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Showing posts with label Nigel Kneale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigel Kneale. Show all posts

Friday, February 26, 2016

Quatermass Xperiment, The (1955)

... aka: Creeping Unknown, The
... aka: El experimento del Dr. Quatermass (The Dr. Quatermass Experiment)
... aka: L'astronave atomica del dottor Quatermass (The Atomic Spaceship of Dr. Quatermass)
... aka: Le monstre (The Monster)
... aka: Quatermass Experiment, The
... aka: Schock
... aka: Shock!
... aka: Xperiment Q

Directed by:
Val Guest

This is a feature film remake of the 3-hour-long BBC production The Quatermass Experiment (1953), which was broadcast live in 1953 and is now partially lost in its complete form (only the first two 30 minute segments still survive). For this film version, Richard Landau and director Val Guest have compressed the original Nigel Kneale-penned television play into a more compact running time ranging from 78 to 82 minutes depending on the cut. All of the original actors from the TV version were replaced, with American actor Brian Donlevy taking over the central role of Professor Bernard Quatermass from Reginald Tate, who was slated to reprise the role but passed away before filming began. Not only an important genre title content-wise, this is also noteworthy as being one of the few Hammer horror films to precede their breakthrough hit THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1957). It was released in the U.S. under the title The Creeping Unknown in 1956, became an international hit and led to numerous other Quatermass tales, starting with the TV miniseries Quatermass II (1957), which itself prompted a theatrical remake that same year (released as Enemy from Space in the U.S.). That was followed by a third miniseries called Quatermass and the Pit (1959), which eventually saw a theatrical version in 1967 (released in the U.S. as FIVE MILLION YEARS TO EARTH in 1968) and brief revivals in both 1979 and 2005.



A rocket crash-lands in a field in the English countryside. Part of a secret project headed over by scientist Quatermass, the ship had been launched "1500 miles into space" and was manned by three astronauts... only one of whom has returned safely. Engineer Victor Carroon (Richard Wordsworth) is that lone survivor and yet it's immediately apparent that something isn't quite right with him. For starters, he's disoriented, sickly and no longer speaks. He's also ice cold to the touch, his fingerprints change completely and his skin slowly begins to look cracked, pale and gray. Further analysis by Dr. Gordon Briscoe (David King-Wood) reveal his heart rate and blood pressure are so off that he *should* be dead. A gelatin-like substance is discovered aboard the crashed space crash that may be the remains of the two missing astronauts and, since a film camera was placed aboard, our heroes at least get a bit of proof that something inscrutable and other-worldly happened. They're just not entirely sure what.







While Quatermass, Lomax (Jack Warner), an inspector who's been assigned the case, and others attempt to get to the bottom of things, Victor is taken to a clinic and put under observation. Not wanting her husband to be some guinea pig, his wife Judith (Margia Dean) hires sleazy private eye Christie (Harold Lang) to pose as an orderly and help bust him out of the clinic. Things don't go off quite as planned and, by the time the authorities get there, there's only a blood-drained corpse and a missing cactus to tell the tale of what really happened. Now free and on the run, Victor continues to mutate into something inhuman, absorbing other life forms (including a zoo full of animals) along the way until he becomes some a large, ever-growing, tentacled, octopus-like blob who finally turns up at the BBC.






Well-directed, written, photographed, paced and acted (for the most part), this was influential not only to 50s sci-fi and horror in general but also the concept of 'body horror;' a subgenre of film where one's body is overtaken by something and goes through horrifying physical mutations as a result. That style of film would begin to become very popular in the mid 70s and continues to be popular to this day. This is one of the earliest films I've seen to attempt that. The makeups and special effects (by Philip Leakey and Les Bowie) I frequently see criticized, but they didn't bother me at all. In fact, I found them quite good for the time, especially considering the main ingredient to create the monster was tripe! This film also marked a turning point for Hammer Pictures, who were struggling to keep afloat by 1955. Without the success of this first Quatermass film prompting the company to focus primarily on horror productions, there may not have been their first Frankenstein film and thus never been a Hammer as we know it today. Enough questionable content made this the first X-rated sci-fi film made in the UK; something the altered spelling "Xperiment" consciously pointed out to audiences as a selling point.






