Corruption
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Robert Hartford-davis
Peter Cushing
Sue Lloyd
Noel Trevarthen
Kate O'mara
David Lodge
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Eminent British surgeon Sir John Rowan falls asleep in his apartment before he is to attend a party with Lynn Nolan, his fashion model fiancée. At the party, Lynn introduces him to photographer Mike Orme, who persuades Lynn to pose for him. There is a jealous fight between the two men, and a floodlight topples on Lynn and disfigures her face. To overcome Lynn's despair, Sir John attempts to restore her beauty by injecting into her face a pituitary extract and operating with a laser beam. Using a gland stolen from a hospital corpse, Sir John surgically recaptures Lynn's loveliness and takes her on a holiday; but the remedy proves to be short-lived, and Lynn's face again becomes a hideous mask. In the desperate hope that live tissues will be more permanent, Sir John decapitates a Soho prostitute and operates again. This remedy also proves to be temporary, and Sir John realizes that he will have to continue killing in order to preserve Lynn's appearance. Sir John's associate, Dr. Stephen Harris, perceives what Sir John has been doing to restore Lynn's beauty. Unaware that Lynn has encouraged Sir John to commit the murders, Stephen and Lynn's sister, Val, rush to warn her. Meanwhile, Sir John and Lynn are being harassed in their country home by hoodlum friends of their lastest victim, a young woman named Terry. After killing Terry's husband, the now-deranged Lynn activates the laser beam and demands that Sir John operate once more. The laser goes out of control, however, and kills the hoodlums as well as Sir John, Lynn, and the newly-arrived Stephen and Val. The house, littered with corpses, burns to the ground. Sir John arrives at the party where Lynn introduces him to her photographer friend.
Director
Robert Hartford-davis
Cast
Peter Cushing
Sue Lloyd
Noel Trevarthen
Kate O'mara
David Lodge
Anthony Booth
Wendy Varnals
Billy Murray
Vanessa Howard
Jan Waters
Phillip Manikum
Alexandra Dane
Valerie Van Ost
Diana Ashley
Victor Baring
Shirley Stelfox
Crew
Michael Albrechtsen
Biddy Chrystal
Cyril Collick
Don Deacon
Splinters Deason
Derek Ford
Donald Ford
Peter Gilpin
Bruce Grimes
Robert Hartford-davis
Norman Jones
Maxine Julius
James Liggat
Bill Mcguffie
Peter Newbrook
Peter Newbrook
Peter Newbrook
John O'gorman
Ken Softley
Robert Sterne
George Willows
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Corruption
Unlike the atmospheric, period settings of the many Hammer horror films in which Cushing appeared, Corruption is set in the time it was made - the swinging sixties - and attempts to spice up the proceedings with mod fashions, a bohemian party scene, unsavory sexual situations, and more gore and violence than any previous Cushing film had featured. As a result, the movie veers between the unintentionally funny (the head in the freezer scene always draws laughs) and the sleazy (Rowan's encounter with a prostitute who has a disturbing collection of dolls in her room). Cushing would later say, "It was gratuitously violent, fearfully sick. But it was a good script, which just goes to show how important the presentation is."
On top of Corruption's imitative storyline, it also borrows the elliptical nightmare structure of Dead of Night [1945], presenting the whole story as a fever dream experienced by Dr. Rowan. The major flaw of the film is the fact that both Rowan and Lynn are completely unsympathetic characters and deserve exactly what happens to them in the course of their increasingly desperate behavior. From the get-go, Rowan seems perfectly willing to sacrifice his ethics and reputation for his vain girlfriend, whose interest in him appears to be purely monetary. Lynn, for her part, becomes so obsessed with restoring her beauty, that she blackmails Rowan into further crimes, threatening to reveal his past murders to the police. It all topples over into complete foolishness with a home invasion of some Clockwork Orange type hooligans, featuring a particularly laughable, over-the-top performance by David Lodge as a Neanderthal moron named Groper.
The film's abrupt changes in storyline and tone are often jarring but actually provide some unpredictability amid the clichés. Cushing would later comment, "The company that made the film split up halfway through as certain individuals could not agree on what should and should not appear in the final print. What you saw was the final result of their bickering. Audiences did not get the idea that it was supposed to be based on a dream, which in fact did not justify some of the scenes that were presented. With any film you participate in, the company, if they so wish, can destroy your original interpretation of the role."
Corruption was not the sort of picture that critics are ever kind to and the reviews were typical for its genre. Variety called it a "Fair horror picture...Made in England on a low budget, Corruption suffers from poor writing, plus often sluggish direction by Robert Hartford-Davis." The New York Times review by Vincent Canby was slightly better as he noted, "Peter Cushing brings a certain seedy grandeur to his role. The contemporary setting, however, works against the kind of tale that was even a bit silly in the pre-heart transplant era."
Peter Cushing fans will want to see Corruption regardless of the reviews and it does have enough dotty pleasures to satisfy fans of sixties horror films which often become exercises in camp excess.
Producer: Peter Newbrook
Director: Robert Hartford-Davis
Screenplay: Derek Ford, Donald Ford
Cinematography: Peter Newbrook
Production Design: Bruce Grimes
Music: Bill McGuffie
Film Editing: Don Deacon
Cast: Peter Cushing (Sir John Rowan), Sue Lloyd (Lynn Nolan), Noel Trevarthen (Steve Harris), Kate O'Mara (Val Nolan), David Lodge (Groper), Vanessa Howard (Kate).
C-91m.
by Jeff Stafford
SOURCES:
The Complete Peter Cushing by David Miller (Reynolds & Hearn)
Filmfacts
IMDB
Corruption
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Released in Great Britain in December 1968. Location scenes filmed in London.