Thursday, 13 June 2013
SIMPLE AS THAT. SIR CHRSITOPHER LEE ON 'THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN' (1957)
Labels:
bafa winner.,
hammer films,
make up monster,
mary shelley,
mime,
peter cushing,
terence fisher,
the creature,
the curse of frankenstein
TIME WITHOUT PITY: PETER CUSHING AND MICHAEL REDGRAVE PUBLICITY STILL.
CAST:
                
            Peter Cushing,         
                
            Ann Todd,         
                
            George Devine,         
                
            Renee Houston,         
                
            Lois Maxwell,         
                
            Alec McCowen,         
                
            Leo McKern,         
                
            Joan Plowright,         
                
            Michael Redgrave
SYNOPSIS:
David Graham has only 24 hours to save his son, Alec, from hanging. 
Alec has been convicted of murdering his girlfriend, Jenny Cole. David visits the home of wealthy car magnate, Robert Stanford, where the girlfriend was killed.
Graham finds a number of possible suspects, including Stanford's 
young wife, Honor, his secretary Vickie Harker and also Alec's friend 
Brian, who is Stanford's adopted son.
Directed by
Joseph Losey 
Cinematography
Freddie Francis 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Without_Pity 
Labels:
death sentence,
freddie francis,
joseph losey.,
micahel redgrave,
peter cushing,
time without pity
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
NEWS: PETER CUSHING ITEMS GO UNDER THE HAMMER FOR PILGRIMS HOSPICE CHARITY
A selection of personal items belonging
 to Peter Cushing went under the hammer this morning at the Canterbury 
Auction and Gallery, UK. Included in Lot Number 1026 were: Elizabeth II 
silver miniature commemorative pipe - "Pipe Man of the Year 1968" Award,
 a Dunhill lighter, two walking canes, a Giclee print after a 
watercolour by Peter Cushing - "Whitstable Harbour", a pocket sun dial 
and compass, four books signed by Peter Cushing, and a copy of "Peter 
Cushing - The Complete Memoirs", signed by the Executor. The hammer came
 down on £1,700. The items were sold on behalf of the Pilgrims Hospice, 
Canterbury, UK.
Labels:
canterbury,
canterbury auction house,
complete memoirs of Peter Cushing.,
dunhill lighter,
hospice,
kent,
memorabilia,
peter cushing,
pilgrims hospice,
pipeman of the year,
walking canes,
whitstable harbour
Saturday, 8 June 2013
TROY HOWARTH REVIEWS: DR WHO AND THE DALEKS AND DALEKS INVASION EARTH 2150 AD WITH PCASUK GALLERY
In the interest of full disclosure, I must confess: I am not a science fiction buff, and I have never seen an episode of Dr. Who in its entirety. I am also approaching these two films, clearly aimed at juvenile audiences, from the perspective of a somewhat cynical and adult perspective. In short, I am not the “ideal” audience for these two pictures – but given that reviews should encompass all varying points of view, hopefully my perspective will not seem invalid.
Having dispensed with that, let us get down to brass tacks.  Dr.
 Who made a tremendous splash on UK audiences in the 1960s, initially 
with the distinguished actor William Hartnell cast in the title role.  The show was low on budget but big on ideas, and like so many programs of its era, it was in black and white.  When
 producer Joe Vigoda decided the time might be right to bring the good 
doctor to cinema screens, he knew it would be necessary to sweeten the 
pot by adding color – and widescreen photography.  Given 
that Hartnell’s name was unknown outside of the UK – and given that much
 could be said for the character of Dr. Who himself, who had yet to 
mushroom into an international “brand name” of sorts – it was decided 
that it would have to be sold on the basis of a bigger box office draw.  Vigoda
 was affiliated with
 producers Max J. Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky, the heads of Amicus 
Productions in the UK , and so the casting of Peter Cushing in the lead 
seemed a master stroke.
