Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll (US: Jekyll's Inferno/House of Fright, 1960)

Director:  Terence Fisher
Cast:  Paul Massie, Dawn Addams, Christopher Lee, David Kossoff, Francis de Wolff

Welcome to the first Hammer Horror film review at The Psycho Ward!  For those who don't know, Hammer is a British subsidiary of Exclusive Media Group that is very popular for the Christopher Lee Dracula films.

THE PLOT:  While it basically follows the same storyline as the version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde we know and love, there are a few differences.  For one, all of the characters, except for Jekyll and Hyde, have been replaced with completely original characters.  There is a semi-original storyline as well.

Henry Jekyll's (Paul Massie) wife Kitty (Dawn Addams) cheats on him with his friend Paul Allen (Christopher Lee, who hounds money from Jekyll). Ignoring the warnings of his colleague and friend Dr. Ernst Littauer (David Kossoff), Jekyll concocts a chemical potion which he hopes will help him learn the depths of the human mind. Testing the potion on himself, he transforms into Mr. Hyde, a young and handsome, but also murderous and lecherous beast. Soon, Hyde becomes bored with conventional debauchery, and when his eyes catch Kitty, he decides he must have her. When Kitty rejects him, Hyde rapes and murders her, and frames his other self for these crimes.  He also passes the time by wooing a snake charmer, but he eventually murders her and uses her snake to kill Paul.

THE REVIEW:  While usually I am against using original characters and original storylines to "retell" classics (look at the atrocity that was the 1998 "retelling" of Great Expectations), I have to say that these characters and this storyline work terrifically well here.  No wonder; it was directed by Terence Fisher.

The only thing I didn't like was Massie's acting, especially while he was charming Maria, but it occurred throughout the whole film.  He was too over-the-top as Hyde, but perfect as Jekyll.  Despite the over-the-top acting, his performance as Hyde is probably the most cruel and cunning I've ever seen, and that makes it even more wonderful.  Sadly, the over-the-topness has to dock this film's score a bit.  4.5 out of 5 stars.  Brilliant twist on the original story, and to be honest, I much prefer Hyde as young and handsome, and not for the reason you may think;  if you think about it, it makes a tad bit more sense than the monster we always imagine Hyde to be, because if you look at most murderers and beasts today, aren't they young and handsome?

Watch the full film below:

   

Friday, July 8, 2011

Frankenstein (1931)

Director:  James Whale
Cast:  Colin Clive, Dwight Frye, Boris Karloff, Mae Clarke, John Boles

Another Dwight Frye classic, this time with an all-star cast.

THE PLOT:  Forget the plot, you know what Frankenstein is about, even if you're a valley girl who doesn't give a rat's ass about true art.

THE REVIEW:  I honestly want to know why Dwight Frye hasn't received any posthumous Oscars, or at least nominations, for his roles.  The man is a legend.  I also want to know why he was typecast when he played madmen to a T.

Colin Clive is so compelling as Dr. Frankenstein.  When Clive and Frye are together in this film, you can almost feel the insanity radiating off on you.  Brilliant acting, so this film gets a 4 out of 5.  It is based on the novel by Mary Shelley, and it loses a point because, like Dracula, it didn't exactly stick to the original storyline.  The monster, played by Boris Karloff, was also a bit more comical than scary. 

Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)

Director:  Stanley Kubrick
Cast:  Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens

Thanks to BI for the request!

THE PLOT (from Wikipedia): 
United States Air Force Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden), the commander of Burpelson Air Force Base, initiates a plan to attack the Soviet Union with nuclear weapons in the paranoid belief that there is a Communist conspiracy involving water fluoridation which will lead to contamination of everyone's "precious bodily fluids". Ripper orders his nuclear-armed B-52s, which were holding at a fail-safe point as part of a special training exercise, to move into Soviet airspace. Group Captain Lionel Mandrake (Peter Sellers), a Royal Air Force exchange officer serving as General Ripper's executive officer, issues the command on Ripper's order but later realizes that it was not issued in retaliation to a Soviet attack on America. He resolves to recall the planes but Ripper refuses to disclose the three-letter code needed to get the bombers back to base and locks the two of them in his office.
In the "War Room" at The Pentagon, General Buck Turgidson (George C. Scott) briefs President Merkin Muffley (Sellers). He reports that Ripper apparently took advantage of "Wing Attack Plan R," a wartime contingency plan which is intended to give Field Commanders authority to retaliate with nuclear weapons in the event that a Soviet first strike obliterates Washington, D.C. and incapacitates U.S. leadership. When President Muffley angrily begins to question the merits of this, the General responds that he does not "think it's quite fair to condemn a whole program because of a single slip-up". When Muffley proposes that troops be sent to the Air Force Base to seize Ripper (and hopefully force the recall code from him), Turgidson warns that General Ripper will have put the security forces there on high alert—ready to repel any outside force.
Turgidson tries to persuade Muffley to seize the moment and eliminate the Soviet Union by launching a full-scale attack on the Soviet Union. The General believes the United States is in a superior strategic position and a first strike would destroy the majority of the Soviets' missiles before they could retaliate. Without such a response, the US would be annihilated. Muffley refuses to have any part of such a scheme, and instead summons the Soviet ambassador, Alexei de Sadeski (Peter Bull). The Ambassador calls Soviet Premier Dimitri Kisov on the "Hot Line" and gives the Soviets information to help them shoot down the American planes, should they cross into Soviet airspace.
The Ambassador reveals that his side has installed a doomsday device that will automatically destroy life on Earth if there is a nuclear attack against the Soviet Union. The American President expresses amazement that anyone would build such a device. But Dr. Strangelove (Sellers), a former Nazi and weapons expert, admits that it would be "an effective deterrent... credible and convincing." However, a recent study by an American think tank had dismissed it as being too dangerous to be practical.


