Film Review
Christopher Lowe suffers a similarly dismal fate when he steals a medal
from the same antiques dealer. He did this to impress an old war
veteran, Jim Underwood, whom he has recently befriended.
Underwood's daughter takes a liking to Lowe and offers to release him
from his loveless marriage...
If Reggie Warren had known what became of Charlton and Lowe he probably
wouldn't have conned the antiques dealer into selling him a valuable
silver snuff box for four pounds. It isn't long before
retribution comes Warren's way, in the form of an invisible elemental
that sits on his shoulder, scaring away dogs and generally sucking the
goodness out of him. Luckily, Warren meets a clairvoyant who
knows how to exorcise evil spirits - or does she?
William Seaton is victim number four. He cannot afford to pay the
full asking price for an ancient wooden door but the antiques dealer
accepts what he is offered. Seaton's girlfriend thinks he is mad
to fit such a grand door to a stationery cupboard but Seaton soon
realises that the door is actually a portal to something far more
portentous. Passing beyond the door one day, he finds himself in
a large room lit by an eerie blue glow. On a table is a book
which explains the room's purpose. It was built by the 17th
Century Occultist Sir Michael Sinclair to trap all those who enter it,
so that he may be perpetually renewed by their soul. If Seaton
short-changed the man who sold him the door he is surely doomed...
From
Beyond the Grave was the
last, and easily one of the best, in a series of anthology horror films
made by Amicus Productions in the 1960s and '70s. In common with
its nearest rival, Hammer Films, Amicus was almost exclusively
dedicated to making low budget horror films, and did so with great
success, many of its films now being considered cult classics. It
was the classic British horror film
Dead of Night (1945) that
inspired Amicus to make
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965), the first of its portmanteau horror films, establishing a
sub-genre that proved to be immensely popular on both sides of the
Atlantic for well over a decade.
Unlike Hammer, who were pretty well wedded to the Gothic horror format,
Amicus had more freedom to explore different facets of horror, and
consequently came up with films that were often more interesting and
frightening than anything that Hammer made.
From Beyond the Grave is a good
example of a British-made horror film that surpasses Hammer's usual
output in both the quality of its writing and its sheer
creepiness. For one thing, it features Peter Cushing in one of
his spookiest roles, that of a Northern-accented antiques dealer
who has a particularly nasty way of dealing with dishonest customers.
From Beyond the Grave actually
has one of the strongest cast line-ups of any British horror film of
this era, and, in addition to Cushing, includes such stars as Donald
Pleasance, Diana Dors, Ian Carmichael and Nyree Dawn Porter, all
turning in performances to die for (literally, as it turns out).
R. Chetwynd-Hayes' short stories are intelligently adapted as
well-formed short films in their own right, each directed with immense
flair by Kevin Connor. Alan Hume's cinematography contributes
much to the film's unremitting eeriness, providing frights that are far
more subtle, and far more effective, than you would ever find in a
contemporary Hammer horror film.
As in all anthology films of this kind, there is a strong segment and a
weak segment. The strongest story is the second one, in which
Donald Pleasence and his daughter Angela evoke dark forces to free a
man from an unhappy marriage (or so it would seem). Not only does
this part of the film offer the strongest performances (Diana Dors is
marvellous as the housewife from Hell), but it is the most unsettling,
eschewing obvious thrills for something much darker and
sinister. Pleasence brings an understated Pinter-esque
menace to his portrayal, although his daughter manages to out-do him in
the creepiness stakes. Of the four stories that make up the film,
this is the only one that could have been extended into a
feature. As it is, it still compares favourably with that year's
other notable film forays into the supernatural: William Friedkin's
The
Exorcist and Nicolas Roeg's
Don't Look Now.
It is a pity that the strongest story in the film is followed by the
weakest, and the difference in tone and quality is felt
immediately. Ian Carmichael and Margaret Leighton are clearly
there to provide comic relief but come close to reducing the film
to the standard of a tacky madcap comedy (of the kind that was rife in
British cinema at the time). Leighton's over-the-top portrayal of
a professional clairvoyant (who charges a discount on Thursdays) is
worth savouring but the story lacks substance and seems out of place in
this anthology. It is merely a comedy diversion, and an unwelcome
one at that. Still, it is probably worth it for Cushing's line:
"I hope you enjoy snuffing it."
The other two segments of the film (the first and the fourth) are not
quite as impressive as the Pleasance fright fest but they still manage
to deliver a few well-honed scares. The first, featuring a man
who is converted into a serial killer so that he can release a spirit
trapped within a mirror, is an early attempt at a slasher movie and
must have been quite shocking for its day, in spite of the overt black
humour. The last segment, which owes something to C.S. Lewis's
Narnia Tales, may offer less in the
way of visceral horror but is actually more disturbing, the dreamlike
composition and claustrophobic feel sustaining its ample terror
quotient admirably.
Despite the gradual demise of the British film industry, Amicus
continued making horror films in this vein right up until the end of
the decade, ending with the now oft-derided
The Monster Club
(1980). With audiences in decline and sources of funding
drying up, Amicus would struggle to fend off the inevitable, but
From Beyond the Grave showed what
the company was capable of. Had the economic climate been more
favourable, Amicus could well have been a significant player in the
inception and development of the modern horror film, rather than
a comparatively minor influence.
© James Travers 2010
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