Cushing was already an established name on both side of “the pond,” and his presence would help to ensure that audiences would respond to the concept. Screenwriting chores inevitably fell to Subotsky, a process expedited by the fact that Terry Nation, who created the series, was unavailable. In addition to watering the material down so that it would be more suitable for the matinee crowd, Subotsky also altered the character of Dr. Who himself – in the series, he was an alien and a Time Lord, whereas in the film he’s a kindly old duffer and most definitely human. The changes put Cushing firmly in “kooky old man” mode, which hardly shows him at his best.
Cushing was already an established name on both side of “the pond,” and his presence would help to ensure that audiences would respond to the concept. Screenwriting chores inevitably fell to Subotsky, a process expedited by the fact that Terry Nation, who created the series, was unavailable. In addition to watering the material down so that it would be more suitable for the matinee crowd, Subotsky also altered the character of Dr. Who himself – in the series, he was an alien and a Time Lord, whereas in the film he’s a kindly old duffer and most definitely human. The changes put Cushing firmly in “kooky old man” mode, which hardly shows him at his best.
The first of the film films, Dr. Who and the Daleks, was released 
in 1965 – with much of the same technical personnel carried over from 
another, vastly superior, Cushing-Amicus vehicle: The Skull.  The
 story deals with Dr. Who’s invention of a time travel device known as 
TARDIS, which enables one to be transported to any time frame, past or 
present, anywhere in the universe.  The plot is set in 
motion when the beau (Roy Castle, wearing thin early on and getting more
 and more irritating as the story unfolds) of Dr. Who’s granddaughter 
(Jennie Linden, previously terrorized in Hammer’s Nightmare, 1963) 
accidentally triggers the device, thus transporting them all – including
 Dr. Who’s younger granddaughter (Roberta Tovey) – to a remote future, 
wherein the world has been reduced to ashes and is lorded over by the 
power-hungry Daleks, a race of robots.
To his credit, director Gordon Flemyng does a decent job with a laughable screenplay.  The
 humor is flat and heavy handed, and Cushing’s absent minded professor 
routine is about as stale as stale can be, but the low budget production
 has some nice camerawork and is paced at a good clip.  The
 Techniscope framing is eye catching throughout, and some of the 
lighting (courtesy of John Wilcox) evokes the ornate, color-drenched 
aesthetic of Italian genre filmmaker Mario Bava.  Unfortunately, all the technical polish imaginable can only do so much to redeem such a hopelessly hokey enterprise as this.  There
 is zero suspense, the characters are flat and listless, and the whole 
thing is so relentlessly pitched at children that it seems virtually 
impossible for a more mature audience to get much out of it.  Cushing would
 normally present as something of an oasis in such a situation, but in this instance, even he falters.  To be fair to the actor, he played the character as written by Subotsky – as a sweet natured eccentric.  To
 be fair to the audience, however, this only serves to make the 
character tolerable in small doses – and with him at the center of so 
much of the action, he is ill equipped to fill the role of hero.  The
 supporting cast includes a number of actors (playing part of a tribe 
known as the "Thals," who are being oppressed by the power-hungry 
Daleks) who look embarrassed to be kitted out in ludicrous wigs and 
heavy eye liner, including Michael Coles, who would later reunite with 
Cushing on Hammer’s two modern day Dracula adventures: Dracula AD 1972 
and The Satanic Rites of Dracula.
The film opened to withering reviews and big box office, so Amicus wasted no time lining up a sequel. Cushing returned to play the lead once again, apparently on the understanding that he would only do it if they brought back Roberta Tovey to play his granddaughter. And thus it came to be, Daleks' Invasion Earth: 2150 AD would emerge in 1966...
Here, Dr. Who is accompanied by his niece (Jill Curzon), 
granddaughter (Tovey) and a hapless Scotland Yard bobbie to the year 
2150... for no real apparent purpose in particular.  Upon arrival, the 
group of time travelers discover that London is now a bombed out shell 
of its former glory, with a group of freedom fighters engaged in a 
desperate struggle against an alien force... which turns out to be those
 pesky Daleks.
Unlike many sequels, this one manages to improve upon its 
predecessor - but given the quality of what came before it, it seems to 
be more of a case of the filmmakers learning from their mistakes.  
