Film Review
It may require a slight stretch of the imagination, but
The Deadly Bees could conceivably
have been for Freddie Francis what
The Birds had been for Alfred
Hitchcock, if only he had been given a big enough cheque and more
autonomy in making the film. Amicus was a small British film
production company that, by the mid-1960s, had acquired a certain kudos
for turning out respectable horror films on a shoestring budget,
evidenced by the success of
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors (1965)
and
The Skull (1965).
After the company's early successes, a degree of complacency set in and
The Deadly Bees was the first
casualty of this, a film that was marred by a lack of production
commitment which resulted in it being a dismal misfire. Widely
regarded as one of Amicus's worst films, it suffers not only from some
of the most appalling special effects to be seen in any British film,
but also has major failings on both the writing and acting
fronts. However, it isn't all bad...
The film started out as an adaptation of H.F. Heard's novel
A Taste for Honey, which had
previously been adapted as an episode of the series
The Elgin Hour entitled
Sting of Death, featuring horror
veteran Boris Karloff. The original script was supplied by Robert
Bloch, who had penned not only Amicus's earlier
The Skull, but also the novel on
which Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) had been
based. Amicus's bosses had some objections to Bloch's script and
it was mostly re-written by Anthony Marriott. The studio was
unwilling to stump up the cash to hire Christopher Lee and Boris
Karloff for the two principal roles, so these ended up being given to
Frank Finlay and Guy Doleman, a fatal error in Bloch's eyes. The
tight budget allowed for only the most basic of special effects, and so
the film's most obvious shortcoming - effects that are so bad they make
you howl with derision - rendered the most dramatic parts of the story
ludicrously unconvincing.
Even allowing for the poor effects,
The
Deadly Bees fails as a suspense thriller because the element of
surprise is distinctly lacking throughout. The identity of the
killer is apparent almost from the first seen in which he appears,
something that neither the script nor the performance by the actor
concerned makes any attempt to conceal. Saddled with a
poorly paced script with sequences which, at the time and given the
budget, were impossible to realise convincingly, director Freddie
Francis could have been forgiven for walking away from the production -
and maybe that would have been the best outcome. Francis does
the best he can, and one or two scenes are surprisingly effective, but
overall his efforts are endlessly frustrated by the ramshackle script
and a blatant lack of money and commitment elsewhere.
And yet, for all its numerous failings,
The Deadly Bees does have a
curious, indefinable appeal. Frank Finlay's performance is hardly
of Oscar winning standard but it is eerily unsettling and is in keeping
with the thick, sour aura of creepiness that pervades the film, once we
have got beyond the silly first few scenes. Bloch may have had
his script torn to pieces but his dark humour somehow still makes
itself felt in the final film and you can't help wondering how much
better it might have been had it been played for comedy. There
have been better films featuring lethal bees, but this one has its own
particular downbeat charm, and if nothing else you can have no end of
fun laughing at the effects, which really are in a league of their own.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Freddie Francis film:
Torture Garden (1967)
Film Synopsis
Vicki Robbins, a pop singer suffering from nervous exhaustion, is sent
by her doctor to a remote island to recuperate in the care of beekeeper
Ralph Hargrove. When a swarm of bees attack and kill the latter's
dog Vicki begins to suspect that her host is up to no good, an
impression that is only reinforced when she begins talking with a
neighbour, Mr Manfred. An amateur beekeeper, Manfred admits that
he was once attacked by Hargrove's bees and is convinced he is breeding
a deadly new species of bee. Hargrove's wife is the next victim
of the killer bees but there is no evidence of unlawful killing.
Manfred persuades Vicki to steal some papers from Hargrove's study
that will prove his guilt. Vicki is then herself attacked by a
swarm of bees and, convinced that Hargrove intends to kill her, insists
on moving in with Manfred. It is at this point that the killer
reveals himself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.