Maniac
Brief Synopsis
A beautiful woman seduces a drifter so he can help free her murderous husband from an insane asylum.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Michael Carreras
Director
Film Details
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Crime
Horror
Release Date
1963
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 26m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Synopsis
Kerwin Matthews, playing a dissolute drifter down on his luck, is stranded in a cheap bar in Spain where he falls for Annette, the pretty daughter of the proprietor, played by Nadia Gray. Nadia Gray gradually shifts the young man's attentions to herself, rather than her daughter, and together Matthews and Gray concoct a plot to help Gray's estranged husband, now a homicidal maniac confined in an institution after a grisly series of killings dubbed "The Acetylene Murders" by the press, out of the mental institution so he can escape from the country.
Director
Michael Carreras
Director
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Film Details
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Crime
Horror
Release Date
1963
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 26m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Articles
Maniac (1963)
Set in the South of France, the story focuses on American artist Geoffrey Farrell (Kerwin Mathews) who is down on his luck and drifting around the country. He soon meets and becomes romantically involved with Eve Beynat (Nadia Gray), who lives with her stepdaughter Annette (Liliane Brousse). Eve's husband, George Beynat, is currently under lock and key in a mental institution for the murder of his daughter's rapist four years earlier. After a visit to see her husband at the asylum, Eve reveals that George will agree to divorce her so she can marry Geoffrey if they both help him escape from his confinement. With the aid of a male nurse at the asylum, Eve and Geoffrey successfully spring George and transport him to the Marseilles pier where he makes his getaway....or does he? After Geoffrey discovers the body of the murdered male nurse in the car trunk, other strange occurrences and sinister incidents indicate that George is still lurking about and that he is not only dangerously unstable but that he may be planning to murder Geoffrey and his unfaithful wife.
Written and produced by Jimmy Sangster, Maniac was the second Hammer feature to be directed by Michael Carreras, whose father James founded Hammer Films. Michael, who would go on to direct The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb [1964], Prehistoric Women [1967, aka Slave Girls] and The Lost Continent [1968], boasted in an interview at the time that Maniac is "a thriller of thrillers, so ingeniously constructed, so packed with surprises, that we defy anyone to predict correctly what's coming next or to anticipate the startling and unexpected climax."
For the cast, Carreras assembled American actor Kerwin Mathews, who was best known as the title hero of The 7th Voyage of Sinbad [1958] and had recently appeared in the Hammer costume adventure Pirates of Blood River [1962]; Hungarian native and international star Nadia Gray who created quite a stir with her striptease in the decadent jet-set party scene of Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita [1960]; French ingénue Liliane Brousse, who abandoned her film career after only one more movie, the still unreleased 1964 feature, The Parisienne and the Prudes; and two prolific English character actors Norman Bird and Donald Houston, whose total screen credits together almost exceed 300 movies!
Maniac was filmed on location in the Camargue region of Southern France with Bac du Sauvage being used for the exterior café scenes and Les Baux utilized for the finale in the caves. The interior scenes were shot at the MGM Studios location at Borehamwood, England.
Recalling the filming of Maniac, Kerwin Mathews told interviewers Tom Johnson and Deborah Del Vecchio (in Hammer Films: An Exhaustive Filmography), "This was my first extended stay in France, particularly in the South. I've lived there occasionally since then. I'm a blatant Francophile because of Maniac! Michael Carreras was just breaking through my shield of insecurities on Maniac , and I always wished we could have had another chance on another film as he found his way as a director and I matured as an actor. I loved working with him and also working without a sword in my hand! Because of the short schedules on Hammer films (and others I've done), I became super-organized. The quick filming didn't bother me at all. I was inclined to be very impatient and critical of film people, but not those at Hammer. I was so serious about acting as a craft I could be proud of and, acting in low budget films, hanging on to those ideals could be very often an insurmountable challenge! Believe it or not, I've never seen Maniac - or many of my pictures. I was usually making another one on the other side of the world when the last one came out!"
Donald Houston, who gives a perfectly chilling performance as the title character, admitted that he "found his role so frightening that it kept him awake at night." Producer Jimmy Sangster, on the other hand, was slightly perturbed by Nadia Gray's request that a friend be allowed to visit her on the set and after reluctantly granting that permission, discovered the unexpected guest was Orson Welles! Co-star Norman Bird had a surprise in store for himself as well on the production: "I remember that when I was offered the part, I was told it was not one of their usual horror films. On receiving the script, I was intrigued to see that it started with a girl pursued through the woods by her rapist who then had his head burned off by her vengeful father with an oxyacetylene blowtorch! I was, rightly, rather worried about the quality of my French accent. But, when I saw the finished film, I was surprised to hear how good it was. After a few minutes, I realized my voice had been exceptionally well dubbed! It was the only time this had ever happened, and I must say it improved my performance considerably!"
