Showing posts with label zombie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zombie. Show all posts

Thursday 20 October 2016

RICK BAKER CREATES A GREAT HALLOWEEN TRIBUTE TO PETER CUSHING!


#THROWBACKTHURSDAY: It's a great tribute to the work of make up artist Roy Ashton and Peter Cushing, that Cushing's portrayal of Arthur Grimsdyke STILL gets as much attention that it does! Make Up genius RICK BAKER too to twitter today to show us his #Halloween make up for this year! It's terrific! ' “Tested my Halloween party makeup today....He tweeted.... #Grimsdyke Fabricated out of cotton & latex. Hard to shoot a selfie with black fabric on your eyes!” GREAT job!


THIS TRIBUTE TO ASHTON/CUSHING also reminds us of the 'cameo' that the make up did in #thewalkingdead TV show last year. Greg Nicotero did a great job also of recreating Cushing's nightmare-Grimsdyke, back from the dead!



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Wednesday 28 September 2016

#TOOCOOLTUESDAY FOR A BIRTHDAY : AMICUS FILMS MILTON SUBOTSKY


#TOOCOOLTUESDAY: TODAY SEPTEMBER 27TH, WE REMEMBER MILTON SUBOTSKY, one of the co-founders of Amicus Productions along with Max J Rosenberg, he produced his first horror film in 1960, City Of The Dead. He would go one to produce such classics as Dr Terrors House Of Horrors (1965), Tales From The Crypt (1972) , From Beyond The Grave (1973) and many more.



Peter Cushing made a total of 15 films for him, 5 of which co-starred Christopher Lee...


#TOOCOOLTUESDAY: Here is a short clip from a whole interview we shot with Milton at his home back in 1981! This extract appeared in the 'Amicus Vault of Horrors' documentary, that was released last year. Milton and his wife were the perfect hosts, he was the friendliest of people, a real fan at heart, creative with the excitement of a child, when telling you about his ideas ! Here Milton explains about how he rewrote the script for City of the Dead, and why he changed the title


Imageat the top: Milton Subotsky and his family with Vincent Price during the filming of The Monster Club at Elstree studios 1980 — with Peter Cushing, Milton Subotsky, Vincent Price and Amicus Films.


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Monday 13 June 2016

MONSTERMONDAY : TALES FROM THE CRYPT : MONSTER NEIGHBOUR JAMES ELLIOTT


#‎monstermonday‬ This weeks candidate for monster Monday is James Elliot from Tales From The Crypt (1972) played by Robin Phillips proving that not all 'monsters' have to be of the supernatural kind.


ELLIOT BEGINS a campaign of hate to try and force Arthur Grimsdyke (Peter Cushing) to sell his house and move away, as he believes Grimsdyke is a blight on the neighbourhood, he pushes him to far and Grimsdyke commits suicide, however we all know that he finally gets his revenge on Elliot on Valentine's Day!

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Saturday 6 February 2016

ON SET SATURDAY : BEHIND THE SCENES BACK IN 1972 WITH HORROR EXPRESS


Great entertainment may not always constitute great art in the eyes of highbrow critics and scholars, but there’s no denying the lasting appeal of certain films. Some of these films are the result of intense planning and preparation; they’re guided by a sense of purpose and have the benefit of a crack team of technicians and artisans at their disposal. Others more or less just happen. It seems safe to say that Horror Express falls into this latter category.


Legend has it that producer Bernard Gordon, having just overseen the filming of Pancho Villa (1972), starring Telly Savalas, had access to some elaborate miniature train sets from that production; itching to get his moneys worth out of the investment, he decided to get another picture on the rails right away. Enlisting the services of American screenwriters Arnaud d’Usseau and Julian Zimet (writing under the name Julian Halevy), Gordon gave them free reign to come up with a budget-friendly scenario that could be set aboard a train. Zimet and d’Usseau concocted a wild and wooly combination of horror, intrigue and science fiction, cribbing elements from Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and The Thing (1951), with a touch of Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, while scratching the surface of the more cerebral sci-fi fantasies of acclaimed screenwriter Nigel Kneale. The end result is something of a mishmash and it doesn’t really bear close scrutiny, but in the hands of director Eugenio Martin, it rattles along at such a fantastic pace, it really doesn’t matter much.


