Film Review
The Golem, a creature of Jewish folklore, is one of the few mythical
beings not to be over-exploited by cinema. In the early years of
cinema, Paul Wegener made good use of the Golem's horrific potential in
a series of silent films, the most famous being
The Golem: How He Came into the World
(1920). Julien Duvivier's
Le
Golem (1936) and an obscure Czech comedy entitled
The Emperor and the Golem (1951)
just about completed the list of the Golem's screen appearances until
Herbert J. Leder came along in the mid-1960s and gave the fearsome
stone statue the unenviable task of enhancing Roddy McDowell's love
life. It was an encounter that killed off the Golem's screen
career for good and had McDowell hiding behind a monkey mask for most
of the next decade. Somehow homicidal statues from Jewish
mythology don't quite have the crowd-pulling potential of marauding
mix-and-match cadavers, bloodsucking Goths or even men wrapped from
head-to-toe in bandages. Such a shame, because, as Wegener showed
in his films, the Golem has so much untapped potential.
One of the reasons why Herbert J. Leder's film is so little known -
apart from the fact that it is barking mad - is that it is stuck with a
title that is hardly likely to impress itself on your memory, namely
It! As far as daft, gimmicky
titles go this is probably the daftest and gimmickiest of the lot, and
the alternative titles
Anger of the
Golem and
Curse of the Golem
do a far better job of selling the film, even if just about
every British horror film of the
1960s had the words
Curse of
in it. Imagine walking into your favourite DVD shop and asking
for
It! You'd either be
directed to the nearest public convenience or else dragged off by
security before you knew what was happening.
It!'s title suggests something
grand and portentous, albeit with a slightly embarassing suggestion of
B-movie cheapness, not the off-the-wall comedy laced with cheap horror
thrills that Leder serves up with a careless lack of restraint.
This wasn't Leder's first foray into the fantasy/horror genre - he had
previously scripted the neat little sci-fi shocker
Fiend Without a Face (1958)
featuring brain-sucking invisible monstrosities trying to take over the
world with the help of nuclear power.
It! has far less shock value than
this notorious B-movie romp and it feels more like a self-conscious
send-up of Hammer's horror films of the '60s than a serious attempt at
a horror movie. It's hard to be terrified by a lumbering big lump
of stone which you know you could easily outrun at the pace of a sedate
stroll, and even when it is fancily lit Leder's rampaging killer Golem
is as about as frightening as an umbrella rack.
Roddy McDowell is far scarier, but then he always was. With his
features hidden by an ape mask, McDowell could just about pass for a
human being, and a rather amiable one at that. Without the mask
that made him a much-loved cultural icon, he just looks unutterably
strange - weirder than a Body Snatcher facsimile of Norman Bates.
When we discover, at the start of the film, that Roddy lives with his
mother, and that the dear lady is a partly embalmed skeleton, we are
not remotely surprised. What some unkindly regard as a gratuitous
steal from Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) is actually how
most of us envisage Roddy's home-life to be, and when he starts
ordering a stone statue to kill people who annoy him and tries to
impress his girlfriend by demolishing Hammersmith Bridge we couldn't be
less surprised. Even when Roddy heads off to his country retreat
with his dead mother, reluctant girlfriend and a walking nine-foot
statue in tow, our credulity is barely strained for a second. The
only thing that is hard to swallow are the assurances from the US
military that the atomic bomb with which they intend to destroy the
golem will only affect anything within a five mile radius. It's
the one obvious lie in another wise totally convincing production.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The only artefact to survive when the warehouse of a London museum
burns down is a crude stone statue dating from the mid-16th
century. Mr Grove, the museum creator, is examining the statue
when it suddenly comes to life and kills him. For his assistant,
20-something Arthur Pimm, this is the best thing that could have
happened to him. His employers are bound to promote him to the
post of curator and Grove's daughter Ellen will be so impressed that
she will gladly consent to be his wife. Things do not turn out as
Arthur had hoped, alas. First, another man is given the curator's
job, and then Ellen starts going out with a smug-faced American, Jim
Perkins, who intends shipping the grotesque stone statue to the
US. For a sensitive soul who still lives with his mother, or,
more precisely, the mummified remains of his mother, since the old
woman passed on several years ago, this really is too much. But
then Arthur soon discovers that things aren't so bad after all.
The stone statue is actually the mythical Golem of Judah Loew, created
to protect the Jews from their persecutors four centuries ago. No
sooner has Arthur found a way to bring the statue to life than he is
using it to get rid of the troublesome new curator and impress Ellen
with a show of strength. Maybe getting the statue to rip up
Hammersmith Bridge in broad daylight was a bit over the top but love
does tend to make young men do strange things. Realising that the
Golem is slowly turning him into a power-crazed lunatic, Arthur makes
several attempts to destroy it, in vain. Just how is he going to
explain all this to his mother?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.