Flemyng is again in charge of direction, and again he makes good use of 
the 'scope format.  The canvas is larger this time, with more exterior 
shots and more ambitious matte and miniature work; alas, the quality of 
the FX is highly variable, ranging from the effective (some of the matte
 work is pretty well done) to the downright laughable (the Dalek 
spacecraft is plainly supported by strings).  Cushing is allowed to play
 things a little more low key this time, which is most definitely for 
the best.  It's still not a characterization that will ever rank among 
his more distinguished, but at least there isn't quite so much emphasis 
on his being a slightly dotty old duffer this time
 around.
The supporting cast is an improvement, as well.  Bernard Cribbins 
is far more engaging as the outsider roped into the plot compared to Roy
 Castle in the first film.  Cribbins had previously played opposite 
Cushing in Hammer's She (1964) and would go on to play the nasty bar man
 in Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972).  Tovey is plucky and engaging as the 
doctor's brainy grandchild, while Andrew Keir adds plenty of gusto as 
one of the freedom fighters.  Keir had already effectively subbed for 
Cushing as the gun toting Father Sandor in the Van Helsing-less Dracula 
Prince of Darkness (1965) and would later go on to replace the ailing 
thespian on Hammer's troubled Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971).  
Philip Madoc, later to star in the superior British crime series A Mind 
for Murder, is also in good form as a mercenary whose lust for cash gets
 the better of him.
On the downside, the film is saddled with a horrendous score by 
Bill McGuffie.  McGuffie would later add an equally jarring lounge score
 to the tacky Cushing vehicle Corruption (1967), so clearly he did not 
make much improvement over time.  The first film had been scored by 
Malcolm Lockyer - who also provided the music for the Cushing sci-fi 
items Island of Terror (1965) and Night of the Big Heat (1967) - and his
 music, though not among his finest efforts, was far better suited to 
the material.  John Wilcox's classy photography adds as much gloss here 
as it had in the first film.
Sadly (or fortunately, depending on one's point of view), lighting
 did not strike twice.  The sequel garnered reviews every bit as dismal,
 but it failed to repeat the first film's box office performance.  
Subotsky and company were ready and willing to push ahead with a third 
Dr. Who adventure, but it was ultimately decided that it was a case of 
diminishing returns, to plans to continue with the doctor's adventures 
were scuttled.  Given that the sequel improved on the first film in so 
many areas, it's not unreasonable to suppose that the third may have 
been better still... that's firmly in the realm of supposition, however,
 as we are left with only two vehicles for Cushing's Dr. Who.
Fans of the series have long dismissed the films for being too far removed from the mythos of the series, while other viewers may have a hard time relating to them on any level. For matinee audiences of the 1960s, however, these were probably rip roaring entertainment - and Cushing can hardly be faulted for essaying the character as (re)conceived by Subotsky. Fans of the actor will want to check these films out, and this is much more convenient to do now that they have emerged on DVD and Blu Ray in immaculate condition courtesy of Studio Canal.
 
Fans of the series have long dismissed the films for being too far removed from the mythos of the series, while other viewers may have a hard time relating to them on any level. For matinee audiences of the 1960s, however, these were probably rip roaring entertainment - and Cushing can hardly be faulted for essaying the character as (re)conceived by Subotsky. Fans of the actor will want to check these films out, and this is much more convenient to do now that they have emerged on DVD and Blu Ray in immaculate condition courtesy of Studio Canal.
Labels:
bernard cribbins,
blu ray,
dalek films,
daleks invasion earth. 2150 ad,
dr who,
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dr who.,
drwho and the daleks,
jennie linden,
peter cushing,
roy castle,
subotsky,
terry nation
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
ACID BATH HEAD: PETER CUSHING 'THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN' (1957)
The Curse of Frankenstein. Peter Cushing with the crow-pecked head from 
the gallows, ready for the acid bath and created by make up artist, Phil
 Leakey.
Labels:
acid bath,
dummy head.,
gallows,
hammer films,
make up,
peter cushing centenary,
phil leakey,
the curse of frankenstein
MAYBE THE GREATEST LINE IN THE HAMMER FILM 'FRANKENSTEIN' SERIES : PETER CUSHING 'FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED' (1969)
Labels:
anthony nelson keys,
baron frankenstein,
bert batt,
best dialogue,
key still.,
peter cushing,
terence fisher. frankenstein must be destroyed
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
VAN HELSING AND DRACULA : DRACULA AD 1972 : PETER CUSHING AND CHRISTOPHER LEE.