Quatermass creator Kneale had mixed feeling about this version, but most especially disapproved of casting several American actors in lead roles. Though Donlevy claimed to be from Ireland and IMDb states he was born in Ireland, he was actually born in Cleveland, Ohio and the whole Irish thing was something cooked up entirely by his publicist. Either way, the actor doesn't do a bad job at all and his commanding, gruff, hard-edged and somewhat pushy performance is appropriate for the character. Apparently Guest didn't mind his work either because the actor got to reprise this role in the 1957 follow-up. Most everyone seems to agree that the real standout of the film is Wordsworth, the great-great grandson of poet William Wordsworth, who creates a pitiable and sympathetic character with no words and a limited amount of screen time. The character certainly has more than a few things in common with the Frankenstein Monster.







The only flaw in the central casting was Dean, a former Miss California and one-time girlfriend of the president of 20th Century Fox, who was hoisted upon the filmmakers as part of the American co-financing deal. Yes, despite being currently listed most places as being an entirely British production, this was actually co-produced and financed by Americans (Robert L. Lippert's "Regal Films; which was more-or-less a branch of Fox). Guest would later say of Dean: "She was a sweet girl, but she couldn't act." As a result of her inappropriate American accent (and presumed poor performance), all of her dialogue was dubbed over by someone else in post. Unfortunately, whatever actress they chose to dub the role also could not act and didn't even sound British! Regardless, it stands out like a sore thumb in this otherwise professionally-done movie. Also in the supporting cast are Gordon Jackson, Thora Hird, Lionel Jeffries, Marianne Stone, Maurice Kaufmann, Henry B. Longhurst and a young Jane Asher as a little girl whose encounter with the monster works out better for than it did little Marilyn Harris in Frankenstein.




Upon its 1955 release in the UK, this became one of the biggest hits of its year. Here in America, where it was cut down by four minutes and frequently double-billed with THE BLACK SLEEP (1956) by distributor United Artists, it was also a big hit. At one showing, a nine-year-old boy died of a ruptured artery in the lobby after viewing the films, which prompted the Guinness Book of World Records to list this as the only incident of an audience member being "scared to death." A unsuccessful lawsuit by the boy's parents followed. This story ran in a 1956 issue of Variety and very well could have been where William Castle got his idea for the later "death by fright" insurance policy gimmick for MACABRE (1958). After the boy's death, the producers of Black Sleep tastelessly urged theater owners to “Cash in on the Variety Headline Report!” in their press materials.


There have been numerous releases of this film over the years on laserdisc, VHS and DVD (mostly through MGM as part of their "Midnite Movies" line). In 2014, Kino Lorber issued a Blu-ray, which contains a commentary track from director Guest and film historian Marcus Hearn, interviews with the director and John Carpenter (who was clearly very influenced by seeing this film as a boy) and a guide the differences between the cut and uncut versions. 

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Murrain (1975) (TV)

... aka: Against the Crowd: Murrain
... aka: Murrain by Nigel Kneale

Directed by:
John Cooper

"Murrain” was part of a seven episode series of hour-long programs called Against the Crowd made by Associated Television (or ATV). Each of these played on the commercial TV network Independent Television (or ITV) in the UK in July and August of 1975 and, to my knowledge, nowhere else (though I could be mistaken). The series has since been forgotten... all except for this one singular episode. So what exactly saved it from total obscurity? The fact that it's written by Nigel Kneale, that's what. Kneale, a respected, well-known fantasy writer in his home country, first broke through the mainstream with the extremely popular live TV series The Quatermass Experiment (1953), which led to numerous other TV shows and feature film remakes and spin-offs, as well as the equally popular George Orwell adaptation Nineteen Eighty-Four (1954), which also aired live and was supposedly the film that got Peter Cushing a contract with Hammer. After being pleased with Kneale's work on Murrain, ATV gave the writer a chance to develop his own six-episode series called Beasts the following year. Because Kneale has enough draw to sell whatever may happen to have his name attached to it, when it finally came time for a Beasts DVD box set release, Network DVD included Murrain on the set as an extra. The other six Against the Crowd TV films, which appear to be drama and not horror, are currently nowhere to be found.

