Film Review
To the Devil a Daughter was
the film that brought down the curtain on one of the most successful
series of films made in Britain, the much loved and oft-derided Hammer
horrors.
It is a very different work to Hammer's previous horror
offerings, in both style and subject. It eschews the familiar
Gothic trappings and Grand Guignol theatricality in an attempt to cash
in on the fad for supernatural psychothrillers exemplified by Roman
Polanski's
Rosemary's Baby (1968) and
William Friedkin's
The Exorcist
(1973). With its contemporary setting, the film more closely
resembles an episode of the hugely successful television series that
Hammer would make in the 1980s,
Hammer
House of Horror. This is Hammer's third adaptation of a
Dennis Wheatley novel, following
The Devil Rides Out (1968) and
The Lost Continent (1968).
It bears virtually no resemblance to Wheatley's novel and, not
surprisingly, was reviled by the author.
From the very outset,
To the Devil a
Daughter ran into production difficulties. Director Peter
Sykes was unimpressed by the original screenplay and hired Gerald
Vaughan-Hughes at the last minute to rewrite it. The script was
not even half-completed by the time the film went into production and
scenes were being written and re-written a matter of hours before they
were due to be shot (hence the disjointed narrative and botched
ending). The person who was most aggravated by this creative
chaos was the lead actor Richard Widmark, who added to the travails by
managing to get up the back of just about everyone involved on the
production. He walked off the set in annoyance on a number of
occasions and came close to abandoning the film, which he considered to
be a Mickey Mouse venture.
Whilst the film has its flaws, it has much to commend it, particularly
the slick photography and editing which effectively build the tension
and make a somewhat silly storyline chilling and almost plausible. There
are also some strong performances from a hugely talented cast, which
includes some well-known British actors - Christopher Lee, Honor Blackman
and Denholm Elliott - as well as American screen icon Richard Widmark
and the alluring debutante Nastassja Kinski (the 15 year old daughter
of the great German actor Klaus Kinski).
Watch out for cameo appearances by Brian Wilde and Frances de la Tour,
who featured in two of the decade's most popular
British sitcoms,
Porridge and
Rising Damp.
It is a pity that the film is so marred by its horror excesses (which includes an
ill-conceived shot of an unconvincing foetal devil squirming in its
birth blood) and a diabolically weak denouement. The original
ending was deemed to be too similar to that of an earlier Hammer film
(probably
Scars of Dracula) and so a last
minute re-edit was attempted, with near-disastrous results.
To the Devil a Daughter earned
mixed reviews but was a box office hit, although most of the takings
went to the film's German and American backers. Hammer made very
little out of it and it certainly did not bail the company out of its
mounting financial difficulties. By the mid-1970s, cinema was a
dying art in Britain and Hammer's demise was part of a wider
phenomenon, the failure of the British film industry to compete with
Hollywood and lure audiences away from their television sets. But
this was not the end of Hammer. Like the immortal Dracula, there
would come a time when the company would rise from the grave, finding a
new lease of life with an infusion of fresh young blood...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
John Verney is surprised when his friend, Henry Beddows, asks him to
collect his 17-year-old daughter Catherine from the airport and take
her back to his London apartment. Verney, a writer of Occult
fiction, is intrigued by Catherine, who has spent all of her life in a
German convent run by an obscure religious order. Unbeknown to
Verney, Catherine was born into a dangerous Satanist cult, led by the
sinister priest Michael Rayner. The latter intends to abduct
Catherine and reincarnate her as the satanic god Astaroth on her
eighteenth birthday...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.