Key to the film’s success was the casting of horror icons Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. The two actors, with their contrasting styles - Lee, cool and introverted; Cushing, warm and jittery - had become modern answer to Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi thanks to the success of Hammer Films’ The Curse of Frankenstein (1957), Dracula (1958) and The Mummy (1959), but few of the films they acted in really gave them much of a chance to interact with each other. In a typical Hammer horror, they’d have a few terse encounters, then they’d engage in a duel to the death at the end of the picture; given that Lee was typically cast as the villain, he seldom emerged victorious, needless to say.


By the 1970s, the two actors had gone down very different career paths. Cushing, devoted to his ailing wife and content among the familiar trappings of the English countryside, tended to stick close to home; Lee, an outspoken critic of the British tax system, relocated his wife and daughter to Switzerland for a period in the 1960s, and embarked on a campaign for international stardom by appearing in as many foreign language films as possible - it was a move that made him more immediately recognizable in other countries, especially since the multi-lingual actor was able to actually perform in their own language, without the aid of a dubbing artist. Cushing’s career was in a bit of a slump, thanks to a string of less than stellar vehicles that exploited his name and offered little in return beyond the sheer joy of working; Lee’s, on the other hand, was in the ascent - he had fought long and hard to achieve mainstream recognition, and felt vindicated when he was cast in his first western (Hannie Caulder, 1970) and, most notably, when he landed a plum supporting role in Billy Wilder’s big budget The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970). For Lee, fresh horizons were in evidence; for Cushing, his life was quietly crumbling about him, as his beloved wife Helen eventually succumbed to emphysema in 1971.


Cushing’s grief over her passing is legendary - his devotion to her is truly the stuff of great romance, and his only solution to shouldering the burden was to throw himself into more and more work. He literally accepted everything he could fit on his plate, sometimes to the detriment of his legacy - he may have always delivered a professional performance, but sometimes critics found themselves wondering what on earth compelled him to accept the films he agreed to appear in. On the other hand, Lee’s attempts to be choosy sometimes back fired - thus, faced with a suddenly empty slate after a string of proposed projects stalled, he would reluctantly don the cape of his most iconic role, Count Dracula; he loved the role, but hated what Hammer was doing to the bloodsucker, and he didn’t mind letting the press know it, either. Lee’s image as a prickly, opinionated man contrasts vividly with Cushing, about whom seldom a bad word is uttered. If Lee sometimes came off as arrogant and demanding, Cushing was the soul of gentility. One thing was certain, however - they had terrific chemistry (and unlike Karloff and Lugosi, they were good friends off screen) and their names together on a poster was a benefit to many low budget horror items. In preparing Horror Express, producer Gordon and director Martin were fortunate indeed to snag them both. While Lee’s presence in a Spanish horror title was nothing new (he had just recently completed several films for Spanish enfant terrible, Jess Franco), Cushing’s presence was much more unexpected.


Indeed, following Helen’s death, the once travel-shy Cushing broadened his horizons somewhat, accepting assignments in France and Greece, among other countries, though he remained fonder of working in England than anywhere else in the world. The two men had already appeared in numerous “home grown” pictures together, but Horror Express would mark their first - and last - collaboration outside of the UK. As it happens, the entire enterprise nearly fell through when Cushing attempted to bail upon arrival in Spain. As he explained to producer Gordon, the Christmas holidays (the filming took place at the end of ‘71) were nearing, and it was his first Christmas in many years without Helen at his side; a fit of melancholy ensued and he advised Gordon that he felt it best to resign from the picture in person, rather than doing so by cable.


A panic-stricken Gordon turned to Lee for assistance, and as the story goes, the outwardly aloof actor managed to make his friend and colleague feel at home and all talk of abandoning ship ceased. Lee and his family would even invite Cushing to spend the holidays with them, thus creating a little slice of Britannia for the grieving actor who otherwise might have felt adrift in a strange land.


Fans of these two fine actors therefore owe a debt of gratitude to Lee, for his  intervention ensured the completion of one of the most purely enjoyable films they would ever be a part of, either alone or as a team. Hammer consistently cast the two men as adversaries, thus ensuring that their screen time together was limited. It took a sojourn to Spain for their fans to finally see them carrying a film together - as equals, sharing barbs at each other’s expense and clearly enjoying the hell out of doing so.


