Film Review
Scream and Scream Again can be
summarised in four words: premise good; realisation bad. The
plot, taken from a novel by Peter Saxon, has some mileage (even if it
is slightly barking), but unfortunately screenwriter Christopher
Wicking and director Gordon Hessler took the decision to jumble it up
and make it as incomprehensible as possible. After five or six
viewings, the film starts to make some kind of sense, but by that stage
you are just about ready to throw yourself into a vat of acid, just
like the film's principal villains.
The film's lack of narrative coherence is not its biggest sin
however. The publicity for
Scream and Scream Again boldly
claimed to offer us three masters of horror - Vincent Price,
Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. What it doesn't tell us is
that Cushing is only on screen for about three minutes, Lee for only
marginally longer and Price only comes into his own in the last ten
minutes. It doesn't quite contravene the Trades Description Act,
but it is a bit of a let down for anyone expecting to see the three horror
kings together. No doubt if the film were re-released today,
the distributors would make a big thing of the fact that Peter Sallis of
Wallace and Gromit fame is in the film (for a good ninety seconds).
Although the film has its failings, it occasionally impresses with a
few inspired directorial flourishes and, to be fair, it does offer one or two
spine-tingling thrills of the kind you would expect of a good
low-budget British horror film. The only thing that cannot, under
any circumstances, be forgiven is the awful soundtrack. Who could
possibly think that late 1960s British disco jazz would make an appropriate
accompaniment to a horror film? Someone in the production office clearly lost
the plot. And they weren't alone.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
As he investigates the gruesome murders of two young
women, Superintendent Bellaver becomes convinced that a psychopath is at
large. A man wakes up in
a hospital and finds, to his horror, that his legs have been
amputated. Somewhere in Europe, a Fascist government with a very
silly logo is preparing to take over the world. A mad scientist
is attempting to create a race of super-humans by inserting human
brains into synthetic bodies. Is it possible that these bizarre
happenings are in some way connected?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.