Two terrific colourised publicity photographs recently posted at https://www.facebook.com/petercushingblog and the work of member Paul Willetts Crowley. Peter Cushing as Lawrence Van Helsing and Chrsitopher lee as Dracula from the prologue sequnce of  Hammer Films 'Dracula AD 1972' Ditected by Alan Gibson Come along and join us and find a few more colourised prints plus a whole archive of vintage Peter Cushing material and stills!
Labels:
black park,
dracula ad 1972,
hammer films.,
peter cushing,
stagecoach,
van helsing,
vintage lobby stills,
warner brothers
VERONICA CARLSON, SIMON WARD AND PETER CUSHING 'FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED' (1969)
A LARGE SCAN from a colour contact print from 'Frankenstein Must
 Be Destroyed' (Hammer Films. 1969. Terence Fisher) Featuring Peter 
Cushing, Simon Ward and Veronica Carlson.
Labels:
frankenstein must be destroyed,
hammer films,
hammer horror.,
peter cushing,
petercushing at 100,
simon ward,
terence fisher,
veronica carlson
Monday, 3 June 2013
BOOK SIGNINGS: PETER CUSHING ON THE BOOK TOURS.
Tired out! Peter Cushing plays it up for the press, during a signing session for his second book, 'Past Forgetting' 
Peter saying thank you, in his own inimitable way....
Saturday, 1 June 2013
AUTOGRAPHED COLOURISED PORTRAIT OF PETER CUSHING
ANDREW SWAINSON 'DRACULA' PRINT NOW AVAILABLE
We are sure many of you will remember the superb Andrew Swainson DRACULA 
print we offered as a prize in our Peter Cushing Birthday Competition? 
Well, following the huge interest in so many of you enquiring about how you
 could purchase your own print, we're happy to tell you the print is now
 for sale...and with a 10% discount for PCASUK members! The discount 
offer is only open for orders until 8am gmt Monday 3rd June. 
When 
ordering please quote the code : PCAS100. Just click on this link to 
order: http://www.andrewswainson.bigcartel.com/
Labels:
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christopher lee,
dracula,
hammer films,
pcas100.,
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print
Friday, 31 May 2013
TARDIS LANDS ON WHITSTABLE BEACH ON PETER CUSHING'S 100TH BIRTHDAY TO MAKE MONEY FOR BBC CHILDREN IN NEED
Jason Onion took to the beach in Whitstable to raise money for the BBC CHILDREN IN NEED charity 2013 with his full size replica Dr Who TARDIS during the Peter Cushing Centenary Weekend. The public donated to have their photograph taken with the TARDIS along with theor own chunk of Peter Cushing's 100th Bithday cake. Congratulations to Jason who raised £205.05!
Labels:
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BFI ANNOUNCES HAMMER 'DRACULA' AND 'THE MUMMY' RESTORED SCREENINGS FOR AUGUST 2013
The BFI has announced the screening of two RESTORED Hammer Films classics for AUGUST: DRACULA on AUGUST 30th 2013 and THE MUMMY for AUGUST 31st 2013. TICKETS go on sale THURSDAY 6th JUNE 11.30 am. 
THE MUMMY and DRACULA: These screenings will PREMIER at The British Museum! 
LINK TO DETAILS HERE:https://whatson.bfi.org.uk/Online/monster-weekend 
Labels:
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the mummy
Thursday, 30 May 2013
TROY HOWARTH REVIEWS : PETER CUSHING AND CHRISTOPHER LEE : HAMMER FILMS 'THE MUMMY' AND THOSE UNRAVELED AFTER....