Lee starts the film in typical stuffy fashion. He portrays the eminent anthropologist Sir Alexander Saxton, who has uncovered what appears to be the fossil of a missing link while on an expedition in Manchuria. Saxton is abrassive, opinionated, imposing, intimidating - in short, very much the usual Christopher Lee we’ve grown to know and love. As the film unfolds, however, the character grows in an interesting way. His so-called fossil thaws out and goes on a killing spree. He is as incredulous as he is intrigued, but his initial iciness begins to melt, as well, and he becomes determined to fix the wrong he has unintentionally inflicted on the other passengers. Along the way he strikes a few romantic sparks with a beautiful Russian countess (Silvia Tortosa), and he presents as a dashing man of action. It’s a good part, and he’s simply delightful in it.


Cushing is also cast very much to type. He portrays the impish and devious Dr. Wells, a rival of Saxton’s who unknowingly speeds the catastrophe along by bribing a baggage attendant to open Saxton’s myserious crate and “take a peek at what’s inside.” Cushing clearly relishes deflating Lee’s pomposity, knowingly pushing his buttons and stirring the pot in a marvellously sly manner. Cushing, too, takes a romantic interest in one of the passengers - in his case, a sexy Russian spy (Helga Line, veteran of many Spanish horror items, including Paul Naschy’s Horror Rises from the Tomb, 1973). This leads to some marvellous comedic situations, notably when Saxton manages to get his own back at Wells by barging his way into the cabin when the latter is eagerly trying to console the young woman. Truth be told, the Wells character is a bit of a meddling jerk, but he, too, becomes more heroic as the action unfolds.


In addition to the wonderful central performances by Lee and Cushing, Horror Express has a grab bag of familiar “Euro cult” performers. Julio Pena (Werewolf Shadow) is excellent as the stern police inspector who becomes possessed by the alien, Jorge Rigaud (A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin) brings sly humor and gravitas to his role as the condescending Count, and the aforementioned Helga Line is wonderfully sly and sexy as the spy. Best of all is Alberto DeMendoza (The People Who Own the Dark), cast as a “mad monk” named Pujardov. The character is clearly modeled on that of Rasputin, and the wild-eyed DeMendoza plays the part for all it’s worth.


Given that Lee had previously played the “real” Rasputin so memorably (albeit in a palid film, Hammer’s Rasputin the Mad Monk, 1965), it’s amusing to see him reacting with such disdain and contempt to Pujardov’s biblical rantings. Last but not least, let us not forget Telly Savalas, who shows up just when things are threatening to run out of steam - he isn’t the most likely Cossack ever seen on screen, but no matter… he’s a hoot in the role, and he knows it. Savalas chews the scenery with abandon, and his confrontation with stiff upper lip Brits Lee and Cushing (whom the Greek-American actor would later recall with respect and admiration) is a joy to behold.


Added to the wonderful cast, Horror Express has much to laud in the technical department as well. John Cacavas contributes a haunting, Ennio Morricone-inspired soundtrack, while ace cinematographer Alejandro Ulloa (Jess Franco’s The Diabolical Dr. Z, 1966) helps to disguise the low budget with some elegant lighting and camerawork. Director Martin, who would later helm several other (but less memorable) horror items, keeps the pace moving at breakneck speed. He also displays an appreciation of the script’s sly, tongue in cheek wit, ensuring that Horror Express is always first and foremost a fun film. It may not reinvent the wheel or aspire to make profound social comments, but this is horror entertainment at its finest, acted and directed with an incisive mixture of commitment and irony. It is also, arguably, the only Christopher Lee/Peter Cushing film that really properly exploits the tremendous chemistry these two men had on screen. On that level alone, Horror Express is essential viewing for all Lee and/or Cushing fans.


The text in this feature first appeared in a feature post on our site, in February 2013. It can be found with full colour gallery, at it's original posting : HERE 

Feature: Troy Howarth
Images: Marcus Brooks


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Tuesday 16 June 2015

WIN PETER CUSHING AMICUS FILM TALES FROM THE CRYPT : TEN DVDS MUST BE WON!


THE PRIZES:
Thanks to our sponsors Cinema Cult and Screenpop.... we have TEN DVD copies of Amicus Films 'TALES FROM THE CRYPT' starring Peter Cushing up for grabs as prizes in todays competition.


