Film Review
Loosely based on the popular
Dr Syn
novels by Russell Thorndike,
Captain
Clegg is a rare excursion by Hammer into swashbuckling
territory, although the amount of swashbuckling that goes on in the
film is pretty minimal. It's a compelling tale involving a
band of ingenious smugglers trying to keep their criminal exploits out
of sight of those pesky excise men, directed with flair by Peter Graham
Scott and designed with as much commitment and style as any other
period feature from Hammer. The casting of Peter Cushing as a
smuggler chief masquerading (very effectively) as a man of the cloth is
inspired, but the icing on the cake is having Oliver Reed in the role
of his feisty first lieutenant. Cushing provides the charm,
Reed the muscle - an unbeatable combination.
It is worth remembering that Oliver Reed cut his acting teeth working
for Hammer and turned in some of his finest performances for the
company. He made a more terrifying werewolf than Lon Chaney Jr ever
did in
The Curse of the Werewolf (1961)
and he could give Anthony Perkins' Norman Bates a good run for his money
in the 'scary psychopath' stakes in
Paranoiac (1963).
In
Captain Clegg,
served by an intelligent, well-paced script, both Cushing and Reed are
at their best, aided by a supporting cast that includes other fine
actors including Patrick Allen, Derek Francis, David Lodge and Hammer
regular Michael Ripper. The photography is also of a high
calibre, the location scenes on the Romney Marshes in Kent having a
haunting beauty that adds greatly to the mood of the piece.
Captain Clegg is one of Hammer's
more enjoyable romps through history, a riveting and suspenseful game
of cat and mouse that deserves to be better known than it is.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1792, Captain Collier arrives in an English coastal town
to investigate a possible smuggling operation. He soon
begins to suspect that the local vicar, Dr Blyss, may be implicated,
although his attempts to uncover any evidence of smuggling are
thwarted. Collier becomes interested in
sightings of mysterious phantoms on the marshes. Could this
be a supernatural phenomenon or an attempt to divert suspicion away
from the smugglers...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.