Film Review
Fear in the Night was the last
in a series of low budget suspense thrillers that Jimmy Sangster
scripted for Hammer, an effective but some somewhat mechanical
reworking of H.G. Clouzot's classic French thriller
Les
Diaboliques (1955). It is practically the template for
the two television series that Hammer would make in the 1980s:
Hammer House of Horror and
Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense.
Sangster had been a key player in Hammer's success in the 1950s,
writing the screenplays for the early Gothic horrors such as
The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and
Dracula (1958). After he
left Hammer in the early 1970s, Sangster moved to America where he
pursued a successful career as a television scriptwriter.
Fear in the Night was one of
three films that Jimmy Sangster directed for Hammer. He made his
directing debut with
The Horror of Frankenstein
(1970), which featured Ralph Bates as a young Baron Frankenstein.
Hammer had high hopes for Bates, seeing him as a potential replacement
for its main stars Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. Although
Bates featured in several Hammer films, including
Fear in the Night, he never
achieved the profile or popularity enjoyed by Hammer's star
players. When Hammer stopped making films in the late 1970s, the
actor would make regular appearances on British television, starring in
prestigious dramas such as
Poldark
and
Penmarric, and the
popular sitcom
Dear John,
which he made just before his premature death from cancer in 1991.
The two biggest names on the cast list of
Fear in the Night are Peter Cushing
and Joan Collins, neither of whom needs any introduction. Joan
Collins was experiencing a career dip when she appeared in this film,
the kind of low budget production she would probably have shunned had
things been different. Collins had risen to stardom in Hollywood
in the 1950s but, just as quickly, she fell into virtual obscurity by
the early 1970s. The actress would get a second chance at fame
later in the decade, when she appeared in
The Stud (1978) and
The Bitch (1978), paving the way
for her greatest success, as soap queen Alexis Carrington in the hit
series
Dynasty throughout the
1980s.
Fear in the Night is a
polished and compelling production. It is atmospherically shot
and well acted, but it offers few real surprises, particularly for
anyone who has seen Sangster's earlier (and virtually identical)
Taste of Fear (1961).
Ralph Bates is never entirely convincing as the innocent husband and
Judy Geeson's dolly girl hysteria becomes tiring after a while.
Meanwhile, Peter Cushing and Joan Collins are both criminally
underused, which is particularly frustrating as theirs are the most
interesting characters, both having the potential to add more depth and
complexity to the plot. Sangster admitted that the film had to be
padded out with lengthy scenes of Geeson roaming the deserted school to
ensure the film had an acceptable runtime - another reason why the film
doesn't quite hit the mark.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Not long after suffering a nervous breakdown, Peggy finds herself
married to Robert Heller, a teacher at a public school. On the
night before she joins Robert for their new life together, Peggy is
attacked by an unknown assailant with an artificial arm. Robert
assures her that she imagined the attack but Peggy is convinced it was
for real and fears that someone is trying to kill her. The couple
arrive at the school where Robert works and Peggy is surprised to find
the school is deserted and in pristine condition, as if no child had
ever set foot in it. Whilst Robert is away, Peggy explores the
empty classrooms and is surprised by the headmaster, Mr Carmichael who,
despite his politeness, strikes her as someone sinister, someone with a
dark secret. She later meets Carmichael's young wife, Molly, to
whom she takes an immediate dislike. When Robert is away from
home one evening to attend a conference in London, an intruder breaks
into the couple's cottage. Peggy's worst fears are
confirmed. It is Carmichael, the man with the artificial
arm. Stricken with fear, Peggy takes up a rifle and shoots him
dead. The nightmare has only just begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.