Prior to viewing, I said to myself, “Who is a Murrain? What is a Murrain? Is it a town? Is it a person? Is it exclusively British slang for something?" Nope. It's none of the above. After a dictionary search, I discovered it was a noun that refers to “an infectious disease, especially babesiosis, affecting cattle or other animals” and that it's also a somewhat archaic, generic term that can mean a plague, an epidemic or a crop blight. "OK," I said, pausing for a second. "Sure... but... uh... what in the hell is “babesiosis?!” So back to the dictionary we go... Also a noun, babesiosis is “a disease of cattle and other livestock, transmitted by the bite of ticks. It affects the red blood cells and causes the passing of red or blackish urine.” Alright, now I think I'm ready for...







Veterinarian Alan Crich (David Simeon) heads to a small country village to check out some strange goings-on at a pig farm run by Mr. Beeley (Bernard Lee). Having already analyzed some of the dead hogs on an earlier trip, it appears the swine are being stricken down with some kind of mysterious virus unknown by modern science. Even stranger, all of the water in the area has dried up save for one lake and other unknown maladies have afflicted certain people living there. Alan is taken to see general store owners Mr. (David Neal) and Mrs. (Marjorie Yates) Leach, whose son is pale, has no appetite and has been confined to bed for the past month due to an incurable illness. The villagers believe there's a link between what's happening to the pigs, what's happening to the child, the sudden water shortage and a strange crippling disease another man suffers from. Unable to find a rational explanation for the (a ha!) murrain that's struck their village, they've pinned the blame on elderly Mrs. Clemson (Una Brandon-Jones); who they believe is a witch. Alan, rational and educated and not prone to superstition, shrugs off their suggestion and believes they're all “raving mental cases."







Alan decides to go visit Mrs. Clemson himself and is saddened to find a frightened, lonely, seemingly kind old woman living in filth and poverty. The people in town are too scared to get anywhere near her ramshackle home, refuse to talk to her, serve her or sell her food, have tapped her well dry so she'll have no water and, worse, have gone one step further trying to drive her out of town by cutting her beloved cat into two pieces and flinging it over her wall. Feeling a pitiable and likely mentally ill old woman is being wrongfully persecuted, Alan befriends her and decides to help her by bringing her food and arranging for county welfare to come check up on her... but the villagers get even more riled up and the mysterious incidents continue.







This is a modest and somewhat familiar little mystery/drama that was shot on video, but the acting is good, it utilizes a great-looking country village full of crumbling old stone building and walkways and it's thoughtfully-written to be a parable about man's inclination to seek out a scapegoat whenever the unexplainable rears its ugly head. It opts for a somewhat ambiguous ending, which is just as well in this case.

★★1/2

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)

Directed by:
Tommy Lee Wallace

Part 3 seems like it has no business being in the HALLOWEEN series at all (there is no Michael Myers to be found anywhere in the film), but it's good, dumb fun anyway. The original intention of this entry was to prompt more unrelated sequels carrying a seasonal theme and the HALLOWEEN brand name, but thanks to terrible critical reviews and disappointing box office receipts, that concept both began and ended right here. After a mysterious murder at a hospital (a guy has his nose popped right out of socket!), Tom Atkins (a doctor doing some freelance detective work) and Stacy Nelkin (a young woman whose father was murdered and is now looking for answers) go to a small California town to investigate "Silver Shamrock," a company mass-producing popular Halloween masks designed like skulls, witches and goblins. Cheerful company owner Conal Cochran (played with big kid charm and gusto by Dan O'Herlihy) is actually using the masks in a ridiculous plot to kill millions of children on Halloween night. In one scene, a kid wearing a mask watches a hypnotic and catchy commercial ("Two more days to Halloween, Halloween, Halloween. Two more days to Halloween, Silver Shamrock!"), his head melts and hundreds of beetles, cockroaches and snakes come crawling out. Robotic guards are around too, to do things like drill a hole in a woman's face and rip a bum's head off. Eventually, a news program tells us that a piece of Stonehenge is missing (!?!) and our heroes find it in the factory with robo lab technicians chipping away pieces of it to put inside the masks. See there's this special microchip thingy located at the base of the mask that's set off by flashes of colored light, shoots out a laser beam and somehow manages to simultaneously melt your head and turn it into a breeding ground for all kinds of nasty creepy crawlers. Wonder if he got a patent for it?