It’s a piece of Hollywood folklore that would
        appear to have
        been in place much longer, but – apart from a few gag-oriented
        shorts made
        during the silent era – the mummy wasn’t part of the horror
        pantheon until Karl
        Freund unleashed The Mummy in 1932.  Legend
        has it that, cinematographer-turned-director Freund made the
        film in response
        to Tod Browning’s Dracula, which he had photographed in 1931.  Freund, a major figure in
        the days of German
        expressionist cinema, was said to have been dissatisfied with
        the staid
        approach Browning took to the material, and so he approached The
        Mummy as a
        sort of thinly veiled remake designed to “school” the other
        director on how it
        should have been done.  Whether
        this is
        really true is a matter of speculation, but there’s no denying a
        certain
        structural similarity between the two films, as an undead being
        works his magic
        on a damsel in distress, while an elder savant figure looks to
        destroy the
        creature before he accomplishes his goal.
Many viewers have complained that the film is slow and
        lacking in
        incident, and on the face of it this is true enough – it is
        really more of a
        tone poem, and whether one appreciates it depends on whether
        they respond to
        the film’s peculiar atmosphere. 
        Even so,
        the opening of the picture, with Boris Karloff’s titular
        character stirring to
        life and shambling off into the night, leaving young
        archaeologist Bramwell
        Fletcher in a state of abject hysteria, is justly celebrated –
        it also happens
        to be the only sequence in the film where Karloff is presented
        in the iconic
        makeup of a full blown reanimated mummy. 
        For the rest of the film, he adopts the guise of wizened
        Egyptian
        scholar Ardath Bey, complete with fez and parchment-like skin.
When Universal decided to
        revisit the
        property in 1940, with The Mummy’s Hand, they introduced the
        character of
        Kharis, the mummy, an unstoppable force who would come back for
        a series of
        progressively weaker sequels.  The
character
        – slightly rechristened as Klaris – would return to face his
        mightiest foes in the inevitable Abbott and Costello Meet the
        Mummy (1955).
When the time came for Hammer Films to make
        their version of
        The Mummy, they were only able to do so by virtue of a new
        production deal with
        Universal-International Pictures. 
        The
        company sensibly decided to reunite much of the same team which
        had been
        responsible for The Curse of Frankenstein (1957) and Dracula
        (1958), including
        director Terence Fisher, cinematographer Jack Asher, screen
        writer Jimmy
        Sangster, and stars Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee.  By this stage in the game,
        the crew had
        become very familiar with each other and their working methods,
        and The Mummy
        finds them honing their craft to an even greater degree.
Sangster always maintained that he never saw
        any of the
        Universal horror films, and while he may have been truthful in
        this, he did
        have access to the scripts of the old mummy series when he was
        preparing this
        screenplay.  This is
        borne out by the
        repetition of various character names and incidents that had
        been peppered
        throughout the franchise, and it has the unwitting effect of
        making The Mummy
        into something of a “greatest hits” package of mummy films of
        the past.  Truth be told,
        if the film has a major
        deficit, it is in the screenplay.
        Sangster is not able to bring anything resembling the
        fresh perspective
        that had made his Frankenstein and Dracula screenplays so
        successful, and it
        has been accurately noted by some critics that it relies,
        instead, on a series
        of murder scenes which make it into something of a precursor to
        the stalk and slash
        films of the 1970s onwards.  Sangster
also
        displays a certain laziness, in using the name of an Egyptian
        city ( Karnak )
        as the name of the God to whom Kharis is a high priest.
On the upside, the film is beautifully
        realized by Terence
        Fisher.  By this time, he
        had developed a
        real flair for the Gothic, and working in harmony with
        cinematographer Asher,
        he creates some of the most memorable images in his entire
        filmography.  The film
        has been criticized for its patently
        phony exterior sets, but in fact most of these sets suit the
        dreamlike,
        unrealistic atmosphere on display. 
        Only
        a clumsy Egyptian flashback scene feels like a misstep, and the
        remainder of
        the film is smooth in its execution.  The
        scenes of Kharis in the swamp don’t approach any kind of
        realism, but they
        clearly don’t aspire to, either. 
        Asher
        utilizes lighting which makes his approach on the initial
        Frankenstein Dracula
        pictures look positively staid – vivid highlights of red, green
        and blue
        spotlighting help to emphasize the theatrical nature of the
        proceedings, and
        the end result was praised by none other than star Christopher
        Lee (in an
        interview included on the CD release of Franz Weizenstein’s
        score for the film)
        as “the best looking film Hammer ever made.”
