Film Review
A fang-baring Christopher Lee makes a triumphant return as the dentally
endowed prince of horror in this spine-tingling chiller - a classic of
its kind from Hammer Film Productions, the British company that breathed new life
(and several hundred lorry-loads of theatrical blood) into the
old-fashioned horror genre. Lee made the part his own when he
starred in Hammer's earlier film
Dracula (1958), in which he was
pitted against the equally iconic Peter Cushing, a match that would be
replayed many, many times in Lee's subsequent blood-stained
career. Although the actor would soon regret becoming so closely
associated with one character, no would deny that he is the definitive
Count Dracula - surpassing even Bela Lugosi in screen presence,
elegance and blood-curdling creepiness.
Dracula: Prince of Darkness is
an enjoyable fantasy horror romp but it doesn't quite match up to the
earlier
Dracula (which is
referenced in the film's prologue). The combined talent of Andrew
Keir and Francis Matthews is no substitute for Peter Cushing and the
plot is at times so formulaic and predictable that it feels like the
output of a computer program. Another disappointment is that
Dracula is silent throughout the film - the story is that Christopher
Lee felt the dialogue was so awful that he refused to say his lines -
and this robs the monster of some of his power and humanity.
Of course, the film makes up for its failings in other ways - most
evidently in its gloriously over-the-top set pieces, which exemplify
Hammer's attempt to revive the art of the Grand Guignol. The
highpoint is the sequence in which the vampiric prince is reanimated
by the blood of one of his hapless victims, which manages to be both
spell-bindingly stylish and viscerally horrifying. Another
masterstroke is the way in which the Count is dispatched at the end of
the film, which does the deed without the tried and tested
methods involving crucifixes, sunlight and wooden stakes. It may
not be perfect, the script may be a bit ropey in places, the pace
uneven, but this spirited venture into Gothic horror, British-style,
has plenty to chill the marrow and pep up your nightmares.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Terence Fisher film:
Island of Terror (1966)
Film Synopsis
Englishman Charles Kent persuades his brother Alan and their two wives,
Helen and Diana, to make a tour of the Carpathian
mountains. When they arrive in the area they find the
locals strangely fearful and are warned by a priest, Father Sandor, not
to continue with their exploration of the mountains. When their
coach driver refuses to take them on to the next stop on their
itinerary, the two couples find themselves stranded at the entrance to
an old castle. Entering the castle, they find it deserted, and
yet the dinner table is set for four. An unkempt butler named
Klove appears and serves them dinner, explaining that he is fulfilling
the wishes of his former master, the late Count Dracula.
Unbeknown to the four tourists, Dracula was a vampire, a blood sucking
fiend who, it is believed, was destroyed ten years ago. Klove has
preserved his master's ashes and knows that all he needs to bring the
Count back to life is to soak them in blood - human blood...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.