Despite being utterly stupid, mean-spirited and confusing (not to mention having some muddled reasoning behind why Cochran even wants to do all this in the first place), this crazy thing moves along nicely thanks to lots of gross out Tom Burman FX, good cinephotography by Dean Cundey (later a trusted cinematographed used by Spielberg, Zemeckis and Ron Howard) and an excellent synthesizer score from Alan Howarth and John Carpenter (he also produced with Debra Hill for a third time). Originally writer Nigel Kneale demanded his name be removed from the finished product. The cast includes Nancy Loomis (in a different role here than what she played in the original), Dick Warlock and a voice cameo from Jamie Lee Curtis. The Michael Myers character would return in the rest of the sequels, starting with HALLOWEEN 4: THE RETURN OF MICHAEL MYERS in 1988.

★★1/2

Quatermass and the Pit (1967)

...aka: Five Million Years to Earth
...aka: Mind Benders, The

Directed by:
Roy Ward Baker

Workers at the Hobb's End Underground Transport unearth skeletal remains that seem to date back five-million years. They also hit a strange non-metallic plate that ends up being part of an alien spacecraft. Perplexed by the substance, which is harder than diamond and resistant to the 3000 degree flames from a blow-torch, some conflicting experts are called in to investigate. Derelict apartments across the street from the excavation site have strange claw marks on the walls. A hidden compartment on the ship also houses some dead, medium-sized, horned, green, insect-like creatures. But it's really the ship itself that poses the strongest threat. And what is lying dormant in all of our minds. The military, of course, continually butt heads with the scientists and call the whole discovery a hoax (a "German propaganda item" from World War II). But Professor Bernard Quatermass (Andrew Keir) thinks otherwise and proposes a theory that offends just about everyone involved; managing to question both creationism and evolution. Quatermass comes to the conclusion that millions of years ago, aliens landed on Earth, removed primitive apes and took them back to their home planet (which may have been Mars) for experimentation. They continued to do so, each time making them more intelligent until man was eventually born… He could be right, but not necessarily. The government definitely is on the wrong track and open up the site to the general public. The dormant evil is unleashed and those exposed to it become mindless and violent. Buildings collapse, fires start, citizens go on a rampage and London will eventually be completely leveled if Quatermass and chief archaeologist Dr. Roney (James Donald) can't stop it. Barbara Shelley co-stars as Barbara Judd, an assistant who has visions of an alien colony and becomes possessed, eventually getting socked in the face by Quatermass himself! Julian Glover is the close-minded militarist who's fried into a crispy critter.

All four of the principal actors are excellent in this intelligent, thoughtful and multi-layered science-fiction film, which raises an impressive number of interesting questions. And it's not without a sense of humor. The "Hammer Collection" DVD has both the UK and US trailers ("It could happen in your lifetime!"), plus the science fiction episode of the ho-hum 1990 WORLD OF HAMMER TV documentary series (narrated by Oliver Reed), which covers the titles DICK BARTON STRIKES BACK, THE DAMNED (aka THESE ARE THE DAMNED), FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN, QUATERMASS 2, QATP, QUATERMASS XPERIMENT, SPACEWAYS, X THE UNKNOWN and a few others.

★★★1/2
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