When Maniac went into theatrical release, the reviews were more positive than usual for this type of genre thriller. The Time magazine critic called it "a lethal little thriller that succeeds in spite of itself...the picture has an ingenious, neatly reticulated plot that packs some walloping surprises...Maniac is good clean sadism that seldom falters until the final frames, when the fun is diluted in a 3.2 Hitchcock solution." Robert Salmaggi of The N.Y. Herald Tribune wrote that Maniac was "a modest, nicely written suspense drama" and "well directed by Michael Carreras" and Howard Thompson of The New York Times exclaimed "Maniac has one thing and has it in spades - a plot of extraordinary cunning....The cat-and-mouse nightmare packs three tingling surprises plus a dazzling denouement we defy anyone to predict."
One last bit of trivia: The Research publication Incredibly Strange Films features a still on its back cover that was labeled as "film unknown" on the flyleaf page but is actually a scene from Maniac's climax where Annette is menaced by the title character.
Producer: Jimmy Sangster
Director: Michael Carreras
Screenplay: Jimmy Sangster
Cinematography: Wilkie Cooper
Art Direction: Edward Carrick
Music: Stanley Black
Film Editing: Tom Simpson
Cast: Kerwin Mathews (Paul Farrell), Nadia Gray (Eve Beynat), Norman Bird (Salon), Liliane Brousse (Annette Beynat), Arnold Diamond (Janiello), Donald Houston (George).
BW-86m. Letterboxed.
by Jeff Stafford
SOURCES:
Hammer Films: An Exhaustive Filmography by Tom Johnson & Deborah Del Vecchio
Hammer Films: The Bray Studio Years by Wayne Kinsey
Filmfacts
IMDB
Maniac (1963)
In the wake of Alfred Hitchcock's phenomenally successful Psycho (1960), several studios attempted to mimic the success of the Universal box office hit by rushing into production numerous psychological thrillers with warped, aberrant characters driving the narrative. Hammer Film Studios was probably the most prolific of the lot, churning out such memorable titles as Scream of Fear (1961, aka Taste of Fear in the U.K.), Paranoiac (1963) and Hysteria (1965). While none of these matched the success or quality of Psycho, some of these Hammer concoctions were still stylish genre exercises and Maniac (1963) was one of their better efforts.
Set in the South of France, the story focuses on American artist Geoffrey Farrell (Kerwin Mathews) who is down on his luck and drifting around the country. He soon meets and becomes romantically involved with Eve Beynat (Nadia Gray), who lives with her stepdaughter Annette (Liliane Brousse). Eve's husband, George Beynat, is currently under lock and key in a mental institution for the murder of his daughter's rapist four years earlier. After a visit to see her husband at the asylum, Eve reveals that George will agree to divorce her so she can marry Geoffrey if they both help him escape from his confinement. With the aid of a male nurse at the asylum, Eve and Geoffrey successfully spring George and transport him to the Marseilles pier where he makes his getaway....or does he? After Geoffrey discovers the body of the murdered male nurse in the car trunk, other strange occurrences and sinister incidents indicate that George is still lurking about and that he is not only dangerously unstable but that he may be planning to murder Geoffrey and his unfaithful wife.
Written and produced by Jimmy Sangster, Maniac was the second Hammer feature to be directed by Michael Carreras, whose father James founded Hammer Films. Michael, who would go on to direct The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb [1964], Prehistoric Women [1967, aka Slave Girls] and The Lost Continent [1968], boasted in an interview at the time that Maniac is "a thriller of thrillers, so ingeniously constructed, so packed with surprises, that we defy anyone to predict correctly what's coming next or to anticipate the startling and unexpected climax."
For the cast, Carreras assembled American actor Kerwin Mathews, who was best known as the title hero of The 7th Voyage of Sinbad [1958] and had recently appeared in the Hammer costume adventure Pirates of Blood River [1962]; Hungarian native and international star Nadia Gray who created quite a stir with her striptease in the decadent jet-set party scene of Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita [1960]; French ingénue Liliane Brousse, who abandoned her film career after only one more movie, the still unreleased 1964 feature, The Parisienne and the Prudes; and two prolific English character actors Norman Bird and Donald Houston, whose total screen credits together almost exceed 300 movies!
Maniac was filmed on location in the Camargue region of Southern France with Bac du Sauvage being used for the exterior café scenes and Les Baux utilized for the finale in the caves. The interior scenes were shot at the MGM Studios location at Borehamwood, England.
Recalling the filming of Maniac, Kerwin Mathews told interviewers Tom Johnson and Deborah Del Vecchio (in Hammer Films: An Exhaustive Filmography), "This was my first extended stay in France, particularly in the South. I've lived there occasionally since then. I'm a blatant Francophile because of Maniac! Michael Carreras was just breaking through my shield of insecurities on Maniac , and I always wished we could have had another chance on another film as he found his way as a director and I matured as an actor. I loved working with him and also working without a sword in my hand! Because of the short schedules on Hammer films (and others I've done), I became super-organized. The quick filming didn't bother me at all. I was inclined to be very impatient and critical of film people, but not those at Hammer. I was so serious about acting as a craft I could be proud of and, acting in low budget films, hanging on to those ideals could be very often an insurmountable challenge! Believe it or not, I've never seen Maniac - or many of my pictures. I was usually making another one on the other side of the world when the last one came out!"