The wheelchair-using Strangelove explains the technology behind the Doomsday Machine and why it is essential that not only should it destroy the world in the event of a nuclear attack but also be fully automated and incapable of being deactivated. He further points out that the "whole point of the Doomsday Machine is lost if you keep it a secret". When asked why the Soviets did not publicize this, Ambassador de Sadeski sheepishly answers it was supposed to be announced the following Monday at the (Communist) Party Congress because "the Premier loves surprises."

U.S. Army forces arrive at Burpelson to arrest General Ripper. Because Ripper has warned his men that the enemy might attack disguised as American soldiers, the base's security forces open fire on them. A pitched battle ensues, which the Army forces finally win and Ripper, fearing torture to extract the recall code shoots himself. Colonel "Bat" Guano (Keenan Wynn) forces his way into Ripper's office and immediately suspects that Mandrake, whose uniform he does not recognize, is leading a mutiny and arrests him. Mandrake convinces Guano he must call the President with the recall code (OPE) which he has deduced from Ripper's desk blotter doodles but has to use a pay phone to do so. Guano has to shoot open a Coca-Cola machine to obtain coins for the phone, which he does reluctantly. Off camera, Mandrake finally contacts the Pentagon and is able to get the code combinations to the President and Strategic Air Command.

The correct recall code is issued to the planes and all those that have not been shot down by the Soviet military turn back toward base, except one. Its radio and fuel tanks were damaged by an anti-aircraft missile, leaving the plane unable either to receive the recall message or reach its primary or secondary targets, where the Soviets have concentrated all available defences at the urging of President Muffley. The pilot heads for the nearest target of opportunity, an ICBM complex. Aircraft commander Major T. J. "King" Kong (Slim Pickens) goes to the bomb bay to open the damaged doors manually, straddling a nuclear bomb as he repairs arcing wires overhead. When he effects his electrical patches, the bomb bay doors suddenly open, the bomb releases and Kong rides it to detonation like a rodeo cowboy, whooping and waving his cowboy hat. The H-bomb explodes and the Doomsday Device's detonation is inevitable. In the War Room, Ambassador de Sadeski says life on Earth's surface will be extinct in ten months. Dr. Strangelove recommends the President gather several hundred thousand people to be relocated into deep mine shafts, where the radioactivity would never penetrate so the United States can be repopulated. Strangelove suggests a sex ratio of "ten females to each male," with the women selected for their stimulating sexual characteristics and the men selected for youth, health, intellectual capabilities and importance in business and government. He points out that with proper breeding techniques, the survivors could work themselves up to the present Gross National Product in 20 years and emerge after the radioactivity has ceased in about 100 years. At one point, Strangelove's errant right arm tries to give the Nazi salute and then strangle him.
General Turgidson warns of a possible "Mineshaft Gap" that might be a factor when the survivors emerge. De Sadeski walks away from the group and begins taking pictures of the war room's Big Board with a spy camera disguised as a pocketwatch. Just as Dr. Strangelove miraculously gets up from his wheelchair, takes a couple of steps and shouts, "Mein Führer! I can walk!," the Doomsday Machine activates. The film then cuts to a montage of nuclear detonations across the world, accompanied by Vera Lynn's recording of "We'll Meet Again."
 
THE REVIEW:  BI could not have made a better choice.  I'm a huge fan of Peter Sellers' work, especially in the Pink Panther films.  Sellers delivers more comedy than any of those retards alive today can.  Stanley Kubrick is an amazing and funny director of The Shining and Color Me Kubrick with John Malkovich.  As for George C. Scott, I'm a big fan of his role as Scrooge in the 80s adaptation of A Christmas Carol.

I watched this film in summer school going into tenth grade.  My teacher described it as a black comedy, and it really is, being released when tensions were rising in Vietnam in '64 and the midst of the Cold War.

In this film, Sellers is so versatile that he is able to play two characters at once, a skill reminiscent of another one of my favorite actors Alec Guinness' performance as eight characters in Kind Hearts and Coronets (1946).

This film is funny, and it makes you think.  4.5 out of 5.