Blood of the Vampire
(1958)
Dir. Henry Cass
Written by Jimmy
Sangster
Starring Vincent Ball,
Donald Wolfit, Barbara Shelley, Victor Maddern
In “Transylvania, 1874,” as the opening credits dubiously
explain, “The most loathsome scourge ever to afflict the earth was that of the
vampire. Nourishing itself on warm living blood, the only known method of
ending a vampire’s reign of terror was to drive a wooden stake through its
heart.” This little bit of trivia seems extremely pertinent almost immediately,
as the movie opens with a stake driven through a shroud-wrapped body by a burly
masked man, while a priest or authority figure or something looks on
approvingly. And later, when some wall-eyed hunchbacked weirdo (Victor Maddern,
CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG) sneaks up to murder the gravediggers and steal the
corpse, you would be forgiven for assuming that this movie called BLOOD OF THE
VAMPIRE, which is set in Transylvania and begins with a bunch of text about
vampires, was about vampires.
Alas, you’d be wrong. While the most loathsome scourge to
ever afflict the earth may well be the vampire, this movie will be dealing
with, at most, the second most loathsome scourge ever to afflict the Earth, and
to be perfectly honest, considering the small scale and relative local impact,
if the source we’re dealing with here is even in the top ten most loathsome
ever to afflict the earth, we’ve actually had a pretty easy go of it. I even
have my doubts about if it’s the most loathsome scourge to ever afflict
Transylvania in 1874, given that all the characters have a weird mix of German,
British, and Latin names. Maybe there’s a lesser-known Transylvania in Germany?
Anyway, wherever the
scourge may fall in the all-time rankings of loathsomeness, it’s certainly
loathsome enough that I’m against it. And the person who’s going to discover it
the hard way is one Dr. John Pierre (Vincent Ball, small roles in WHERE EAGLES
DARE, A TOWN LIKE ALICE, MURIEL’S WEDDING, along with a lot of TV), a
forward-thinking doctor who’s just been tried in “Carlstadt” * for murder,
following a failed last-ditch attempt at a blood transfusion on a dying
patient. The ignorant locals consider this basically one step down from
witchcraft, and when his last-minute attempt to get a respected colleague to
corroborate the medical necessity of his actions is strangely answered with
condemnation, he’s packed off to the Penal Institute on Comboat (?) Island.
This institution, as it turns out, is run by a sinister warden/mad scientist
named Callistratus (Donald Wolfit, BECKETT[!], LAWRENCE OF ARABIA [!!]) who
happens to have great need of a man with exactly Pierre’s skillset. Pressed
into work in Callistratus’ secret basement laboratory, he quickly begins to
suspect something sinister is afoot, especially when his fellow prisoners start
to mysteriously disappear. OK, not so mysteriously; everyone knows Callistratus
is killing them in his diabolical experiments. But can Pierre foil the
dastardly villain and clear his name before he, or his devoted fiancé (Barbara
Shelley, the original VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED and various Hammer productions)
become the next victims of the madman?
1958 was still the very,
very dawn of British horror cinema; CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN,
which touched off the movement, was only a year old, and its follow-up, THE HORROR OF DRACULA,
was barely even out of theaters by the time BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE came calling.
But producers and longtime low-budget hustlers Monty Berman and Robert Baker of
the also-also-also** ran Brit grindhouse studios Eros Films and Tempean Films (THE FLESH AND THE FIENDS,
THE TROLLENBERG TERROR aka THE CRAWLING EYE) already saw something of a formula
brewing, and hired FRANKENSTEIN and DRACULA scribe Jimmy Sangster pretty much
immediately after DRACULA proved that its predecessor’s success was no fluke.
Sangster had only two
produced screenplays when DRACULA premiered, but was already in hot demand: he
had six produced screenplays in 1958 alone, which might explain why he
was running a little low on ideas when he wrote BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE. I mean, I
guess there’s a certain smirking cleverness to the idea that the “vampire” of
the title here is not a supernatural bloodsucker, but rather a mad scientist
who steals blood for medical transfusions to combat his rare blood disease. That is, however, more a matter of title semantics than a plot point the movie makes much
of --or, in fact, comments on at all-- and alas, the movie is otherwise
strictly standard mad science fare, with a castle, laboratory, hunchback, etc.