Donald Houston, who gives a perfectly chilling performance as the title character, admitted that he "found his role so frightening that it kept him awake at night." Producer Jimmy Sangster, on the other hand, was slightly perturbed by Nadia Gray's request that a friend be allowed to visit her on the set and after reluctantly granting that permission, discovered the unexpected guest was Orson Welles! Co-star Norman Bird had a surprise in store for himself as well on the production: "I remember that when I was offered the part, I was told it was not one of their usual horror films. On receiving the script, I was intrigued to see that it started with a girl pursued through the woods by her rapist who then had his head burned off by her vengeful father with an oxyacetylene blowtorch! I was, rightly, rather worried about the quality of my French accent. But, when I saw the finished film, I was surprised to hear how good it was. After a few minutes, I realized my voice had been exceptionally well dubbed! It was the only time this had ever happened, and I must say it improved my performance considerably!"
When Maniac went into theatrical release, the reviews were more positive than usual for this type of genre thriller. The Time magazine critic called it "a lethal little thriller that succeeds in spite of itself...the picture has an ingenious, neatly reticulated plot that packs some walloping surprises...Maniac is good clean sadism that seldom falters until the final frames, when the fun is diluted in a 3.2 Hitchcock solution." Robert Salmaggi of The N.Y. Herald Tribune wrote that Maniac was "a modest, nicely written suspense drama" and "well directed by Michael Carreras" and Howard Thompson of The New York Times exclaimed "Maniac has one thing and has it in spades - a plot of extraordinary cunning....The cat-and-mouse nightmare packs three tingling surprises plus a dazzling denouement we defy anyone to predict."
One last bit of trivia: The Research publication Incredibly Strange Films features a still on its back cover that was labeled as "film unknown" on the flyleaf page but is actually a scene from Maniac's climax where Annette is menaced by the title character.
Producer: Jimmy Sangster
Director: Michael Carreras
Screenplay: Jimmy Sangster
Cinematography: Wilkie Cooper
Art Direction: Edward Carrick
Music: Stanley Black
Film Editing: Tom Simpson
Cast: Kerwin Mathews (Paul Farrell), Nadia Gray (Eve Beynat), Norman Bird (Salon), Liliane Brousse (Annette Beynat), Arnold Diamond (Janiello), Donald Houston (George).
BW-86m. Letterboxed.
by Jeff Stafford
SOURCES:
Hammer Films: An Exhaustive Filmography by Tom Johnson & Deborah Del Vecchio
Hammer Films: The Bray Studio Years by Wayne Kinsey
Filmfacts
IMDB
Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films - A 3-Disc Set on DVD
The collection begins with a murder thriller, 1958's The Snorkel. Written by Peter Myers and Hammer's in-house scribe Jimmy Sangster, from a story by Italian horror director Antonio Margheriti, The Snorkel is an elaborate "how did he do it?" gimmick film. As with more than a few Hammer mysteries, it takes place at a beach setting, on the border between France and Italy. The killer avoids suspicion because he can prove that he was in the wrong country during the crime. Rocky cliffs render sneaking through the border almost impossible -- by normal means.
Director Guy Green gets the most from the second gimmick, which is explained in the film's first scene. The killer seals himself into a gas-filled room, and breathes by donning an adapted diving snorkel mask. We know from the beginning that it's Paul Decker (Peter Van Eyck), a wife-killer who soon decides that his teenaged stepdaughter Candy (Mandy Miller) must die as well. Bizarre murders in a French setting remind us a bit of Clouzot's Les Diaboliques, while Candy's precocious investigation points forward to a number of sixties' chillers. Discounted as an unreliable witness, Candy must trap her stepfather on her own.
Van Eyck is an undeveloped but menacing villain, and lovely Betta St.John offers good support as Candy's chaperone. Grégoire Aslan is the prerequisite French detective on the case. Mandy Miller's likeable teen heroine is a doubtful mix of immature emotions and steely resolve, as shown in one poorly handled scene when Candy underreacts to the death of her beloved dog. The film's good reputation comes from fans that admire the killer's technically elaborate murder scheme, and ace Hammer cameraman Jack Asher's arresting camerawork. A final surprise lifted from The Third Man could have provided a perfect shock finish, but the movie goes on a bit longer, clearly to tie up some moral loose ends for the censors.
1960's Stop Me Before I Kill! (known in England as The Full Treatment) is produced, co-written and directed by Val Guest, a superior filmmaker who made two of Hammer's best science fiction efforts. Despite locations in the South of France and excellent Megascope cinematography by Gil Taylor, the thriller is let down by an unusually weak script. Racing car driver Alan Colby (Ronald Lewis of Mr. Sardonicus) recovers from a wedding-day car crash but finds himself stricken with an illogical desire to strangle his wife Denise (Diane Cilento). Alan and Denise meet French psychiatrist David Prade (Claude Dauphin) on the Riviera. The charming aristocrat ignores Alan's unprovoked fits of temper and convinces him to submit to analysis. Meanwhile, Denise worries that another of Alan's violent episodes may be her last.
