Film Review
In common with virtually all of Hammer's late output in the 1970s,
Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell
has a feel of desperation about it. In the face of fierce
competition from the more visually graphic horror films being made in
America at the time, Hammer was driven to make their own films ever
more gory and violent. But at the same time the company was
reluctant to give up its attachment to a quintessentially British form
of horror rooted in Gothic tradition. The result of this
irreconcilable conflict is a series of films that marked Hammer's slow
march towards oblivion, none more so than its final Frankenstein film.
Before this, Hammer had attempted to bring new blood to its Gothic
horror output, with Ralph Bates taking over from Peter Cushing as the
infamous spare parts scientist in
The Horror of Frankenstein
(1970). This film's failure led Hammer to backtrack and persuade
Cushing to reprise his most famous role for one last Frankenstein
fling, although it proved to be just one more nail in the coffin for
the ailing studio. The film's dismal performance at the box
office and accompanying critical onslaught was to be the death knell
for Hammer's association with Gothic horror.
It is not hard to see why the film was so badly received. Like
the monstrosity that Frankenstein cobbles together in the story, it is
an ungainly mixed bag, with little of the artistry and commitment that
had made Hammer's early horror films so popular. As fantastic as
the studio's early Gothic horror offerings were, they did at least have
some semblance of logic and coherence to them.
Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell
is a crazy mass of recycled concepts which struggles to hold itself
together. The sets are drab and cheap-looking. The
direction (Terence Fisher's last work before he retired) lacks focus
and imagination, the camerawork unbearably static. The only thing
that the film has going for it are the gripping performances from a
talented cast, Peter Cushing ably supported by Shane Briant, Madeline
Smith and John Stratton.
Despite a silly wig (which he apparently helped to design), Cushing is
as compelling as ever, still evoking menace and pathos in his sixth and
final outing as Baron Frankenstein, the man with the worst possible
form of obsessive-compulsive disorder. By now, you'd have thought
old Victor would have learned his lesson, but no, he's still at it,
pinching body parts from all over the shop and stitching them together,
his creations getting uglier with each attempt. The latest
monster is a throwback to primeval times, brought to life by David
Prowse (the future Darth Vader), who had previously played a slightly
more socially acceptable version of the creature in
The Horror of Frankenstein.
Enrolled as Baron F's glamorous assistant, Shane Briant gets to do all
the interesting work, sawing open people's heads, wiring up brains and
stitching on dismembered hands as if he'd been doing it all his life.
Yes, this is definitely
not a
film for the squeamish or someone about to tuck into a plate of
spaghetti bolognese. With jars of eyeballs and human brains being
carelessly knocked all over the set,
Frankenstein
and the Monster from Hell takes grand guignol excess to a whole
new level, but it totally misses the point as to what audiences wanted
in a modern horror film. If you're after cheap visceral thrills,
you only have to pay a visit to the local abattoir or sit and watch
daytime TV. Like poor demented Victor, Hammer had by this stage
totally lost the plot and was doomed to repeat past mistakes, getting
it even more wrong on each successive attempt. This final
desperate bid to revive a dying genre was like a stake through the
heart of a geriatric vampire - messy, grotesque and totally decisive.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Terence Fisher film:
Stolen Face (1952)
Film Synopsis
Arrested for performing immoral experiments on stolen corpses, a young
doctor named Simon Helder is declared insane and admitted to a lunatic
asylum. Here, Helder is surprised to meet Baron Frankenstein,
whom he has long idolised. Under the pretence of being the
asylum's physician, Frankenstein has been continuing his attempts to
artificially create life and he agrees to take Helder on as his
assistant. Having brought back to life a neolithic savage of a
man, Frankenstein has grafted onto him the hands of a skilled
violist. With Helder's help he intends to replace the creature's
primitive brain with that of a genius. When a criminally insane
mathematician hangs himself, Frankenstein has the opportunity to fulfil
his life's work...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.