Film Review
A true landmark in British cinema,
Witchfinder
General created an uproar when it was first released in the UK
in May 1968 (a momentous month as it turned out). Critics fell
over themselves to condemn the film for its gruesome depictions of
rape, mutilation and murder, and it has been conjectured that this
onslaught may have contributed to the premature death of its director,
24-year-old Michael Reeves. The film was years ahead of its time
and most of the criticism it received was predictable reactionary
froth. The first truly visceral horror film,
Witchfinder General was to
influence not only the horror genre, but how violence was depicted in
films more generally.
Unimpressed by the theatricality of contemporary horror films,
exemplified by Hammer's Gothic horror series, Michael Reeves wanted to
make a film that portrayed violent acts as they should be portrayed,
not as titillating entertainment for mass audiences, but as something
that is ugly, degrading and unspeakably vicious. Despite the
various cuts that were insisted upon by the British Board of Film
Censors, Reeves still managed to include scenes of such explicit
violence that he was painted in the popular press as a gratuitous
sadist. Although mild by today's standards, the film's
unremitting barrage of vicious brutality still makes it a gruelling
experience to sit through. If it were not for the film's
visual poetry and the mesmerising performances from the principal cast,
this film would be almost unendurable.
Ironically, given how highly the film is now regarded, few of those
involved in the production of
Witchfinder
General believed it would amount to anything. American
International Pictures contributed £32,000 towards the film's
paltry £100,000 budget as a tax write-off. Tigon
Productions, the small British company that made the film, had yet to
release its first film,
The Blood
Beast Terror (1968), and so was an unknown quantity.
Director Michael Reeves had made just two films, the most recent being
the shoestring budget horror flick
The Sorcerers (1967).
Rightly,
Witchfinder General should
have come and gone without anyone noticing. Reeves was determined
to prove otherwise.
The film is based on Ronald Bassett's 1966 novel of the same title,
which was itself inspired by the real-life exploits of the
self-appointed 17th Century witch-hunter Matthew Hopkins.
Although the film, like the book, plays fast and loose with historical
facts, it provides a powerful and disturbingly convincing account of
how power can corrupt an individual, and how easily society can be
duped into condoning acts of unspeakable evil.
Witchfinder General is as much a
morality play on the dangers of political corruption and mass delusion as it is a
horror-oriented historical drama.
The quality of
Witchfinder General
belies its troubled production. Although an immensely talented
technician, Michael Reeves found it incredibly difficult to work with
actors and would often get into disputes with his cast through his
inability to communicate what he was looking for. On this
film, Reeves had a particularly bad working relationship with his lead
actor, Vincent Price, who had been foisted on him by AIP. Reeves
had originally intended that the part of Hopkins would go to
Donald Pleasence, who would have played the part more
sympathetically. Price was known mainly for playing theatrical
villains, most prominently in AIP's own series of horror films, and so
could only portray Hopkins as a conventional villain. Reeves was
not happy to see Price in his film and he told the actor as much when
they first met on the set. After that, their relationship went
downhill faster than a juggernaut on oil-lubricated skis.
It is reported that Reeves hated the actor so much that he instructed
his close friend Ian Ogilvy (playing the heroic lead) to inflict real
physical pain on him in the final scene in which Marshall beats Hopkins
to death.
Although he grew to loath Reeves as much as he loathed him, Vincent
Price was inspired to give what many consider to be his greatest screen
performance. The camp villainy with which the actor is usually
associated doesn't register for a second in this film. Here,
Price is pure, unadulterated menace, and his understated portrayal of
Hopkins stands as one of the most credible and chilling depictions of
evil to be found in any piece of filmed drama. Price may have
hated working with Michael Reeves but he was later compelled to admit
that this was one of the highpoints of his career and he paid tribute
to Reeves' immense skill as a director.
Price's performance alone would have sold this film, but its real
strength lies in its authentic depiction of communities that are
riven by conflict and consumed by fear. In stark contrast to the
stylised Grand Guignol approach of most contemporary horror films,
Witchfinder General has a bleak
realism, a near-documentary feel which makes what it shows us
particularly harrowing and sinister. The English landscape,
stunningly photographed by John Coquillon, has an austere beauty which
somehow renders the exploits of Hopkins and his henchman even more
grotesque and demonic. It is hard to believe this is the work of
a 24-year-old filmmaker. In only his third film, Reeves exhibits
a maturity and an acute awareness of the power of the moving image
that few directors attain after a decade of assiduous filmmaking.
AIP had not been expecting much from this film and so were pleasantly
surprised when it looked as though it might attract an audience and
even show a return. Hoping to cash in on Vincent Price's
association with its series of Edgar Allan Poe's films (directed by
Roger Corman), AIP released the film in the United States under the
title of Poe's poem
Conqueror Worm,
even though this had nothing to do with the film other than voiceover
narrations, read by Price, which were appended to the start and end of
the film.
The film's success in America led AIP to commission Michael Reeves to
direct its next Poe adaptation,
The
Oblong Box. Tragically, Reeves would not complete this
film; he died from a barbiturates overdose during its
pre-production phase, aged 25. His final film,
Witchfinder General, bears
testament to the fact that Reeves' untimely death robbed British cinema
of one of its most creative talents, at a time when such talent was
badly needed.
© James Travers 2010
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