In fact, despite the “Vampire” in the title, it differs in no particular from
the Hammer FRANKENSTEIN movies that Sangster also wrote (there’s even a hunchback named “Carl”!),
with the exception that even the lowest-rent FRANKENSTEIN film had at least
some aspirations towards a high concept premise. BLOOD is more of a prison
movie, where it matters less exactly that the doctor is up to (just trying to
develop a treatment for his own blood disease) than that our hero escapes from
him.
And to that end, it’s
actually a pretty good story, as far as it goes! The fiendish
Doctor’s machinations are mostly unimaginative, but respectably diabolical
(one might even say loathsome!), and our hero’s situation looks suitably
hopeless. The script does a perfectly proficient job of methodically
establishing the specific obstacles he must overcome to clear his name and
defeat the villain, and consistently rolls out new complications to keep things
from getting too repetitive. The hero himself is dull as dishwater, but at
least the circumstances of the story lend themselves well to a nicely-build
prison-escape-thriller. And the cast is proficient enough; Ball isn’t exactly
explosively charismatic, but he imparts a prickly sense of contemptuous umbrage upon the
character, which at least gives him more definition than the litany of bland
pretty boys Hammer insisted on shoehorning into their movies for the next few
decades. Wolfit is basically doing a low-level Bela Lugosi impression without
the accent, which is fine enough, because after all, he’s
quite right, this movie would be better if Bela Lugosi was playing the
villain. Interestingly, the two least important characters are the ones who are
actively good here: Hammer scream queen Shelley brings vastly more intelligence
and agency to her role than is strictly required (Sangster, who does not
exactly have a great history of writing meaty female roles, at least gets her
directly involved in the action here, and Shelley runs with it every inch as
far as the boilerplate damsel-in-distress trope will possibly allow her), and
Maddern, through his one real eye, does a surprising and impressive amount of
work to instill his non-speaking hunchback sidekick stereotype with some inner
life. It’s hard to know what he’s thinking, exactly, and the screenplay
offers very little that would help one guess, but it’s definitely clear from
his performance that he is thinking, that he’s taking all this in and
pondering it.
Indeed, while over the
next decade or so Sangster’s scripts and plotting would sometimes get a bit
loose (even the next years’ THE MUMMY and BRIDES OF DRACULA struggle with some basic narrative
structure), BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE sports a perfectly sturdy construction. It’s a perfectly fine yarn, told perfectly adequately. And yet, for all that, it packs very
little punch compared to its British horror contemporaries. Despite its gothic
horror trappings (the “prison” might as well be a castle, it even has a
drawbridge, towers, and posh living quarters), it feels much more akin to the
mad science films of the 1950s than the burgeoning horror films which would
define the 60s and 70s. Partly this comes from the somewhat anachronistic story
itself, which is set up in every imaginable way to resemble something like THE DEVIL COMMANDS (1941) or, hell, even ISLAND OF LOST SOULS from 20+ years prior. But a bigger part is the production, led by director
Henry Cass (THE GLASS MOUNTAIN), which is every bit as stagy and stodgy as the
early Hammer films were vital and audacious. With its lengthy medium shots,
drowsy editing, hammy theatricality, and corny under-dressed castle sets, it
resembles the low-budget movies of twenty years prior more than their descendants
just a few years later. Cass demonstrates not a whit of understanding about why
the Hammer films were such a monumental leap forward in modern British
filmmaking, and seems perfectly content recycling the same style as the films at the beginning of his career in the late 30’s. Even the
addition of color film --Hammer was notorious for using the medium for bright
red blood splatter-- makes no difference to a films whose primary palette
consists of dirty grays and faded browns.
With a more
forward-thinking production and a little more ambition, I think the film could
have mustered more bite and been a little better. But ultimately not much better.
