Film Review
Demons of the Mind is one of
Hammer's dafter and more daring attempts at reviving the Gothic horror
formula that had brought the company great success in earlier
years. The film certainly has more graphic violence and nudity
than previous Hammer offerings, although what is perhaps more
interesting is the way in which the film is shot and edited, in a vivid
and frenetic way that makes it feel like someone has their finger stuck
on the
auteur button.
Whilst the film certainly breaks new ground for the British horror
movie, a confused plot, some appalling dialogue and a general
impression of over-theatricality make the film pretty
indigestible. The story has some potential but the characters are
so poorly developed that they are hard to take seriously and the whole
thing just fails to cohere. It doesn't help that half of the cast
look as if they are in a pantomime whilst the other half seem to think
they are in an undergraduates' production of a Shakespeare play.
The performances range from the mildly O.T.T. to full-blown hysteria,
with some of the cast (Robert Hardy notably) managing to cover
the full spectrum of histrionic excess within the blink of an
eyelid.
Demons of the Mind is an
interesting (and probably necessary) departure for Hammer and, in the
hands of a more mature director, could have been one of the company's
better films in its declining years. Alas, in his attempt to
prove himself, rookie director Peter Sykes fails to rein in his
artistic enthusiasm and allows his cast to get away (literally) with
murder. (Sykes was the director who drove the final nail into Hammer's coffin
with
To the Devil a Daughter (1976).)
The result is a film that is bold and distinctive
but thoroughly muddled - a scrambled potpourri of Gothic horror
clichés that lacks charm, coherence and substance. But it
has plenty of ham.
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis
Convinced that his son Emil and daughter Elizabeth have inherited his
insanity, Baron Zorn imprisons them in his castle and prevents them
from ever seeing one another. Meanwhile, young women from a
peasant village in the neighbouring area mysteriously disappear.
These two things are not unconnected. Out of desperation, Zorn
invites a spiritualist to his castle, hoping to cure him and his
offspring of their Satanic affliction...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.