The story and script by Ronald Scott Thorn is a tangle of bad psychiatry and painfully transparent mystery plotting. Top-billed Claude Dauphin's macabre chitchat about deadly spouses is clearly meant to upset Alan; the doctor follows the couple to London "just in case" his services might be needed. Alan's mood swings from sweetness to rage at least once in every scene in a way that's simply laughable. All of the film's important clues -- a Siamese cat, bruises on Denise's neck, a cable car in disrepair -- are clumsily foreshadowed. Alan even has a box of antique surgical instruments that seem awfully handy for a man with violent impulses. All three main actors do fine work under the circumstances and the location photography is splendid, but Stop Me Before I Kill! is definitely not Hammer's finest hour. Sony's encoding is an uncut English version, as it includes a brief glimpse of nudity in a swimming scene.
Never Take Candy from a Stranger (1960) sounds like trashy exploitation but is actually a responsible, thought-provoking movie about child molestation -- perhaps the best ever made on the subject. Director Cyril Frankel (On the Fiddle, The Devil's Own) does excellent work with John Hunter's adaptation of a play by Roger Garis. Sheltered eleven year-olds Lucille Demarest and Jean Carter (Estelle Brody & Janina Faye) tell their parents that the doddering Mr. Olderberry (Felix Aylmer) lured them into his house with candy and asked them to dance naked for him. Jean's parents, newcomers in their Canadian hamlet, find that the law is ineffective against the powerful Olderberry family, the founders of the town. The old man's businessman son controls almost everything. The police are unhelpful and Mr. Demarest (Robert Arden of Mr. Arkadin) is entreated to declare his daughter unfit to testify. Olderberry's lawyer (Niall MacGinnis) traumatizes Jean on the witness stand. He implies that the Carters are perverted "outsiders" and threatens to force the girl to submit to psychiatric and physical tests.
Freddie Francis's superior camerawork lends realism to all aspects of the story. Gwen Watford and Patrick Allen are excellent as Jean's caring parents and little Janina Faye (of Horror of Dracula and Day of the Triffids) is outstanding as the brave and innocent Jean. Felix Aylmer's senile Olderberry Sr. is disturbing, as we're accustomed to seeing the actor play figures of authority. By the end of the trial scene we've nearly forgotten that this is still a Hammer thriller, and when the two girls suddenly find themselves once again in jeopardy, the final reel of the picture is electrifying.
Directed with taste and discretion, Never Take Candy from a Stranger comes to a chilling conclusion. In England the film was released as Never Take Sweets from a Stranger. It would make a thoughtful double bill with William Wyler's The Children's Hour, another problematic story in which children testify about a socially taboo subject.
A compact and intense bank robbery tale, 1961's Cash on Demand provides Hammer stalwarts Peter Cushing and André Morell with a showcase for their acting talents. Adapted from a Television play, David T. Chantler and Lewis Greifer's script makes an asset of the film's single set. Director Quentin Lawrence broke out of TV only occasionally but acquits himself admirably.
The focus is on Cushing's bank manager Fordyce, a veritable Ebenezer Scrooge who alienates his employees and browbeats his top clerks Pearson and Sanderson (Richard Vernon & Norman Bird) over inconsequential errors. That's when Bank Security Chief Hepburn (André Morell) shows up. The layout of the bank's rooms and vault (designed by Hammer's Bernard Robinson) becomes critical when Hepburn reveals to Fordyce that he's a bank robber, and that his confederates have already kidnapped Fordyce's wife and child.
Forced to play along with Hepburn's scheme to loot the vault, the once-imperious Fordyce begins to crack up under the strain. Although fifty years of caper movies make a few of Cash on Demand's explanations and situations seem a little obvious now, the tension stays high. It's especially pleasant to see Peter Cushing given so much screen time to develop his character -- we're reminded of his breakout role in the BBC's landmark teleplay of 1984, where he carried the entire show. After Morell's robber beats him about the face, Cushing must take a few seconds to wipe the tears from his eyes. It's a marvelous little moment of acting. Cash on Demand is a real gem and a very welcome surprise.
1963's Maniac has excellent production values but labors under the weight of yet another gimmicky and obvious script by Jimmy Sangster. Hammer producer Michael Carreras directs this one with Sangster taking over producing responsibilities. In the interesting Camargue region of France, American artist Paul Farrell (Kerwin Mathews) parts company with his rich girlfriend, and finds warm companionship at the café of the two Beynat women. Paul romances the daughter Annette (Liliane Brousse of Paranoiac), only to be seduced by her mother Eve (Nadia Gray of La dolce vita). He then unwisely helps Eve spring her husband from an asylum for the criminally insane. It seems that Annette was raped five years before, and that Monsieur Beynat killed the offender with a blowtorch. One thing leads to another and Paul is soon helping Eve dispose of a corpse. Just when their problems seem resolved, Eve's mad husband reappears, seeking revenge.