The cast performs beautifully.  Lee gives one of his most
        affecting
        performances as the mummy.  A
        lesser
        actor would have simply soldiered through the makeup and made no
        real attempt
        at building character, but Lee does not resort to such tactics.  His gift for mime comes
        through frequently,
        and he makes the character come to life with genuine pathos
        instead of coming
        off as a mere killing machine.  Peter
Cushing
        is saddled with a less fully realized character than usual, but
        he
        manages to convey a certain sadness and melancholy of his own.  The scene in which he goes
        out of his way to
        antagonize the sinister Mehemet Bey (an equally splendid George
        Pastell)
        includes some choice dialogue, which the actor clearly relishes.  Interestingly, whereas
        Kharis had been
        depicted as having paralysis on the left side of his body in the
        Universal
        film, thus requiring Tom Tyler (in The Mummy’s Hand) and Lon
        Chaney, Jr (in the
        subsequent straight horror outings) to drag a leg and keep an
        arm motionless,
        here Kharis is presented as limber and fast moving, while
        Cushing is saddled
        with a lame leg.  This
        has the effect of
        making Cushing’s hero figure somewhat ineffectual against
        Kharis, thus upping
        the suspense angle considerably during their confrontation
        scenes.

Beautiful Yvonne
        Furneaux (later to work with
        such major filmmakers as Federico Fellini and Roman Polanski)
        may not have
        taken the project very seriously (she reportedly loved Cushing
        but had no
        appreciation of Fisher’s talents) but she still gives a strong
        performance in
        an admittedly one dimensional role, as Cushing’s doting wife –
        who also happens
        to be the reincarnation of Kharis’ beloved Princess Ananka (this
        reincarnation
        business was a trope in the mummy series, and would later spill
        into various
        Dracula adaptations, ranging from the Dan Curtis telefilm of
        1973 to the recent
        Dario Argento version of 2012). 
        Felix
        Aylmer (Cushing’s costar in Laurence Olivier’s Hamlet), Raymond
        Huntley (once
        famous for playing Dracula on stage), Michael Ripper (making one
        of his first
        Hammer Gothic appearances, and soon to become a staple) and the
        aforementioned
        Pastell also shine in their supporting roles
With its lush cinematography, gorgeous score
        and fine
        acting, The Mummy found favor at the box office – thus setting
        off an
        inevitable chain of follow ups (not really sequels) of its own.  Michael Carreras graduated
        from producing the
        first film to producing, writing and directing the first follow
        up, The Curse
        of the Mummy’s Tomb (1964).  Granted,
Carreras
        had a tough act to follow – but the end result is one of
        Hammer’s
        least successful Gothic horrors, and arguably the worst horror
        effort of their
        golden period.
The story deals with an American showman
        (Fred Clark) who
        finances an expedition to discover the mummy of Ra-Anted; when
        the mummy is
        uncovered, the showman takes it on the road for the benefit of
        curious
        yokels.  Things get messy
        when the
        creature comes to life and goes on a rampage.Carreras clearly took his inspiration from
        King Kong (1933),
        with Clark subbing for Robert
        Armstrong’s Carl
        Denham.  Alas, despite
        impressive
        production values and beautiful widescreen cinematography
        courtesy of the great
        Otto Heller (Peeping Tom), the film lumbers as slowly as its
        bandaged
        protagonist.   Clark 
        is a hoot as the prototypical “Ugly American,” and he manages to
        work in a bit
        of humanity to the role where he is able. 
        Terence Howard is also effective as the suave nobleman
        with a mysterious
        secret, while George Pastell reprises his role as the mummy’s
        “guardian,”
        albeit in a more sympathetic vein this time. 
        Michael Ripper is squandered in a blink and you’ll miss
        it appearance,
        however, and Ronald Howard (TV’s Sherlock Holmes) and Jeanne
        Roland make for a
        dull romantic couple.  The
        mummy is
        played under wraps by Dickie Owen, but he is given scant
        opportunity to function
        as anything more than a brute.The film performed reasonably well when
        released as part of
        double bill with Terence Fisher’s vastly superior The Gorgon,
        and Hammer
        revisited the material yet again with The Mummy’s Shroud (1966).