HOW TO ENTER:
All YOU have to do is study the two photographs below, taken of Peter Cushing from Tales From The Crypt.....and tell us the FIVE DIFFERENCES between PHOTOGRAPH ONE and PHOTOGRAPH TWO...it's as simple as that!


HOW TO SEND US YOUR ENTRY:
Once you think you have spotted all FIVE, send us your answers by EMAIL to theblackboxclub@gmail.com

PLEASE DO NOT post your answers on this thread. Any entries posted onto the thread will be deleted and not counted as an entry.


This competition is open until SUNDAY 21st JUNE 2015 mid day GMT. TEN correct winning entries will be drawn out of a hat and the winners names will posted here two hours later.

SIMPLE as that!

Should you have questions or queries about the competition, please message us, Do not post your questions onto this thread.


Many thanks to our sponsors Cinema Cult and ScreenPop. Please visit and like their page as a courtesy for helping make your competition possible

Tuesday 10 February 2015

THE WALKING DEAD : GRIMSDYKE NICOTERO TRIBUTE


Comicbook.com reports today: WALKING DEAD tribute to Cushing's Grimsdyke: On tonight's episode of AMC's Talking Dead, host Chris Hardwick and special effects guru Greg Nicotero revealed that the walker pictured above and at right was, in fact, an homage to the classic Tales From the Crypt ghoul known as Grimsdyke.


That undead unfortunate, played by Star Wars and Dr. Who and the Daleks veteran Peter Cushing, can be seen at left...and, yeah, it's easy to see why eagle-eyed fans who spotted things like George Romero's Bub and the in-jokes ranging from The Boondock Saints to An American Werewolf in London, didn't immediately pounce on this one. It's a solid likeness, but hardly identical...mostly because of how far effects have come since Cushing's day.


It isn't that the effects aren't great on Nicotero's end -- it's that the look they were mimicking came from a time when the effects weren't that great, and it would have been odd and out of character for The Walking Dead to have a walker look just like him -- so it was more "in the style of," rather than a more direct copy, and that made him a touch harder to spot."

More on this: HERE 

The Arthur Grimsdyke make up was created by Hammer / Amicus make up legend, Roy Ashton.

Thursday 5 June 2014

SCREAM FACTORY TO RELEASE AMICUS DOUBLE BILL BLU RAY: VAULT OF HORROR UNCUT AND TALES FROM THE CRYPT


NEWS: SCREAM FACTORY TO RELEASE AMICUS DOUBLE BILL BLU RAY: Scream Factory, the horror-thriller offshoot of independent film distributor Shout Factory, has revealed that it plans to release on Blu-ray Freddie Francis' Tales From the Crypt (1972), Roy Ward Baker's Vault of Horror (UNCUT) (1973), and Freddie Francis' The Doctor and the Devils (1985). These releases are expected to arrive on the U.S. market later this year.


Saturday 10 May 2014

#ONSETSATURDAY: CHRISTOPHER LEE GETS THE CREATURE COMFORT AT #HAMMERFILMS BRAY STUDIOS


PCASUK: #ONSETSATURDAY Large scanned photograph: Christopher Lee in the make up chair being attended by make up artist Phil Leakey during the making of #hammerfilms 'The Curse of Frankenstein' (1957 Dir Terence Fisher) The whole make up job would take up to an uncomfortable three hours. Lee would listen to the cricket scores and sometime sing opera or occasionally, something from a G and S Musical with Peter Cushing in the dressing room next-door joining in! The Curse of Frankenstein Starred Peter Cushing as Baron Frankenstein, Robert Urquhart as Paul Krempe, Hazel Court as Elizabeth and Valerie Gaunt as Justine.

Tuesday 29 April 2014

TROY HOWARTH: POTIONS AND VALENTINES: THE AMICUS FILMS OF PETER CUSHING PART FOUR


The House That Dripped Blood marked a highpoint for Cushing’s relationship with Amicus.  The same could not be said of the next (and last) Cushing/Lee/Subotsky outing.  I, Monster (1970) was adapted by Subotsky from the Robert Louis Stevenson novella “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”.  It’s easy to forget that Stevenson constructed his story as a mystery; now it is so much a part of pop culture that even those who’ve never read it or even seen one of the many film versions will be well aware that Jekyll and Hyde are one and the same person.


