Saturday, January 26, 2019
SPELL OF THE HYPNOTIST (1956)
PHENOMENALITY: *uncanny*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological*
W. Lee ""Brother of Billy" Wilder made three pure-SF films with scripts from his son Myles Wilder. These films, despite their many problems, are probably the only reasons anyone remembers either of the Wilders. The Wilders' other four collaborations-- three naturalistic thrillers and SPELL OF THE HYPNOTIST, the subject of my review-- are not often celebrated. Myles Wilder went on to do a lot of episodic TV, some of which is decent (like early GET SMART episodes) though hardly outstanding. W. Lee directed two non-Myles films with SF-content, THE OMEGANS and MAN WITHOUT A BODY, both of which I think deserve their obscurity, and most of W. Lee's efforts in other genres seem to inspire only apathy.
The film being reviewed has probably been exhibited most often with the title FRIGHT, but SPELL OF THE HYPNOTIST is a better title, especially since it's so hard to imagine even an impressionable child being scared by this double-Wilder outing. In addition, just as the Wilders seem generally under-invested in their three SF-films-- as if they could hardly summon the energy to care much about the motives of their snow creatures or their space-visitors-- SPELL conjures a little with the subject of reincarnation, but then dispels the supernatural from the world of the film. However, the Wilders do seem a little more invested in the titular hypnotist and his power to manipulate human minds.
There seems to be little question that the film was created to ride on the bestseller status of the 1956 book THE SEARCH FOR BRIDEY MURPHY. This purported non-fiction recounted how an amateur hypnotist put a housewife into a trace, resulting in her remembering a past life as an 1800s woman named Bridey Murphy. Paramount adapted the book in the same year, but given that SPELL comes out a month or so earlier than the paramount adaptation, I think I'm justified in assuming that the Wilders simply rushed an imitation of the bestseller out as quickly as possible.
SPELL's opening scene is simple but more viscerally involving than anything else I've seen from W. Lee Wilder. A demented murderer named Morley, having escaped police custody, gets atop a bridge and threatens to jump if the cops don't back off. Crowds gather to watch the spectacle, and among them is a psychiatrist, Doctor Hamilton (Eric Fleming). Hamilton commandeers a police bullhorn and uses hypnosis-techniques to lull Morley into a suggestible state, so that he can be captured. However, one other person in the crowd is affected by Hamilton's persuasive voice, a young woman named Ann Summers (Nancy Malone). Summers approaches Hamilton, and though he's taken with her good looks, he doesn't accept clients who come up to him on the street. However, he soon changes his mind and allows her to visit his office-- and the visit leads to his use of hypnosis to disclose her apparent manifestation of a second personality, a German woman from the 1800s, also a lover to the Bavarian crown prince Rupert.
Amid many dull talking-heads scenes, the two of them fall in love, but Hamilton doesn't want a "second wife" in the bargain. While Hamilton seeks to solve Summers' dilemma, he also happens to be called in to consult on the psychological state of Morley the murderer. (Morley later proves crucial to Hamilton being able to solve his reincarnation problem). The psychiatrist eventually determines that there are no spirits involved, and that Summers has simply created a fantasy-construct-- which, significantly, is what modern authorities tend to believe about the actual "Bridey Murphy" controversy.
But although there's nothing supernatural about Summers, Hamilton's use of hypnosis carries an uncanny vibe. Though he's supposed to be no more than a skilled professional, he works a sort of "mental magic" when he uses Morley's presence to "exorcise" Summers' false construct. The title SPELL OF THE HYPNOTIST is also appropriate because the main character-arc is all about Hamilton overcoming the obstacle to his future marriage. (It helps that Fleming is the best actor in the ensemble, though good acting isn't the determining factor in determining a story's main character.) Ann Summers in both of her personalities is more of an object to attain than a character, and so SPELL is structurally the opposite of the slightly later TERROR IN THE HAUNTED HOUSE, where the haunted female is the star of the narrative.
SPELL is certainly mediocre as plain entertainment. But it still has a couple of reasonably involving scenes, which certainly puts it way ahead of THE SNOW CREATURE.
Thursday, January 24, 2019
PHANTOM FROM SPACE (1953)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *cosmological*
I recently reviewed W. Lee ("Brother of Billy") Wilder's SNOW CREATURE, the last of the pure-SF films he did with his son Myles. I had already looked at the Wilders' second collaboration, KILLERS FROM SPACE, so I decided to get round to the first, PHANTOM FROM SPACE.