Here, another crass businessman (John
        Phillips) bankrolls an
        expedition, this time headed by distinguished archaeologist Sir
        Basil Walden
        (Andre Morell). The tomb
        of Kah-to-bey
        is unearthed, thus unleashing the fury of guardian mummy Prem;
        gradually the
        members of the expedition fall victim to the curse of the
        mummy’s tomb.The film was written and directed by the
        talented John
        Gilling, who had just completed two very fine Cornwall-set
        Gothics for the
        studio: The Plague of the Zombies and The Reptile.  Inspiration was running dry
        by the time this
        one rolled along, and Gilling would later dismiss it as a bit of
        hackwork for a
        paycheck.  Truth be told,
        he handles the
        material with considerable flair.
The
        issue, however, is that the film suffers from the same slightly
        flea-bitten
        look which was beginning to affect Hammer’s product around this
        time.  Producer Anthony
        Nelson Keys had hit upon the
        idea of filming two films back to back on the same sets, with
        the same
        personnel, but while this idea was cost effective, it started to
        take a toll on
        the quality of Hammer’s product. 
        Thus,
        The Mummy’s Shroud shared much of the same cramped sets that
        were utilized by
        Frankenstein Created Woman, and both films have a rather flat,
        ugly look to
        them, especially when compared to the product Hammer had been
        releasing before. As with the films that preceded it, The
        Mummy’s Shroud is
        essentially structured as a series of elaborate revenge-murder
        scenes.  Gilling tackles
        these setpiece with
        tremendous verve, however, resulting in a few nicely timed
        shocks.  The scene of a
        character having his head
        crushed like a ripe melon by the mummy is suggested rather than
        shown, but the
        choice camera angles and sound effects give it an appropriately
        icky
        quality.  Alas, the film
        is again
        burderned with another awful Egyptian flashback scene – this one
        actually
        commences the action, and it could be that the film’s lousy
        reputation is due
        to this; by starting the film off on such a bad note, it may
        have lost some of
        its audience before it had much of a chance to win them over.
It would take Hammer several years to revisit
        the mummy
        subgenre, and when they did, it would prove to be one of their
        most bedeviled
        projects.  Blood from the
        Mummy’s Tomb
        (1971), adapted by screenwriter Christopher Wicking from Bram
        Stoker’s novel
        The Jewel of Seven Stars, is one of the most willfully unusual
        titles in the
        history of Hammer horror.  Wicking’s
fragmented
        approach to storytelling was popular for a time during the late
        60s
        and early 70s, and he would write some of the more inventive and
        unusual horror
        films of the period for Hammer (Demons of the Mind) and AIP 
        (Scream and Scream Again).  Blood
        from
        the Mummy’s Tomb sees him working from the Val Lewton approach
        to horror, with
        ample suggestion and nothing in the way of a bandaged, shambling
        monster.  In its place,
        we have statuesque Valerie Leon
        as the demonic Queen Tera, who is reincarnated into the form of
        naïve Margaret
        Fuchs.  She is the
        daughter of obsessed
        archeaologist Professor Julian Fuchs (Andrew Keir), whose
        research into Tera
        has put them both in considerable danger.
Stoker’s story would later be adapted as an
        episode of Tales
        of Mystery and Imagination, with Isobel Black in the central
        role, and it would
        again be adapted for the big budget but rather dreary Charlton
        Heston vehicle,
        The Awakening (1980).  Blood,
        for all its
        faults, remains the best version of the story. 