In adapting the story, Subotsky was scrupulously faithful in almost every respect; for reasons best-known to him, however, he elected to change the name of the central character(s) to Dr. Marlowe and Mr. Blake.  Star Christopher Lee has often railed against the logic in doing this, to say nothing of imposing the idiotic title of I, Monster on the finished film, but his frustration is not evident in the finished product; it is, in fact, one of his most accomplished performances.  Subotsky initially hoped to lure Peter Duffel back to direct, having been pleased with his work on The House That Dripped Blood, but the young director was not keen on becoming typed as a horror director.  Lee suggested a young filmmaker named Stephen Weeks, who had made a short film called 1917 (1970), which had greatly impressed the actor.


Weeks jumped at the chance, but soon found himself in the unenviable position of directing a film in a 3D process which proved impractical, to say the least.  In essence, the process called for perpetual motion in the frame: the camera had to remain in movement and during those few shots that were static, people had to be moving about in the frame.  It was a headache to view with 3D glasses and it was eventually abandoned when Subotsky realized that it simply wasn’t worth all the fuss.

 

Sadly, this still resulted in a film that proved difficult to cut together; transitioning from one tracking shot to another proved unbelievably difficult for editor Peter Tanner, and some scenes were compromised by garish camera angles designed to play up the 3D effects.  On top of that, for all the tricky camerawork, it was a very static piece: long-winded, talky and dull.  Weeks did the best job he could under the circumstances, but it proved to be a disappointment all around.  On the plus side, Lee gives a dynamic performance: his portrayal of the stiff-necked Marlowe is very much in keeping with his screen image, but his performance as the childlike Blake is a revelation: he starts off as an impish child, happy and mischievous in the extreme, but as the story unfolds he becomes more and more horrific … and pathetic.  Lee’s ability to elicit pathos in such horrific characters is one of the elements that keeps him in line with the likes of Karloff and Lon Chaney, Sr.  It’s just unfortunate that one of his best performances had to be in such a dull film.


Cushing doesn’t fare very well here: his role as Marlowe’s lawyer friend, Utterson, is dull and one-dimensional, and the actor doesn’t seem to be able to invest much life into it.  He doesn’t do badly, by any means, but he disappears into the scenery somewhat, and, sadly, some of his scenes are pretty much wrecked by the incompetent thesping of co-star (and wannabe horror star) Mike Raven.  Raven speaks with his own voice here, which only serves to make one better appreciate Hammer’s decision to have him looped by Valentine Dyall in Lust for a Vampire (1970).  I, Monster failed to attract much attention at the box office, and helped to convince Subotsky and Rosenberg that their fortunes lay in the anthology format.

 

Christopher Lee would bid his farewell to Amicus at this stage, but it doesn’t appear that the parting of ways was at all unpleasant for either side. Cushing, however, would remain loyal to his friend Subotsky and would continue to appear in more films for the company. In the meantime, however, his personal life underwent a major upheaval and life, as he knew it, would never be the same.


Following the death of his beloved wife, Helen,  Cushing lost the will to live. He contemplated suicide, but his strict religious principles prevented him from doing so. Sooner than sit around and brood, he opted to throw himself into his work.  He accepted project after project for the pure purpose of remaining busy at all times. In hindsight, he said “Yes” to quite a few projects to which he should have said “No, thanks,” but this was not the case with his next project for Amicus.


Tales from the Crypt was something of a dream-come-true for Milton Subotsky.  The popular comic book was created by William Gaines and Al Feldstein in 1950 and ran on a bi-monthly basis through 1955.  It became the target of a firestorm of criticism when worried parents began to blame it for the rise in juvenile crimes.  In much the same way as people now try to blame video games and violent films for society’s ills, these blackly humorous comics—always with a moral twist at the end—were seen as a corrupting influence.  Bowing to pressure from civic-minded protestors, the comics came to an end in early 1955, but not before they had made a powerful impression on millions of readers, including Milton Subotsky.


Subotsky was able to negotiate a deal with Feldstein and Haines, and, in 1971, Tales from the Crypt went into production.  Subotsky hand-picked five tales and penned the adaptation himself.  The crew would be comprised of some of the studio’s most reliable craftsmen, including Freddie Francis (director), Norman Warwick (cinematographer), Tony Curtis (art director) and Douglas Gamley (composer). As usual, Amicus rounded-up a top-notch cast. Sir Ralph Richardson was lured into making one of his infrequent genre film appearances as the mysterious cryptkeeper; it was a role that called for his presence on set for only a couple of days, but Subotsky and Rosenberg got a lot of mileage out of playing-up his presence.  Inevitably, they also had their eye on bringing Peter Cushing on board, but they hit a roadblock when he declined the role he had been offered.

