Film Review
After their collaboration on the somewhat irreverent biopic
Pancho Villa (1972), American
producer Philip Yordan contracted Spanish genre director Eugenio
Martín to direct an altogether different kind of entertainment,
the main proviso being that it was located mostly on the train sets
that had been constructed at some expense for
Pancho Villa. Inevitably, the
film that Martín made for Yordan,
Horror Express, ended up
looking like a bizarre fusion of murder mystery and sci-fi/horror
thriller, a kind of
The Thing from
Another World (1951) meets
Murder
On the Orient Express. Although Martín's forte was
the spaghetti western, to which he contributed the memorable
The Bounty Killer (1966), he also
dipped his toes into many other genres, including giallo, horror,
documentary and even musical. For many years,
Horror Express was overlooked but
it has since acquired something of a cult following and is now one of
the director's best-known films.
Horror Express is an odd, some
might say demented, cinematic potpourri. The presence of British
horror stalwarts Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee in an Edwardian
setting immediately makes it feel like one of Hammer's period horror
offerings, and Martín and his production team go to great
lengths to capture the mood and style of Hammer's films. However,
the kind of horror (morbidly graphic, in the manner of Grand Guignol)
is nearer to Italian
giallo
than British horror, veering tentatively towards the exploitation gore
fests of Lucio Fulci and Dardano Sacchetti. Martín takes
the film's horror content seriously in the first half of the film and
the scenes showing us the first glimpses of the lethal red-eyed,
brain-sucking ape-like fiend are genuinely frightening. But after
the third gruesome killing an air of complacency sets in and things
take on a far more comedic hue. Telly Savalas (left over from
Pancho Villa) is randomly thrown in
so that he can play the comedy Cossack before he gets his brain sucked,
and just when it looks as if the hysterical melodramatics are about to
die down Martín suddenly turns his film into an insane zombie
flick.
In narrative terms,
Horror Express
starts out well but soon falls apart and ultimately ends up as a
confused muddle, with characters carelessly lobbed in more for comedic
than dramatic effect. A Rasputin-like monk (played somewhat too
earnestly by Alberto de Mendoza, a habitué of the spaghetti
western) soon becomes an irritating sideshow and you cringe when he
suddenly switches (for no apparent reason) from a ranting
fire-and-brimstone Christian to a boot-licking disciple of Satan.
Telly Savalas looks as if he has absolutely no idea what is going on
around him - he seems to be performing some kind of solo act intended
to gain him admission to a lunatic asylum, or at least a ten-year
suspension from the acting profession.
With autopsies aplenty to perform, Cushing and Lee are kept busy -
sawing open brains and dissecting eyeballs, you know the kind of thing
- but around them there is a weird assortment of stock characters whose
sole
raison d'être is
to be killed in the same grotesque manner, like ducks lined up in a
shooting gallery. Not much here to stimulate 'ze little grey
cells'.
Horror Express
is one of those unapologetically over-the-top romps which is clearly not
intended to be taken seriously. Taken for what it is - a mad
joyride that revels in its cheap horror excesses and strange idea of
humour - it can hardly fail to entertain. More spine-chilling
than what ends up on the screen is John Cacavas' eerie score, which
lends a strange nightmarish lyricism to the film. In any event, it's
worth the price of the ticket just to hear Peter Cushing's riposte when
he is asked "What if one of you is the monster?" An offended
Cushing retorts: "Monster? We're British you know.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the course of an expedition to China in 1906, Professor Saxton
discovers the fossilised remains of a prehistoric ape which he believes
may revolutionise theories of human evolution. As the crate
containing the creature is loaded aboard the Trans-Siberian Express a
dead body is found nearby on the platform with its eyes strangely
whited out. A monk, Father Pujardov, promptly appears and insists
there is evil in the crate. After the train has set out on its
long journey to Europe, Dr Wells, a scientific rival of Saxton, becomes
intrigued by the crate and bribes a porter to examine what is
inside. Not long afterwards, the porter is found dead, his eyes
again robbed of their irises. Examining the brain of the dead
man, Wells and Saxton find it to be uncannily smooth, as if its
memories had all been removed. The creature kills again and is
finally shot dead by police Inspector Mirov. Wells and Saxton
realise that the prehistoric ape was only the host for a far deadlier
extra-terrestrial life-form, one that feeds on its victim's memories to
expand its intellect. Having found a new host it is only a matter
of time before the creature kills again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.