
strong one. He’s classy in that way that he always was and you never get
 the impression that he’s treating the material as if it were beneath 
him. He shows genuine concern for his (much younger) ladyfriend when she
 gets injured and he’s also mature and sophisticated enough that we can 
completely buy him in the role of an ace surgeon. Sue Lloyd also does 
fine work here. She’s sexy and confident initially but after her injury 
it becomes increasingly obvious that more than just her skin was 
damaged. Her psyche starts to show signs of cracking and this in turn 
spurns Rowan ever forward in his increasingly grisly attempts to make 
her happy. This provides an interesting dynamic between our two leads. 
The supporting cast members are also fine but the movie really does 
belong to Cushing and Lloyd.
 
The production values here are quite strong. Through the scenes 
involving the laser, particularly towards the end, make obvious their 
low budget origin but the cinematography from Peter Newbrook is never 
less than excellent. The film makes very good use of some particularly 
bizarre and even unsettling camera angels during the murder set pieces 
which really play up his manic disposition in the film and succeed in 
making him look completely deranged. The score from Bill McGuffie is 
also pretty solid, helping to ramp up tension in a few key scenes. This 
one may owe more than a passing nod to Franju’s earlier film, but 
there’s enough about it that is its own to make it more than worth a 
look, particularly for fans of British horror and specifically Peter 
Cushing.
 
Note (mild spoilers): This disc from Grindhouse Releasing 
includes the uncut theatrical version of the movie in addition to the 
international version alternate cut of the film. Although the 
international version runs a little shorter, it does in fact contain 
quite a bit more nudity and violence. The most obvious example is the 
scene in which Rowan kills the prostitute. In the theatrical cut she 
goes to undress and he knifes her. In the international version she 
takes off her top and gets down to her stockings after which he thrashes
 her around on the floor a bit, roughs her up, and then slits her 
throat, her naked breasts fully exposed and slathered in blood. The 
murder that happens on the train car is also a bit rougher as is the 
murder on the rocks at the coast.
 
Video/Audio/Extras:
 
Corruption is presented on Blu-ray in a fantastic looking AVC encoded 
1080p high definition transfer framed at 1.85.1 widescreen. Picture 
quality is excellent here. Film grain is left intact but it’s never 
overpowering or distracting and outside of a few minor specks here and 
there, you won’t see much in the way of print damage at all. Colors are 
reproduced beautifully, you’ll notice this not only in the opening 
hippie party/photo shoot scene but also once the action moves to the 
coast and the characters run across the algae covered rocks where the 
green hues look perfect. Black levels are good, detail is consistently 
impressive not only in close up shots but medium and long distance shots
 as well. There are no obvious compression artifacts nor does there 
appear to be any edge enhancement or noise reduction at all. 
 
The English language DTS-HD Mono mix is also pretty good. There are no 
alternate language options, closed captioning or subtitles provided on 
this release. There are a few spots where the high end gets a little 
shrill but otherwise the audio is perfectly fine for an older mono mix. 
Dialogue is perfectly easy to understand and the levels are properly 
balanced. The score sounds good as do the effects.
 
Extras start off with an audio commentary by UK horror journalist 
Jonathan Rigby and Peter Cushing biographer David Miller which is the 
highlight of this release’s supplemental package. These guys know their 
stuff and have a lot of respect for the material but manage to offer up 
both a history and an analysis of the picture without ever coming across
 as too highbrow or dull and scholarly. We get some interesting insight 
into Cushing’s life and career up to this point and some welcome 
information about the other cast and crew members involved with the 
production. They cover the locations, the material and its sometimes 
controversial nature, and its release history and generally just give a 
rock solid overview of the movie and its origins. They also talk about 
Cushing’s personal feelings on the picture, noting that he found it 
‘particularly nasty.’ They provide some interesting historical and 
social context for the movie, noting that it was a very contemporary and
 brutal film compared to those being made by his contemporaries, they 
being Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, around the same time. Well 
paced, incredibly informative and a lot of fun to listen to, this is 
everything a great commentary should be.
 
