Film Review
With its almost surreal mix of social realism, fairytale artifice and
implied slasher movie violence,
Straight
on Till Morning is one of the bleakest and most adult horror
films made by Hammer.
It is a creepy synthesis of
Beauty
and the Beast and Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960), where the two
protagonists are emotionally unstable adults who resemble children
living in a bizarre fantasy world. The unreality of these two
characters somehow makes the world they inhabit more disturbing, making
this a particularly uncomfortable viewing experience.
If this film were a piece of confectionary it would be a sugar-coated
marshmallow, with an arsenic-tipped razor blade hidden inside.
A propos, the title comes from J.M. Barrie's
Peter Pan:
"Second to the right, then straight on till morning",
an appropriate but unsubtle allusion for a story about two people who refuse to grow up.
Straight on Till Morning was
one of a number of experimental thrillers that Hammer made in the early
1970s in a brave but ultimately doomed attempt to reinvigorate its
horror portfolio and improve the company's financial prospects.
Michael Carreras had recently taken over the management of Hammer from
his father and was keen to move away from the traditional Gothic horror
films that had been popular in their day but which were now looking
increasingly dated. Although Carreras ultimately failed to
achieve his objective, he did allow Hammer to move into some exciting
new areas and make some of its most interesting films, albeit over a
very brief phase of its history.
Straight on Till Morning was
typical of the kind of film that Michael Carreras wanted his company to
make - a traditional thriller that had something of the aesthetics and
maturity of a European art house film. With its sophisticated
camerawork and frenetic crosscutting, the film feels surprisingly
modern for its time, even if its depiction of the London social scene
was slightly dated for the time the film was made. Although it
avoids the explicit visceral violence of today's slasher movies, the
film achieves the same effect through sharp editing and ingenious use of sound -
the result being some of the most horrific sequences to have appeared in
any British film. The denouement is particularly sadistic,
ripping the guts out of a fairytale happy-ever-after ending so
ferociously as to make the brothers Grimm look like Enid Blyton.
The film was conceived by screenwriter John Peacock, who was eager to
write a piece especially for up-and-coming actress Rita Tushingham, who
had achieved instant stardom with her first two films,
A Taste of Honey (1961) and
A Place to Go (1963). Michael
Carreras liked the screenplay and engaged Peter Collinson, one of
Britain's most promising young film directors, to direct it.
Collinson had recently directed
The Italian Job (1969) and
would go on to make one or two other notable films before he died from
cancer, a few years later, aged 44.
The leading male part was given to an unknown actor, Shane Briant, who
would make his film debut in this film. Hammer saw Briant as a
potential star and would groom him as a possible replacement for its
ageing lead actors Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, giving him
prominent roles in films such as
Demons of the Mind (1972) and
Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell
(1974). Briant's androgynous good looks and sinister yet
childlike persona made him an ideal choice for the part in this
film. The actor would later find fame through his lead role in a
memorable television adaptation of
The
Picture of Dorian Gray (1973).
Straight on Till Morning was
released in a double bill with another psychological thriller,
Fear in the Night.
Curiously, the latter was the supporting film, in spite of the fact
that it featured some better known actors, Peter Cushing and Joan
Collins - suggesting that Hammer considered
Straight on Till Morning the
superior film. One of its marketing points was Annie Ross,
the famous jazz singer who both appears in the film and
sings its haunting theme song, which was released, unsuccessfully,
as a single in the UK. Whilst
the film garnered some positive reviews, it was not a commercial success. The failure of this and
similar films would drive Hammer back in to making old-style Gothic
horror films and low budget adaptations of television sitcoms, thereby
hastening its demise.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Tired of her humdrum life in Liverpool, twenty-year-old Brenda Thompson
says goodbye to her mother and heads down south to start a new life in
swinging London. She dreams of finding a man who will whisk her
off her feet and give her a baby. She gets her chance when she
finds a stray dog one evening. She takes the dog back to her
flat, washes it and, the next day, returns it to its owner, hoping for
something more than a polite thank you. The owner turns out to be
an attractive young man named Peter and he offers Brenda a strange
proposal. If she agrees to live with him and do all his
housework, he will consider fathering her child. Scarcely able to
believe her good fortune, Brenda agrees willingly. What she
doesn't know is that Peter is mentally unstable and makes a habit of
luring women to his flat so that he can slice them up with his Stanley
knife. Brenda's happy little fairytale is about to become
nightmarish reality...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.