Sangster's wild plot reversals are too contrived to achieve the intended impact, while the dialogue repeatedly tips us off to what should be narrative surprises. Anybody familiar with TV whodunits knows that if a character's face isn't shown clearly, it's only a matter of time before some kind of identity switcheroo occurs. The acting is fine, especially that of Kerwin Mathews and Liliane Brousse. Ms. Gray struggles with the almost unplayable Eve, a woman who is both sincere and deceitful, often at the same time. The blowtorch and mutilation killings are mercifully kept off screen, but all credibility disappears when we are told that a bandaged patient has been burned beyond recognition - we can see his untouched eyes and eyebrows, so why doesn't the suave Inspector Etienne (George Pastell) immediately recognize him? For that matter, why does the Inspector discount Paul's obvious participation in a prison break and a murder?
The final entry in the Icons of Suspense package is a categorical misfit. It's Joseph Losey's These are the Damned (1963; aka The Damned), one of the best and most profound science fiction films ever made. An angry expression of Ban-the-Bomb and anti-government secrets sentiment, Losey's film also has more to say about teenaged angst and societal alienation than Kubrick's somewhat similar A Clockwork Orange. The openly pessimistic story looks backward to Hammer's earlier Quatermass movies with their top-secret scientific projects, and forward to the growing "age of violence" that will soon permeate all levels of society. Completed in 1961, the film wasn't seen until 1963 in England and 1965 in the United States, and both releases were drastically edited. Sony's stunning Megascope transfer is the full original version, essentially seen nowhere until a few years ago.
"Public servant" Bernard (Alexander Knox) presides over a secret project hidden in barren cliffs not far from the seaside town of Weymouth. Bernard's artist lover Freya (Viveca Lindfors) works in a stone house nearby, creating weird sculptures that look like people and animals charred by fire. A group of local "Teddy Boy" thugs led by the psychotic King (Oliver Reed) chases the disillusioned American Simon Wells (Macdonald Carey) and King's runaway sister Joan (Shirley Anne Field) to these same cliffs. Pursued by Bernard's security forces, Simon, Joan and King find themselves in a hidden bunker where live a group of strange girls and boys. The result of a nuclear accident, the mutated children are cold-blooded and radioactive: Bernard is raising them in isolation so that they will be prepared to live in the conditions that will prevail after the expected nuclear holocaust. The intruders attempt to free the young prisoners, not realizing that the children are lethal to normal, warm-blooded humans. Bernard can't contain his shocking secret, which fills Freya with both despair and fury: "Is that the extent of your dream, Bernard, to turn nine ice-cold children free in the ashes of the universe?"
These are the Damned is world-class cinema that surely confused audiences expecting a biker saga or a replay of an earlier movie about "deadly" children, Village of the Damned. Just prior to his discovery as a major art-film director, Joseph Losey finds a new form for a new anti-establishment genre. His disturbing story begins with a grating James Bernard rock song expressing the nihilism of the Teddy Boys ("Black Leather Black Leather Smash Smash Smash!"). The teen thugs parallel the equally irresponsible, death-worshipping military unit led by the haughtily paternalistic Bernard, who looks us straight in the eye and states unequivocally that nuclear annihilation is unavoidable. Details are everything, and These are the Damned produces a never-ending string of impressive images: the underground quarters of The Children, watched by closed-circuit TV; the machine-gun toting guards reminiscent of the possessed goons from Quatermass 2; the twin giant helicopters that pursue King's stolen sports car down a lonely beach road.
The movie encounters acting difficulties with beautiful Shirley Anne Field, who nevertheless has a transcendant moment showing a frightened girl the beauty of the world outside her prison-cave. Losey's only real directorial stumble is his gross over-emphasis of Oliver Reed's incestuous desire for his sister. Macdonald Carey is convincing as a middle-aged American out of his element, but makes an uninspiring hero. Redeeming these problems is the stunning Viveca Lindfors, a Swedish actress foolishly discarded by Hollywood. Ms. Lindfors's life-affirming Freya is an indelible original. The maker of sculptures that also worship death, she becomes the muse for a mad bureaucrat who has learned to genuinely stop worrying and love the bomb.
Joseph Losey's career is blessed with the kind of symmetry that film critics love. These are the Damned seems a thematic extension of elements in the director's first movie The Boy with Green Hair, another plea for human tolerance in the face of war. Green Hair's ghostly "war orphans" are very much like Damned's prepubescent guinea pigs, innocent victims lost in an insane world they didn't create. Both groups of children beg for help and understanding. A bona fide subversive classic, These are the Damned increases its grip on the audience as it speeds to one of the most doom-laden finishes in Science Fiction: "Help us! Help us! Please help us!"