Bottom line is, although it’s a competently assembled little tale, its most
damning flaw is that it utterly lacks in anything remotely exotic or exciting. It’s
about as standard as they come, hitting virtually every cliché in the book
without building off a single element in any kind of new or imaginative way. Even its
mild nods to actual science (the protagonists study blood types and discuss
transfusions) were a half-century old by the time the movie came out (though,
in fairness, they would have brand new in the movie’s 1880 setting***). Other than the need to crank out a sixth horror script in a single year and to prominently feature the word "vampire" in the title, I can't think of much reason why anyone would have thought this was a tale especially worth telling. It’s
fine as far as it goes, but without a little more imagination, “fine” was all
it was ever going to be.
*Presumably they mean Karlstadt, Germany, a town
about an hour East of Frankfurt, not Carlstadt, New Jersey. There’s also a
Carlstadt which is a borough of Dusseldorf, though if that’s what they mean it
seems unnecessarily specific. The only other potential contender is the
Croatian city of Karlovac, which, apparently, is rendered in German as
“Carlstadt.” Either way, none of these are anywhere close to Romania. It’s over
1,500 miles from Karlstadt to Transylvania, which is a 16 hour journey any way you
slice it today, by car.
** Standard wisdom is that Hammer > Amicus
> Tigon > Tempean > Harry Alan Towers, although there is certainly
some variability movie to movie.
*** The opening takes place in 1874, everything
else takes place “six years later.” I looked it up to be sure Sangster wasn’t
incorporating new medical knowledge ripped from the headlines, but blood types
were first discovered in 1900. That made me wonder if this was actually vaguely
based on a true story, but if Nobel-prize winning biologist and physician Karl
Landsteiner got the idea while being unjustly imprisoned by a imperious madman,
they don’t mention it in his wikipedia page. Landsteiner made his discovery in
1900 and 1901 and got his Nobel for it in 1930, so even that was almost three
decades old when Sangster wrote this script.
You can really see why they thought this image would bring in the kids. |
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2018 CHECKLIST!
Searching For Bloody
Pictures
TAGLINE
|
NO WOMAN IS SAFE from
the MOST FRIGHTENING FIEND IN THE HISTORY OF HORROR! Which is blatantly a lie on a whole cornucopia
of levels, most notably in that almost every woman is safe, since the FRIGHTENING FIEND runs an all-male prison and the inmates are his primary victims. He does kill his
maid, though, and threatens Dr. Pierre’s girlfriend, so those particular two
women are not safe from THE MOST FRIGHTENING FIEND IN THE HISTORY OF HORROR.
And yeah, about that last part...
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TITLE ACCURACY
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Technically vaguely
true if you’re willing to accept that a guy who steals blood to transfuse it
for medical purposes can reasonably be called a “vampire.” But blood
definitely does play a key role here.
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LITERARY ADAPTATION?
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No
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SEQUEL?
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None
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REMAKE?
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None
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COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
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England
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HORROR SUB-GENRE
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Mad Science, arguably
vampire
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SLUMMING A-LISTER?
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None
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BELOVED HORROR ICON?
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Jimmy Sangster
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NUDITY?
|
None, though Berman
and Baker would become notorious for inserting random scenes of nudity into
their later movies, as we discuss in THE FLESH AND THE FIENDS
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SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
Yes, poor Barbara
Shelley gets assaulted by this one asshole, though she’s saved before things
get too out of hand. And, thankfully, the movie agrees that the guy who did
it is scum who deserved to get strangled by a Hunchback.
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WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
Yes, there is a pack
of vicious dobermans who are trained to kill anyone who displeases Dr.
Callistratus or his sadistic guards.
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GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
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No
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POSSESSION?
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No
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CREEPY DOLLS?
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None
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EVIL CULT?
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None
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MADNESS?
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Just mad science
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TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
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None.
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VOYEURISM?
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None
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MORAL OF THE STORY
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Never practice
cutting-edge medicine in Carlstadt.
|