Film Review
Robert Hartford-Davis was just one of numerous minor filmmakers to jump
on the bandwagon that Georges Franju had set rolling with his gruesome
little chiller
Les Yeux sans visage
(1960). His own offering in the 'mad surgeon' line is an odd
concoction of sixties kitsch and cheap exploitation thrills going by
the enigmatic title
Corruption.
It is one in a swathe of low budget horror flicks that bombarded cinema
audiences in the late 60s, early 70s, and which failed individually to
make much of an impact. The film could so easily have been lost
in the mists of time were it not for the presence of Peter Cushing, a
king amongst horror icons. We all know Cushing from his dapper
portrayals in Hammer's series of Gothic horror films but
Corruption shows us a very
different side to the actor - totally convincing, utterly terrifying as
a man who doesn't so much slide as tumble head-first into psychopathic
insanity as he tries to preserve his girlfriend's beauty.
Hartford-Davis's frenetic style of direction gives his film an
unsettling mix of modern day realism and dreamlike frenzy. Things
start out innocently enough, with Cushing failing not to look ill-at-ease
at a typically lively mid-sixties rave (the kind which looks as if
it may turn into a wild orgy at any moment). The first shock
comes early in the film, with Sue Lloyd (later to find fame as Barbara
Hunter in the long-running TV soap
Crossroads) colliding with a flood
lamp, with predictably nasty result. Rather than do the obvious
thing, which is to hire a good plastic surgeon, the enterprising Mr
Cushing embarks on a D.I.Y. job, stealing the bits he needs from a
corpse and then a streetwalker. If only he hadn't watched that
damn Franju film...
Things go from bad to worse in sleepy Seaford, the one place in the UK
where nothing ever happens. As her homemade skin treatment fails
for a second time, Miss Lloyd turns into a mix of Lucrezia Borgia and
Lady Macbeth, manipulating the nice Mr Cushing into taking up murder
and decapitation as a fulltime hobby. Just when you think it
couldn't get any weirder, a gang of groovy beatniks invade the couple's
cottage for a spot of robbery and get more than they bargained for when
they look in the fridge. This is the point at which demented
fantasy takes over and the entire dramatis personae begin hurtling
towards a sadistic denouement like mice in a meat-grinder. And
they say nothing ever happens in Seaford.
Corruption isn't, and probably
doesn't deserve to be, one of the more illustrious entries in Peter
Cushing's filmography but it is an interesting departure for an actor
who, despite his long association with horror, is universally
considered the consummate English gentleman. Here he is given an
opportunity to flex his dramatic muscles and offer a far more colourful
and disturbing character portrayal, through a performance that is
easily one of his most compelling. Sue Lloyd is also pretty
impressive as the principal victim/villain and should be credited for
bringing a sliver of humanity to her grotesquely unsympathetic
character. Looking stunning in her first film role, Kate O'Mara
clearly looks set for better things. It may not be a classic of
British horror but, with such a strong cast on board,
Corruption can hardly fail to
entertain with its avalanche of cheap thrills and manic lunges into
grand guignol absurdity. Can I be the only one who wishes the
film had been titled
The Terror of
Seaford or, better still,
Horror
on the London to Brighton Line?
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the swinging sixties, Sir John Rowan is one of London's leading
surgeons. At a party, he gets into a fight with a photographer
which results in a lamp crashing onto his girlfriend, Lynn Nolan,
totally disfiguring half of her face. Determined to restore his
beloved's looks so that she can resume her busy modelling career, Rowan
explores ancient skin restoration techniques. He finally comes up
with a solution to avoid lengthy and painful skin grafting, but this
involves creating a serum from fluid contained in the pituitary
gland. Rowan's first attempt, using the gland taken from a
corpse, is only temporarily successful. Lynn's scars soon return
and Rowan realises he needs a living donor. One dead prostitute
later, Rowan restores his girlfriend's looks a second time and the
couple decide to take a break at their seaside cottage in
Seaford. Already, Lynn's restored skin shows signs of
deterioration and the model persuades Rowan that he must kill again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.