Sony's DVD set Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films contains six flawless enhanced B&W transfers with very clear audio; every film is encoded with English subtitles. The films all appear to be uncut English versions with American title substitutions. The Snorkel and These Are the Damned are substantially longer than their original American releases. Sony's keep case packaging stacks all three discs on a single hub, a controversial practice already given a thumbs-down by collectors concerned about scratches.
All of the films come with American trailers. The various sales pitches fairly openly show us why the movies were not wildly popular. Never Take Candy from a Stranger comes off as sordid sensationalism. The Snorkel touts its gimmicky central plot device, and even uses the word "gimmick" in its voiceover script. The schizophrenic trailer for These are the Damned plays the outlandish "Black Leather" song over some of the film's most awkward moments. The 2007 premiere of These are the Damned on the TCM cable channel caused a minor sensation. Sony should have put the film out as a special edition but fans will be pleased to see it finally available in such a handsome presentation.
For more information about Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films, visit Sony Pictures. To order Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films, go to TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films - A 3-Disc Set on DVD
Reaching further down into its vault of co-productions with England's Hammer Films, Ltd, Sony collects five mystery thrillers and one
Science Fiction masterpiece under the title Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films. Hammer's Technicolor gothic horror films became
legend but the company actually produced in a variety of genres. The color horrors often seem limited to tiny studio sets and a local
park, but these B&W widescreen productions boast locations across England and even on the continent. Some of the titles in this
collection are real rarities: most received only token releases in the United States and scant exhibition on Television. Several were
severely cut for America, either for "mature themes" or just to render them as brief as possible for Columbia double bills.
The collection begins with a murder thriller, 1958's The Snorkel. Written by Peter Myers and Hammer's in-house scribe Jimmy
Sangster, from a story by Italian horror director Antonio Margheriti, The Snorkel is an elaborate "how did he do it?" gimmick
film. As with more than a few Hammer mysteries, it takes place at a beach setting, on the border between France and Italy. The killer
avoids suspicion because he can prove that he was in the wrong country during the crime. Rocky cliffs render sneaking through the border
almost impossible -- by normal means.
Director Guy Green gets the most from the second gimmick, which is explained in the film's first scene. The killer seals himself into a
gas-filled room, and breathes by donning an adapted diving snorkel mask. We know from the beginning that it's Paul Decker (Peter Van
Eyck), a wife-killer who soon decides that his teenaged stepdaughter Candy (Mandy Miller) must die as well. Bizarre murders in a French
setting remind us a bit of Clouzot's Les Diaboliques, while Candy's precocious investigation points forward to a number of
sixties' chillers. Discounted as an unreliable witness, Candy must trap her stepfather on her own.
Van Eyck is an undeveloped but menacing villain, and lovely Betta St.John offers good support as Candy's chaperone. Grégoire Aslan
is the prerequisite French detective on the case. Mandy Miller's likeable teen heroine is a doubtful mix of immature emotions and steely
resolve, as shown in one poorly handled scene when Candy underreacts to the death of her beloved dog. The film's good reputation comes
from fans that admire the killer's technically elaborate murder scheme, and ace Hammer cameraman Jack Asher's arresting camerawork. A
final surprise lifted from The Third Man could have provided a perfect shock finish, but the movie goes on a bit longer, clearly
to tie up some moral loose ends for the censors.
1960's Stop Me Before I Kill! (known in England as The Full Treatment) is produced, co-written and directed by Val Guest, a
superior filmmaker who made two of Hammer's best science fiction efforts. Despite locations in the South of France and excellent
Megascope cinematography by Gil Taylor, the thriller is let down by an unusually weak script. Racing car driver Alan Colby (Ronald Lewis
of Mr. Sardonicus) recovers from a wedding-day car crash but finds himself stricken with an illogical desire to strangle his wife
Denise (Diane Cilento). Alan and Denise meet French psychiatrist David Prade (Claude Dauphin) on the Riviera. The charming aristocrat
ignores Alan's unprovoked fits of temper and convinces him to submit to analysis. Meanwhile, Denise worries that another of Alan's
violent episodes may be her last.
The story and script by Ronald Scott Thorn is a tangle of bad psychiatry and painfully transparent mystery plotting. Top-billed Claude
Dauphin's macabre chitchat about deadly spouses is clearly meant to upset Alan; the doctor follows the couple to London "just in case"
his services might be needed. Alan's mood swings from sweetness to rage at least once in every scene in a way that's simply laughable.
All of the film's important clues -- a Siamese cat, bruises on Denise's neck, a cable car in disrepair -- are clumsily foreshadowed. Alan
even has a box of antique surgical instruments that seem awfully handy for a man with violent impulses. All three main actors do fine
work under the circumstances and the location photography is splendid, but Stop Me Before I Kill! is definitely not Hammer's
finest hour. Sony's encoding is an uncut English version, as it includes a brief glimpse of nudity in a swimming scene.
