Film Review
The idea of pitting Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's celebrated fictional
detective against the most notorious real-life murder of the Victorian
Era is such an obvious conceit that you wonder why no one thought of it
before this low budget horror schlock came along in the
mid-1960s. Whilst
A Study in
Terror tries desperately hard to be something more than an
exploitation slasher flick, this is essentially all it is, although it
does at least have a thin veneer of respectability with its lavish
production design and distinguished cast. The needlessly
convoluted plot is guaranteed to induce headaches if you make too
serious an attempt to unravel it - the film was after all intended not to
stimulate the cerebellum but to arouse the goose bumps.
Murder by Decree (1978) offers a
far more satisfying encounter between Sherlock Holmes and Jack the
Ripper, sparing us the Hammer horror-style excursions into Grand
Guignol and Barbara Windsor looking as if she has accidentally strayed
onto the set from a
Carry On film.
Hammer's subsequent
Hands of the Ripper (1971)
bears some striking similarities with this film but takes itself somewhat
more seriously.
Whilst they may not be the most memorable of cinema's Holmes and Watson
pairings, John Neville and Donald Houston bring a relish to their
performance which adds to the camp playfulness of the film. It
isn't clear whether this was ever intended to be a serious
horror-thriller or a spoof - the scenes with Babs Windsor and Robert
Morley have an obvious comedic undertone, which works quite well to
offset the film's darker elements. The remarkably detailed sets
may be instantly evocative of Victorian England, but in every other
respect the film shrieks mid-1960s at the top of its voice, John
Scott's score doing its utmost to decimate the aura of menace and
mystery that director James Hill is working so hard to sustain.
A Study in Terror takes itself too
seriously to be effective as a comedy, and not seriously enough to make
a decent mystery thriller. It is however a moderately
entertaining piece of 60s kitsch, made palatable by the juicy
tongue-in-cheek contributions from the likes of Frank Finlay, Judi
Dench and Adrienne Corri. After this, James Hill directed one of
the best-loved British films of the 1960s,
Born Free (1966)
and several episodes of the popular television series
The Avengers (1965-68).
His main claim to fame, however, is that he directed most of the
epsiodes of the original TV series
Worzel Gummidge (1979-81) and
its Australian spin-off.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In late Victorian England, terror stalks the streets of Whitechapel in
the East End of London. Several young women, all prostitutes,
have been mercilessly slain, stabbed to death, by an unknown killer who
has become known as Jack the Ripper. Shortly after he begins his
investigation into these crimes, Sherlock Holmes receives a box of
medical instruments through the post. A surgical scalpel is
missing from the box. Holmes discovers that the tools belonged to
a former medical student named Michael Osborne, who was disowned by his
father, the Duke of Shires. It so happens that the Duke's other
son, Lord Carfax, is giving up his time to help the poor of East London
with a philanthropic surgeon, Dr Murray. Holmes soon realises
that the key to the mystery is the woman Michael Osborne married before
he left England to begin his studies in Paris. Can it be a
coincidence that she too was a prostitute...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.