        It was directed by the brilliant Seth Holt, who had
        previously directed
        two of Hammer’s finest films: Taste of Fear (1960) and The Nanny
        (1965).  Holt had
        established himself as a major
        talent as a film editor, and he would find himself at the helm
        of a series of
        beautifully accomplished films – however, he was also an
        alcoholic, and his
        problems with this disease prevented him from directing more
        than a handful of
        pictures, as well as some episodes of episodic television.  Blood would become his
        final film – and one
        he didn’t even have the advantage of completing.  Several weeks into
        production, Holt
        died.  He was only 47
        years old.  Executive
        producer Michael Carreras was put
        in the difficult position of trying to salvage the film.  He toyed with the idea of
        scrapping the
        material and starting afresh, and he approached Hammer stalwart
        Don Sharp with
        this idea.  Sharp balked,
        however, and
        Carreras realized that it would be more cost-efficient to
        soldier on and
        complete the picture himself.  He
        was
        reportedly horrified by what Holt shot, however, as it was done
        in a very
        strange, elliptical manner.
He
        would
        later say that he figured Holt had a plan in mind, but he had
        not shared this
        plan with anybody else; it therefore fell to him to make some
        sense of the
        material.  He fired
        Holt’s favored
        editor, and resumed production with himself installed as the new
        director.  Final credit
        would go to Holt alone, however,
        though there’s little question that the end result bears only
        scant resemblance
        to what he would have assembled, had he been able to complete
        it.  Carreras deserves
        credit for making something
        workable out of the material, but it has to be said that his
        talent as a
        director was considerably less than Holt’s. 
        Thus, for every moody, beautifully realized sequence,
        there’s another far
        clunkier and less elegant scene to slog through.  The end result is uneven,
        with at least one
        sequence (the death of a major character in a car crash) coming
        off as utterly
        laughable because of how poorly it is staged (this sequence,
        incidentally, was
        not shot by Holt).
Leon 
        dominates the film.  Though
        dubbed by
        another actress, she brings a truly ethereal presence to her
        role.  Her transition
        from normal young woman to
        wanton and vile monster is successfully managed – and sexist as
        it may sound,
        she certainly does fill out his various eye catching outfits
        (skin watchers
        need to bear in mind, however, that she refused to do nudity –
        so that’s a body
        double when she gets out of bed in the nude). 
        Andrew Keir (Quatermass and the Pit), a powerful and
        compelling actor,
        is cast in an unusually weak and powerless role – reminding one
        of how Andre
        Morell fared in The Mummy’s Shroud. 
        Fuchs is sidelined with a stroke early on and spends much
        of the action
        staring wildly from his bed.  It
        is well
        known by now that Peter Cushing had been cast in this role, and
        stills exist
        showing him acting with Leon 
        for one day.  Sadly, his
        beloved wife
        Helen became desperately ill, and Cushing bailed to be with her
        – she would die
        soon after.  For once,
        this was a mummy
        film that truly did appear to be cursed. 
        Whether Cushing would have fared any better in the role
        is open to
        speculation, but one cannot complain about Keir’s performance –
        it’s just not
        that dynamic of a part to begin with. 
        James Villiers (The Nanny) is superbly sinister as
        Corbeck, a member of
        Fuchs’ team who has gone off the deep end of the occult.  Villiers plays the role
        with a touch of camp
        villainy, but he definitely makes a tremendous impression and
        steals many of
        his scenes.  Aubrey
        Morris (A Clockwork
        Orange) also adds to the camp factor with his bizarre but
        memorable portrayal
        of a family GP with a penchant for wearing dark glasses.
Though understandably uneven, Blood from the
        Mummy’s Tomb
        remains one of the company’s most successfully offbeat offerings
        of the
        period.  In lieu of buxom
        vampires and
        heaping helpings of nudity, it offers up a moody and elliptical
        approach to a
        familiar type of subject matter. 
        It
        would become the final mummy adventure for the company, and all
        things
        considered, it made for a good stopping point.
The mummy would inevitably rise again under
        the auspices of
        other production companies – the blood and guts fueled 80s would
        see Dawn of
        the Mummy, for example, while the current propensity for
        overdone CGI 
        and mindless thrills would be reflected in Stephen Sommers’
        mummy films for
        Universal – but Hammer’s contributions remain noteworthy, with
        their 1959
        original comparing well to the 1932 classic that started it all.
Labels:
blood from the mummys tomb. peter cushing.,
chaney,
hammer films,
karloff,
the mummy,
the mummys hand,
the mummys shroud,
universal,
valerie leon,
yvonne furneaux
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