Film Review
A defining film in Italian horror,
The
Mask of Satan (a.k.a.
La
Maschera del demonio) marked an auspicious directorial debut for
46-year-old Mario Bava and ushered in a new era of visceral
realism in the horror genre. Prior to this film, Bava had earned
a reputation as one of Italy's finest cinematographers, having begun
his career by photographing two shorts for Roberto Rossellini. He
had served as a stand-in director on a few films when the credited
director was indisposed or unwilling to complete the film. The
production company Galatea Films rewarded Bava for his directorial
support on
Caltiki, The Immortal
Monster (1959) by offering him the opportunity to direct any
film of his choice. Bava stuck with horror, for which he
had a particular aptitude - as his work on
I Vampiri (1957) demonstrated
- and created one of the most influential and celebrated films of the
genre.
The Mask of Satan was
reputedly inspired by a story entitled
Viy by the Ukrainian author Nikolai
Gogol, although the end result looks far more like a homage to the
Universal horror films of the 1930s. The vast Gothic sets,
atmospherically lit in high contrast chiaroscuro, closely resemble
those seen in Universal's
Dracula (1931) and
Frankenstein
(1931), although the film's explicit horror content and bold sensual
flourishes owe just as much to Hammer's more recent horror
offerings. Bava takes these influences and throws in a smattering
of Italian Rococo to create a strikingly new horror aesthetic, a
Baroque fantasy that is part Gothic fairytale, part lurid
expressionistic nightmare, in which sex and horror are inextricably
married in a stark visualisation of our darkest and seediest imaginings.
The film broke new ground in its graphic depiction of bodily
mutilation. The opening sequence, in which a spike-lined metal
mask is hammered onto the face of an accused sorceress (Barbara Steele,
in the role that established her as the Queen of Horror), was probably
the most shocking image to have been seen in cinema until that time
(surpassed only by the famous eyeball slitting sequence in Bunuel's
Un
Chien andalou). Fifty years on, the film still has the
power to provoke shock and disgust, so imagine how audiences of the
early 1960s would have reacted to such grisly sights as the impaling of
a human eye. Even though the film was censored by its American
distributors (when released under the title
Black Sunday), it still proved to
be highly controversial and was banned outright in the UK until 1968.
It was Mario Bava's experience as a cinematographer which allowed him
to create such visually arresting films as a director. The camera
glides effortlessly through the haunting Gothic landscapes, imbuing the
film with an eerie dreamlike quality and a chilling sense of
confinement and predestination. The film itself appears to be
infected with supernatural forces. Evil lurks in every
shadow. A nauseous graveyard stench lingers in every dark
passage, every stone-walled chamber. Bava conjures up a world of
the imagination that is the very essence of our darkest nightmares, yet
one that is frighteningly real.
The
Mark of Satan stands apart from virtually all other vampire
films by virtue of the fact that its horrific protagonists appear to be
genuinely consumed by evil - not the slightly cartoonish horror icons
supplied by Universal and Hammer, but true Gothic monsters that really
do look as if they are instruments of the Devil. Bava's horror
masterpiece is one of the creepiest films of its kind, a film which
once seen is never forgotten. This is the stuff of our worst nightmares - a
fright-inducing, heart-stopping excursion into pure terror. Watch
it if you dare.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Moldavia, in the early 1600s. Princess Asa Vajda is sentenced to
death, along with her lover Javuto, for consorting with the
Devil. Metal masks lined with sharp spikes are hammered onto
their faces, but before their bodies can be burnt a storm breaks and
extinguishes the flames. Two centuries later, Dr Kruvajan and his
young associate Dr Gorobec are on their way to a medical conference
when their carriage breaks down. Whilst their coachman repairs
the broken wheel, they explore the area and come across a ruined chapel
within which they find Asa's forgotten tomb. Kruvajan
accidentally shatters the coffin's glass panel when a bat attacks him
and cuts himself. When he lifts the mask, he unwittingly allows a
few drops of blood to fall onto Asa's face, enough to revive her from
her long sleep. Kruvajan and Gorobec then meet Katia, one of
Asa's descendents who lives in a nearby castle with her father Prince
Vajda and brother Constantine. Asa has just enough power to
resurrect Javuto, who brings Kruvajan to her so that she may feast on
his blood. Asa needs the blood of one more victim before
she is fully restored and can take revenge on those who condemned her -
the blood of Katia...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.