Never Take Candy from a Stranger (1960) sounds like trashy exploitation but is actually a responsible, thought-provoking movie
about child molestation -- perhaps the best ever made on the subject. Director Cyril Frankel (On the Fiddle, The Devil's Own) does
excellent work with John Hunter's adaptation of a play by Roger Garis. Sheltered eleven year-olds Lucille Demarest and Jean Carter
(Estelle Brody & Janina Faye) tell their parents that the doddering Mr. Olderberry (Felix Aylmer) lured them into his house with candy
and asked them to dance naked for him. Jean's parents, newcomers in their Canadian hamlet, find that the law is ineffective against the
powerful Olderberry family, the founders of the town. The old man's businessman son controls almost everything. The police are unhelpful
and Mr. Demarest (Robert Arden of Mr. Arkadin) is entreated to
declare his daughter unfit to testify. Olderberry's lawyer (Niall MacGinnis) traumatizes Jean on the witness stand. He implies that the
Carters are perverted "outsiders" and threatens to force the girl to submit to psychiatric and physical tests.
Freddie Francis's superior camerawork lends realism to all aspects of the story. Gwen Watford and Patrick Allen are excellent as Jean's
caring parents and little Janina Faye (of Horror of Dracula and Day of the Triffids) is outstanding as the brave and
innocent Jean. Felix Aylmer's senile Olderberry Sr. is disturbing, as we're accustomed to seeing the actor play figures of authority. By
the end of the trial scene we've nearly forgotten that this is still a Hammer thriller, and when the two girls suddenly find themselves
once again in jeopardy, the final reel of the picture is electrifying.
Directed with taste and discretion, Never Take Candy from a Stranger comes to a chilling conclusion. In England the film was
released as Never Take Sweets from a Stranger. It would make a thoughtful double bill with William Wyler's The Children's
Hour, another problematic story in which children testify about a socially taboo subject.
A compact and intense bank robbery tale, 1961's Cash on Demand provides Hammer stalwarts Peter Cushing and André
Morell with a showcase for their acting talents. Adapted from a Television play, David T. Chantler and Lewis Greifer's script makes an
asset of the film's single set. Director Quentin Lawrence broke out of TV only occasionally but acquits himself admirably.
The focus is on Cushing's bank manager Fordyce, a veritable Ebenezer Scrooge who alienates his employees and browbeats his top clerks
Pearson and Sanderson (Richard Vernon & Norman Bird) over inconsequential errors. That's when Bank Security Chief Hepburn (André
Morell) shows up. The layout of the bank's rooms and vault (designed by Hammer's Bernard Robinson) becomes critical when Hepburn reveals
to Fordyce that he's a bank robber, and that his confederates have already kidnapped Fordyce's wife and child.
Forced to play along with Hepburn's scheme to loot the vault, the once-imperious Fordyce begins to crack up under the strain. Although
fifty years of caper movies make a few of Cash on Demand's explanations and situations seem a little obvious now, the tension
stays high. It's especially pleasant to see Peter Cushing given so much screen time to develop his character -- we're reminded of his
breakout role in the BBC's landmark teleplay of 1984, where he carried the entire show. After Morell's robber beats him about the
face, Cushing must take a few seconds to wipe the tears from his eyes. It's a marvelous little moment of acting. Cash on Demand is
a real gem and a very welcome surprise.
1963's Maniac has excellent production values but labors under the weight of yet another gimmicky and obvious script by Jimmy
Sangster. Hammer producer Michael Carreras directs this one with Sangster taking over producing responsibilities. In the interesting
Camargue region of France, American artist Paul Farrell (Kerwin Mathews) parts company with his rich girlfriend, and finds warm
companionship at the café of the two Beynat women. Paul romances the daughter Annette (Liliane Brousse of Paranoiac), only
to be seduced by her mother Eve (Nadia Gray of La dolce vita). He then unwisely helps Eve spring her husband from an asylum for
the criminally insane. It seems that Annette was raped five years before, and that Monsieur Beynat killed the offender with a blowtorch.
One thing leads to another and Paul is soon helping Eve dispose of a corpse. Just when their problems seem resolved, Eve's mad husband
reappears, seeking revenge.
Sangster's wild plot reversals are too contrived to achieve the intended impact, while the dialogue repeatedly tips us off to what should
be narrative surprises. Anybody familiar with TV whodunits knows that if a character's face isn't shown clearly, it's only a matter of
time before some kind of identity switcheroo occurs. The acting is fine, especially that of Kerwin Mathews and Liliane Brousse. Ms. Gray
struggles with the almost unplayable Eve, a woman who is both sincere and deceitful, often at the same time. The blowtorch and mutilation
killings are mercifully kept off screen, but all credibility disappears when we are told that a bandaged patient has been burned beyond
recognition - we can see his untouched eyes and eyebrows, so why doesn't the suave Inspector Etienne (George Pastell) immediately
recognize him? For that matter, why does the Inspector discount Paul's obvious participation in a prison break and a murder?