 

Cushing didn’t find much interest in the role of business tycoon Ralph Jason, the protagonist of the “Wish You Were Here” segment, but according to director Francis he took an instant liking to the character of the kindly garbage man, Arthur Grimsdyke, who is driven to suicide by his heartless neighbors in “Poetic Justice.”  As written by Subotsky, the character was little more than a bit part, but Cushing felt it could be expanded with a minimum of fuss and asked to be allowed to work with Francis on doing so.  Not one to upset his favorite star, Subotsky agreed; the film would benefit enormously as a result.  Other crucial casting would be filled by the likes of Ian Hendry, Joan Collins, Nigel Patrick, Richard Greene, Roy Dotrice, Barbara Murray and Patrick Magee.  Amicus continued their tradition of snagging top drawer British acting talent and Tales from the Crypt would go on to become a huge money maker … though reportedly, Subotsky and Rosenberg saw little of it owing to their production arrangement with Feldstein, Haines and the distributor, Cinerama.


The film rehashes the usual formula: a group of people on a tour of some ancient catacombs become lost and stumble upon a strange man who begins telling them things about their future.  The first segment, “And All Through the House,” deals with Joanne (Joan Collins), who murders her husband on Christmas Eve before falling prey to an escaped lunatic dressed up like Santa Claus.  The second, “Reflection of Death,” depicts what happens when Carl (Ian Hendry) leaves his wife for another woman. The third, “Poetic Justice,” deals with horrid snob James (Robin Phillips, in a role reportedly earmarked for Ralph Bates), who drives his elderly neighbor Arthur Grimsdyke (Peter Cushing) to suicide.  The fourth, “Wish You Were Here,” shows Ralph (Richard Greene) making an ill-fated wish on an ancient statue and not living to regret the consequences.


And the fifth, “Blind Alleys,” deals with stiff-backed Major Rogers (Nigel Patrick), who takes over as the head of a nursing home for the blind and deals with the wrath of the clients when his severe tactics go too far.  At the end, it’s revealed that these are not visions of the past but glimpses of what has already transpired, and that the characters are all on their way to hell …


Freddie Francis directs with economy and a good sense of pace. The film isn’t quite as stylish as his earlier films for the company, but it stands head and shoulders above his other, generally drab and disinterested work of the period. He and cinematographer Norman Warwick create some memorable images, notably in the Cushing segment when the old man returns from the grave to exact vengeance. The stories are an uneven lot, with the second and fourth barely registering at all, but the other stories more than compensate. When Richard Donner, David Giler, Walter Hill, Joel Silver and Robert Zemeckis launched their popular TV show based on the comics in 1989, the first story they elected to film was “And All Through the House.”  It would be a gorier, more over-the-top version, enjoyable in its own way, but the Amicus version tends to linger in the mind longer. “Blind Alleys” and “Wish You Were Here” would also be revisited later on, as well, with the latter appropriately marking the directorial swansong of Freddie Francis.


Tales from the Crypt contains some stellar performances (Nigel Patrick and Patrick Magee are both in great form), but nobody makes a greater impression than Peter Cushing.  His portrayal of Grimsdyke is a thing of beauty.  He is the heart and soul of the film, a reminder of gentle humanity in an otherwise bleak and sardonic universe.  It’s easy to see why Cushing took a shine to the part, which was little more than a plot device in Subotsky’s original conception; with it, he could funnel all of his grief, loneliness and isolation into a form of acting as therapy.  Working with Francis, he created a magnificent portrait of a good man driven to suicide by the callous world in which he lives.   Cushing takes the character to the brink of caricature but never loses his footing, making it one of his most memorable and genuinely heart-wrenching performances.


It would garner him some of the best notices of his career, as well as netting him an award as Best Actor at the second French Convention of Fantasy Film; it was a richly deserved accolade, as the role served to remind one of his ability to inhabit a character role so completely that it was possible to forget for a while that we were watching Peter Cushing at all.

Written by Troy Howarth
with Images and Design by Marcus Brooks
Part Five Coming Soon...


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