Film Review
It is almost universally acknowledged that
Dracula
A.D. 1972 is the weakest of Hammer's eight Dracula films, a
bungled attempt to pluck Bram Stoker's vampiric fiend from his
traditional Gothic setting and parachute him into swinging seventies
London. What then of its immediate sequel,
The Satanic Rites of Dracula, made
by the same production team, featuring most of the same principal cast
and again set in London of the early 1970s? It seems that
writer Don Houghton and director Alan Gibson learned from the mistakes
they had made on their first Dracula film and their second attempt is a
considerable improvement - not a classic by any means, but a fairly
respectable way to round off Hammer's series of Dracula films.
Dennis Wheatley's popular series of occult novels (which Hammer had
previously dipped into with
The Devil Rides Out) appears to
have been the main inspiration for
The
Satanic Rites of Dracula, although at times you could be
forgiven for thinking that it was cobbled together from a rejected
script for
Doctor Who
(Houghton had only recently scripted two stories for the cult
television series). In contrast to Dracula's previous
contemporary London outing, which is essentially a traditional Hammer
vampire flick dressed up in ill-fitting modern glad rags, here there is
an obvious attempt to catch up with prevailing horror trends, namely a
fascination with the occult and fears over germ warfare.
Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of the film is the extent to which
its central protagonists, Dracula and Van Helsing (played for the last
time by Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing in their final shared credit
for Hammer), have changed since their last encounter. Dracula is
no longer the camp, almost cartooneqsue spectre of previous films but a
genuine manifestation of evil. Lee invests him with a chilling
sense of reality and has never looked more powerful and coldly sinister
on screen. Cushing's Van Helsing is no longer the confident
vampire slayer of earlier years but a world-weary old man who appears
almost overwhelmed by the evil that confronts him. You can almost
feel the electricity in the air when the two characters face one
another on screen, the saviour of mankind pitied against the supreme
lord of darkness for what could well be the last time.
The Satanic Rites of Dracula
offers exactly what every fan of Hammer's vampire films had yearned for
ever since Van Helsing's first showdown with Dracula way back in 1958 -
a heart-stoppingly climactic rematch. Unfortunately, this comes
late in the film and before we get to this point we have to sit through
a somewhat tedious run-around which feels like an average episode of
your favourite '70s police procedural drama. Houghton's habit of
drowning his narrative in buckets of wordy and mostly unnecessary
exposition causes the film to get off to an incredibly slow start, and
when, finally, things do start to move it's invariably with recourse to
the old staple of cellar brawl and countryside chase. Another
cause of annoyance is that whenever vampires show up there just happens
to be, within easy reach of whichever good guy they are menacing, an
embarrassingly simple means of dispatching them. And these
particular vampires are a pretty feeble lot, readily sent packing with
water, twigs or any odd bit of wood that happens to be lying
about. It does diminish a vampire's credibility somewhat to know
that you can destroy it just by picking up a random household object
and sticking it in him.
Alan
Gibson's work a director is just as patchy as it was on his previous
Dracula offering but there are a few moments of brilliance that make
you wonder if he is destined for much greater things (in fact his
prolific career in television was cut short when he died suddenly at
the age of 49 in 1987). Christopher Lee may have had major misgivings
about the film (by most accounts he appears to have hated every minute
of it) but he gives it his best shot, positively revelling in the
role that brought him international renown, with Peter Cushing once
again giving a flawless performance as his eternal adversary.
Reprising his role as the implausibly long-haired police inspector from
Dracula
A.D. 1972, Michael Coles is on hand to lend muscle and vigour to
the
film's many crow-barred-in action sequences, with Joanna Lumley adding
a dash of
good-old-fashioned girly glamour to the proceedings, wimpishly
screaming and fainting incessantly because this is what pretty young
females did in those days, or at least until Purdey came along and
began to kick the stuffing out of male chauvinism in the mid-70s.
The Satanic Rites of Dracula has
its flaws certainly, but it is far from being a dismal final
fling. In time, Hammer might conceivably have been able to turn
the tide and make a successful transition to the more realistic kind of
horror films that were proving popular on both sides of the
Atlantic. Alas, with the British film industry in terminal
decline, time was the one thing the studio didn't have...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
A branch of the British secret service finds itself in a quandary when
the government minister who oversees it is found to be participating in
satanic rituals at an English country house. Fearing that the
minister in question may act to close down the department its chief
operative enlists the help of a police inspector, Murray, to look
further into the activities of the mysterious sect. Having worked
with him on a previous case, Murray joins forces with Professor
Lorrimar Van Helsing, a world authority on the occult. Visiting
the country house, Murray has a close encounter with several female
vampires in the cellar. Meanwhile, Van Helsing pays a call on
another scientist, Julian Keeley, and is appalled to discover that he
has been developing an even deadlier strain of bubonic plague, one that
has the potential to totally wipe out mankind. Van Helsing's
investigation leads him to the offices of property developer D. D.
Denham, where he comes face-to-face with the demonic fiend with whom
his ancestors have battled for centuries - Dracula himself! Even
Van Helsing is taken aback when he learns the grim fate that his
ancestral arch-enemy has in store for mankind...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.