The final entry in the Icons of Suspense package is a categorical misfit. It's Joseph Losey's These are the Damned (1963;
aka The Damned), one of the best and most profound science fiction films ever made. An angry expression of Ban-the-Bomb and
anti-government secrets sentiment, Losey's film also has more to say about teenaged angst and societal alienation than Kubrick's somewhat
similar A Clockwork Orange. The openly pessimistic story looks backward to Hammer's earlier Quatermass movies with their
top-secret scientific projects, and forward to the growing "age of violence" that will soon permeate all levels of society. Completed in
1961, the film wasn't seen until 1963 in England and 1965 in the United States, and both releases were drastically edited. Sony's
stunning Megascope transfer is the full original version, essentially seen nowhere until a few years ago.
"Public servant" Bernard (Alexander Knox) presides over a secret project hidden in barren cliffs not far from the seaside town of
Weymouth. Bernard's artist lover Freya (Viveca Lindfors) works in a stone house nearby, creating weird sculptures that look like people
and animals charred by fire. A group of local "Teddy Boy" thugs led by the psychotic King (Oliver Reed) chases the disillusioned American
Simon Wells (Macdonald Carey) and King's runaway sister Joan (Shirley Anne Field) to these same cliffs. Pursued by Bernard's security
forces, Simon, Joan and King find themselves in a hidden bunker where live a group of strange girls and boys. The result of a nuclear
accident, the mutated children are cold-blooded and radioactive: Bernard is raising them in isolation so that they will be prepared to
live in the conditions that will prevail after the expected nuclear holocaust. The intruders attempt to free the young prisoners, not
realizing that the children are lethal to normal, warm-blooded humans. Bernard can't contain his shocking secret, which fills Freya with
both despair and fury: "Is that the extent of your dream, Bernard, to turn nine ice-cold children free in the ashes of the universe?"
These are the Damned is world-class cinema that surely confused audiences expecting a biker saga or a replay of an earlier movie
about "deadly" children, Village of the Damned. Just prior to his discovery as a major art-film director, Joseph Losey finds a new
form for a new anti-establishment genre. His disturbing story begins with a grating James Bernard rock song expressing the nihilism of
the Teddy Boys ("Black Leather Black Leather Smash Smash Smash!"). The teen thugs parallel the equally irresponsible,
death-worshipping military unit led by the haughtily paternalistic Bernard, who looks us straight in the eye and states unequivocally
that nuclear annihilation is unavoidable. Details are everything, and These are the Damned produces a never-ending string of
impressive images: the underground quarters of The Children, watched by closed-circuit TV; the machine-gun toting guards reminiscent of
the possessed goons from Quatermass 2; the twin giant helicopters that pursue King's stolen sports car down a lonely beach road.
The movie encounters acting difficulties with beautiful Shirley Anne Field, who nevertheless has a transcendant moment showing a
frightened girl the beauty of the world outside her prison-cave. Losey's only real directorial stumble is his gross over-emphasis of
Oliver Reed's incestuous desire for his sister. Macdonald Carey is convincing as a middle-aged American out of his element, but makes an
uninspiring hero. Redeeming these problems is the stunning Viveca Lindfors, a Swedish actress foolishly discarded by Hollywood. Ms.
Lindfors's life-affirming Freya is an indelible original. The maker of sculptures that also worship death, she becomes the muse for a mad
bureaucrat who has learned to genuinely stop worrying and love the bomb.
Joseph Losey's career is blessed with the kind of symmetry that film critics love. These are the Damned seems a thematic extension
of elements in the director's first movie The Boy with Green Hair,
another plea for human tolerance in the face of war. Green Hair's ghostly "war orphans" are very much like Damned's
prepubescent guinea pigs, innocent victims lost in an insane world they didn't create. Both groups of children beg for help and
understanding. A bona fide subversive classic, These are the Damned increases its grip on the audience as it speeds to one of the
most doom-laden finishes in Science Fiction: "Help us! Help us! Please help us!"
Sony's DVD set Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films contains six flawless enhanced B&W transfers with very clear audio; every film is
encoded with English subtitles. The films all appear to be uncut English versions with American title substitutions. The Snorkel
and These Are the Damned are substantially longer than their original American releases. Sony's keep case packaging stacks all
three discs on a single hub, a controversial practice already given a thumbs-down by collectors concerned about scratches.
All of the films come with American trailers. The various sales pitches fairly openly show us why the movies were not wildly popular.
Never Take Candy from a Stranger comes off as sordid sensationalism. The Snorkel touts its gimmicky central plot device,
and even uses the word "gimmick" in its voiceover script. The schizophrenic trailer for These are the Damned plays the outlandish
"Black Leather" song over some of the film's most awkward moments. The 2007 premiere of These are the Damned on the TCM cable
channel caused a minor sensation. Sony should have put the film out as a special edition but fans will be pleased to see it finally
available in such a handsome presentation.
For more information about Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films, visit Sony Pictures. To order Icons of Suspense: Hammer Films, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson