Film Review
Hammer followed up its highly successful
The Vampire Lovers with this
much less inspired attempt at an erotic horror film, which is widely
considered the weakest of the company's Gothic horror offerings.
The film has many shortcomings, but these might have been bearable if
Hammer had taken the trouble to put together a decent cast. Peter
Cushing and Ingrid Pitt were both approached to appear in the film, but
both declined. So, instead, we have to make do with a cast of
virtual unknowns, including DJ Mike Raven (inexplicably dubbed by
Valentine Dyall) and Danish model Yutte Stensgaard, whose range of
accomplishments evidently did not extend to acting.
Hammer's regular writer Jimmy Sangster had made a reasonable job of
directing
The Horror of Frankenstein
(1970) but appears completely flummoxed by the lesbian vampire fest
that is
Lust for a Vampire.
The failings of a mediocre script are amplified by Sangster's bloodless
direction and wooden performances from just about the entire
cast. The nude scenes are embarrassing to watch, so badly shot
that you get the impression that neither the director nor his camera
crew could bear to look at what they were filming (and who can blame
them).
Just when you think that the film could not possibly get any worse, it
does, with a toe-curling montage of shots shown through various
coloured filters accompanied by what is probably the worst pop song in
history,
Strange Love. There are one or two scenes that work quite well (the
opening sequence in particular), but overall
Lust for a Vampire is a tedious and
gutless plod-a-thon, probably the dullest thing Hammer ever made.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For forty years, the country of Styria has been rid of the
scourge of vampirism. But then it returns, suddenly and
unexpectedly, when Carmilla Karnstein is resurrected in a blood
sacrifice. At this time, the writer Richard Lestrange arrives in
the area, looking for material for his next novel. He laughs off
rumours of vampirism as mere superstition but is nonetheless fascinated
by what he hears, tales of seductively beautiful women vampires who
lure men and girls to their doom. Visiting the ruined
Karnstein castle, Lestrange meets Giles Barton, the co-proprietor of a
nearby girls' school who is also interested in the vampire
legends. Attracted to one of Barton's pupils, Mircalla Herritzen,
Lestrange contrives to get a place as a teacher at the school. A
short while later, one of the girls mysteriously disappears.
Barton discovers her body and finds she is the victim of a
vampire. He deduces that Mircalla is in truth Carmilla Karnstein
and offers himself as her willing slave. Naturally, she kills him
too. Will Lestrange suffer the same fate?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.