Film Review
Cinema's third adaptation of Curt Siodmak's 1942 novel
Donovan's Brain plays down the
sci-fi/horror trappings of the previous two versions -
The Lady and the Monster (1944) and
Donovan's Brain (1953) - and
instead performs more or less as a conventional murder mystery, albeit
one with a few ghoulish moments along the way. An Ango-German
production (by Raymond Stross Productions and Central Cinema Company
Film),
The Brain's main point
of interest is that was the first horror film to be directed by a
stalwart of the genre, Freddie Francis. Already renowned as a
cinematographer, acclaimed for his work on
Sons
and Lovers (1960) and
The Innocents (1961), Francis
distinguished himself in the 1960s with a run of horror films for rival
companies Hammer and Amicus, including psycho-thrillers such as
Nightmare
(1964), the Gothic horror
The Evil of Frankenstein (1964)
and horror anthologies like
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965).
In less capable hands,
The Brain
could easily have ended up as a routine crime film - essentially just a
plodding whodunit with a disembodied brain driving things along, but
Francis's penchant for atmosphere gives it the body it needs to grab
our attention and make it a distinctly creepy variation on a familiar
theme. Peter van Eyck's presence as a driven Germanic scientist
brings a grim intensity to the drama which is effectively stressed and
sustained by Robert Huke's forbidding noir-like cinematography and the
film's extensive use of extreme close-ups. The music and sound
effects lend a suitably eerie note to the proceedings, and whilst more
could have been made of the film's horrific premise,
The Brain functions adequately as a
compelling little thriller, admirably served by a distinguished
supporting cast that includes Cecil Parker and Bernard Lee. After
this promising debut, Freddie Francis would have difficulty escaping
from the thrall of the horror genre - "Horror films have liked me more
than I have liked horror films," he once remarked. Like the main
protagonist in
The Brain, it
just wouldn't let him go.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Freddie Francis film:
The Day of the Triffids (1962)
Film Synopsis
By experimenting on primates, Dr Peter Corrie has found not only a way
to preserve the brain of an animal after death, but also a means of
monitoring brain activity in its new, artificial environment. The
opportunity of using a human brain in his experiments presents itself
when he is called to the site of an aeroplane crash to try to save the
life of the sole survivor, business tycoon Max Holt. Realising
that Holt will surely die from his injuries, Corrie removes his brain
before death and places it in a glass tank, with the intention of using
it in his experiments. To his surprise, the brain is unusually
active and seems to begin exerting some kind of mental grip on
him. Under Holt's control, Dr Corrie is driven to investigate the
circumstances of the businessman's death and soon discovers he was
murdered - but by whom?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.