Film Review
The gruesome story of Burke and Hare, the most notorious of Britain's
grave robbers, is given a suitably lurid rendition in this well-crafted
period piece, the crowning achievement of the production partnership of
Monty Berman and Robert S. Baker. Through their London-based
company Tempean Films, Berman and Baker turned out a string of
low-budget B-movies and scored some notable
successes with such films as
Jack
the Ripper (1958) and
The
Hellfire Club (1961).
The Flesh and the Fiends was
Berman and Baker's most ambitious and, arguably, finest film. Not
only does it give a generally authentic account of Burke and Hare's
activities, it also makes a highly effective horror film, one that is
as creepy and unsettling as any other British chiller of this
time.
The film's director John Gilling could easily be mistaken for a student
of Val Lewton, so vividly does the film echo Lewton's earlier
production of
The Body Snatcher (1945), an
adaptation of a Robert-Louis Stevenson story which was itself inspired by
the case of Burke and Hare. What Gilling has in common with
Lewton is an unerring ability to imbue his horror films with a
graveyard stench and an unremitting aura of menace. After working
with Berman and Baker for several years, Gilling lent his talents to
Hammer, where he made some of his finest films in the horror genre,
including
The Plague of the Zombies
(1966),
The Reptile (1966) and
The Mummy's Shroud (1967).
The Flesh and the Fiends gave
Gilling a rare opportunity to work with a substantial budget, in
glorious widescreen and with a cast of the highest calibre, and the
result is far from disappointing.
Having played Baron Frankenstein so brilliantly for Hammer in
The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and
The Revenge of Frankenstein
(1958), Peter Cushing was the obvious casting choice for the role of Dr
Knox, the driven man of science and dubious morals who bears a more
than passing resemblance to Mary Shelley's famous fictional
scientist. Like Frankenstein, Knox is so blinded by his
commitment to science that he loses sight of the ethical consequences
of his actions. His is a crisis of conscience that remains highly
topical in the field of medical research, and the film's portrayal of
the conflict between scientific progress and morality is so
intelligently handled that it still has an immensely powerful
resonance. There will always be those who can only see Knox as an
outright villain, a fiend who was knowingly complicit in Burke and
Hare's murderous exploits, but Cushing portrays him in a far more
complex and sympathetic light, a kind of latterday Faust who is ready
to sell his soul for the cause of scientific research.
Cushing's benign and humane portrayal of Knox makes a beautiful
contrast with Donald Pleasence's chillingly monstrous interpretation of
Hare, the more sadistic of the two killers (and ironically the one not
to be prosecuted for his actions). Pleasence's Hare has an almost
iconic quality to it and reminds us of cinema's other great horror
icons, such as the insect-like vampire in Murnau's
Nosferatu
(1922) and the murderous somnambulist in Robert Wiene's
Das Cabinet des Dr Caligari
(1920). Hare's monstrosity shows itself not only in his sinister
cherubin face, which appears to be permanently set in a malicious
rictus smile, but also in everything he says and does. Unlike
Knox, he has absolutely no morality and cannot distinguish between a
living human being and a corpse: to him, they are all the same, flesh
to be sold for the price of a few drinks. Next to Hare, George
Rose's Burke has an almost child-like innocence, and it is fitting that
Hare should receive the grimmest punishment for his sins, in what is
undoubtedly the film's most shocking sequence.
Monty Berman's skill as a cinematographer shows throughout the film,
but mostly in the intensely atmospheric nocturnal sequences, where most
of the foul deeds take place. Clearly influenced by German
expressionism of the 1930s, the lighting and camerawork bring a
brutally nightmarish feel to these scenes, the grim actions that take
place in the foreground being amplified, rendered more horrific,
through the huge monstrous shadows that get projected onto walls in the
background. The savagery of Burke and Hare's litany of crime
reaches its climax in a memorable scene in which the murderous duo
pursue their final victim (an idiot played by a young Melvyn Hayes)
around a farmyard, the demonic squeals of some terrified pigs
ratcheting up the tension to an unbearable pitch. No less
effective is the utterly horrific scene in which the likeable
streetwalker Mary (Billie Whitelaw) is led unsuspectingly to her death
by the killer who obviously intends to rape her. It is curious
that these visually disturbing scenes were left pretty well untouched
by the censor, but other scenes depicting female nudity were excised
(but retained in a continental release).
There have been several other cinematic accounts of the Burke and Hare
story -
Burke & Hare
(1971),
The Doctor and the Devils
(1985),
Burke and Hare (2010)
- but
The Flesh and the Fiends
is arguably the most inspired and the most chilling. With its
elegant art design, atmospheric photography and compelling performances
from Peter Cushing and Donald Pleasence it is not only a beautifully
crafted piece of cinema, it is also one of the finest of British horror
films, setting a standard of excellence that Hammer and its rivals
could never hope to match. The most terrifying fiends to grace
British cinema are not the familiar gore-stained Gothic monstrosities
beloved by Hammer but the pair of 19th century grave robbers who are
convincingly portrayed in this gripping, nightmare-inducing little
masterpiece. This is the film that gave us one of the horror
genre's most chilling lines, spoken not by a psychotic killer but a
respectable man of science:
Death
is an incident producing clay. Use it, mould it, learn from it...
Definitely not a line you would ever use on a first date.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Edinburgh, 1828. Dr Robert Knox is an eminent anatomist who needs
a regular supply of human cadavers for his anatomy lectures. A
man who is committed to the progress of science, Knox has no qualms
about purchasing corpses delivered to him to by a pair of
unsavoury-looking grave robbers, William Burke and William Hare.
Realising that Knox will pay more for fresher bodies, Burke and Hare
begin to kill poor people that no one will miss. One of their
victims is a young prostitute named Mary, who had been going out with
one of Knox's students, Chris Jackson, before they murdered her.
When Chris sees Mary's corpse waiting to be prepared for dissection he
goes after Burke and Hare, but only manages to get himself killed by
the ruthless duo. Meanwhile, Knox's reputation is under attack
from his medical rivals, who disapprove of his methods and his
morals. When Burke and Hare's murderous activities have been
exposed, Knox faces not only criminal prosecution, but also ruin and
public humiliation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.