From there, we move on to the interviews starting with a fourteen minute
 piece with actor Billy Murray who gives a nice introduction to his 
career and talks about his experiences on the set. Not surprisingly, he 
has nothing but kind words to say about Cushing (who he stayed in 
contact with for the rest of Cushing’s life), though he makes a subtle 
dig at Hartford-Davis for not crediting him with coming up with the 
film’s ending. He notes that he’s not really a fan of horror films 
because they scare him, though he does note that he enjoyed making it. 
He also notes that he wore his own clothes in the film and that the 
money he was offered wasn’t bad at all. He also describes the director 
as a bit of a playboy, and how his character and those who accompany him
 may have been influenced by the Manson Gang. He also notes that he 
auditioned for A Clockwork Orange and didn’t get the part. 
 
Up next is actress Jan Waters, who plays the prostitute in the film. She
 talks for nine minutes about the time she spent on the set for this 
picture, her interactions with her fellow cast members, her impressions 
of Peter Cushing (who she describes as kind and courteous but also a 
rather serious man) and Robert Hartford-Davis and her thoughts on the 
film itself. She notes that it’s an early role, discussing how she had 
to go off to the studio to meet the director and read for the part, 
after which she was scheduled. She talks about how the script was being 
constantly rewritten and about what happens to her character in the 
film. 
 
Actress Wendy Varnals is also interviewed and she also reminisces for 
sixteen minutes about working on the picture and shares some stories 
from the set. She talks about this being the last film that she ever 
did, discusses her being stopped on the street while attending Oxford 
and being cast in a play which lead to her acting career getting a bit 
of a start. She also talks about other occupations she did, primarily as
 a writer in the sixties where she wrote about fashion and music. She 
also talks about how she got typecast and which lead to her becoming 
disenfranchised over this as she was ‘bored to death’ with it. She too 
describes Cushing as a nice man and that he was very gentlemanly and 
generous.
 
Last but not least, Grindhouse have included an interesting seven minute
 archival audio interview with Peter Cushing conducted at Pinewood 
Studios in August of 1974. Here he talks about the differences between 
what he considers horror films versus those that he considers fantasy 
films – meaning that they’re entertainment films, rather than pictures 
based on real world atrocities like war pictures. He talks about his 
wife, he talks about attending screenings of his pictures and going to 
the cinema for pleasure and offers up some bits and pieces about his 
career. Always the consummate gentleman, Cushing comes across as a class
 act here, sharing his thoughts on sex and nudity in cinema as well as 
his thoughts on more extreme films, where he cites The Exorcist as an 
example.
 
We also get a collection of three alternate scenes, the first of which 
is from the first prostitute murder. This material was shot to allow the
 distributor to ‘spice up’ the film for international markets and it’s 
gory, bloody and chock full of boobs. In addition to that we get a very 
brief additional shot that takes place on the train and an even shorter 
additional shot from the murder on the rocks that takes place towards 
the finale.
 
Rounding out the extras are a few (surprisingly extensive) still 
galleries featuring all sorts of promotional material gathered up from 
all over the world, a pair of trailers for the feature, five different 
TV spots and a pair of radio spots as well. And of course, this wouldn’t
 be a Grindhouse Releasing disc without a score of trailers for other 
releases either already available (An American Hippie In Israel) or 
coming soon. The extras also include the original annotated director's 
shooting script and production notes which you can skim through on the 
disc, which is kind of unique and not something that you see included in
 bonus features too often.
 
There’s also an Isolated music and effects track that can be selected 
from the audio set up menu. Menus and chapter stops are included and as 
this is a combo pack release, the clear Blu-ray case also houses a DVD 
version of the movie as well. Inside the case is a booklet of liner 
notes and on the flip side a poster version of the cover art by Rick 
Melton.
 
The Final Word:
 
Corruption is a solid thriller/horror picture that takes a familiar 
concept and gives it an interesting spin. Though it is very much a 
product of its time, those with an interest in the swingin’ side of 
British cinema will get a kick out of all the period detail but the real
 reason to want to watch this one is for Cushing’s completely unhinged 
performance. Grindhouse Releasing offers up both versions of the movie 
in beautiful shape and with a great selection of extra features as well.
 A ridiculously strong release overall.
Review by rockshop.com: HERE