PHANTOM seems to have provided the template for SNOW CREATURE, insofar as both films take a pseudo-documentary approach to the subject matter. With even less set-up than CREATURE, a mysterious space-suited man begins wandering around Santa Monica. The spaceman's presence interferes with radio broadcasts, which gets the local FCC reps into the investigation, and he kills a man, which brings in the cops. All three Wilder films seem to be aping the trend of 1950s SF-films to idolize "professional men" of any kind, whether cops, soldiers, scientists or government officials, but the Wilders show no awareness that the audience might like to see such characters given human traits in order to make them somewhat relatable. Indeed, the lead cop in the investigation, a fellow named Bowers, might be more likely to alienate audiences. The alien kills his victim when the latter attacks him, and the two witnesses-- the man's wife and his neighbor-- are automatically disbelieved when they tell their story of a man in a "diving suit," whose face seemed to be invisible inside the helmet. Bowers, on no evidence whatever, tries to float the idea that the neighbor killed the victim to get with the victim's wife. Not exactly Columbo here.
Eventually, even Bowers has to believe that something weird is going on. A night watchman also sees the diving-suit guy, and relates how the stranger ventures near an oil tank and blows it up through his mere presence. Again, where a lot of SF-films of the time would have faulted the various witnesses for their xenophobia, the script is silent on this topic. The cops and the other investigators also encounter a pretty young lab assistant, Barbara. It's quickly established that she's married to another scientist, though their relationship has no greater significance to the story.
The alien-- called an "x-man" once or twice in the film-- has another property: whenever he takes off his spacesuit, he becomes invisible to human sight. At no time in the story is it made clear how the "Phantom" survives, even briefly, in Earth's atmosphere without his suit. Given that it's an important point in the story that the "x-man" needs to replenish his breathing-resources somehow, scripter Myles seems to be pretty cavalier in coming up with a gimmick where his alien can doff his suit whenever he pleases. The alien has no way of communicating with Earthmen, suggesting-- though it's never stated outright in the script-- that he's a castaway who didn't mean to land on Earth. Yet, aside from one scientist in the investigating group-- the fellow brought in to supply the technical exposition-- no one seems particularly bowled over by this contact with extraterrestrial life. Hazen's attitude toward his quarry often seems to be a mirror for the director's attitude toward the film: he just wants it to be over with.
Eventually, thanks to input from the military, the investigators figure out that their visitor can be tracked by his radioactivity. However, the spaceman foils them by taking off his suit and disappearing. Hazen and company take the suit with them back to their HQ at Griffith Observatory, and, unbeknownst to them, the alien stows away in one of their cars. At his first opportunity, the Phantom regains his suit and takes Barbara prisoner. Though he rips her lab-coat once, his main motive seems to be trying to communicate, attempting to establish a code by making rhythmic tapping sounds. However, the scripter is too impatient to deal with how an intelligent castaway might try to establish communication, and so the alien's efforts are interrupted and he's on the run again. At the anti-climactic climax, the alien's breathing apparatus is destroyed and the Earthmen use ultra-violet lights to foil his invisibility-- at which point he takes a fall and dies.
I can see why some SF-fans like this better than Wilder's other SF-films, since there are a few scenes in which the Phantom is scientifically analyzed. However, I found these scenes to be marginal in their impact, when compared to their stultifying effect of the documentary-style narrative. Most Hollywood professionals of the period, whether they really liked SF or not, got the gist of the genre's appeal and successfully emulated it. In all three pictures, Wilder seems fundamentally at odds with the demands of the genre, as if he's trying as hard as possible to minimize the effects of his SF-boogiemen. Only in KILLERS FROM SPACE, despite all of its problems, are the monsters even slightly memorable.
I recently reviewed W. Lee ("Brother of Billy") Wilder's SNOW CREATURE, the last of the pure-SF films he did with his son Myles. I had already looked at the Wilders' second collaboration, KILLERS FROM SPACE, so I decided to get round to the first, PHANTOM FROM SPACE.
PHANTOM seems to have provided the template for SNOW CREATURE, insofar as both films take a pseudo-documentary approach to the subject matter. With even less set-up than CREATURE, a mysterious space-suited man begins wandering around Santa Monica. The spaceman's presence interferes with radio broadcasts, which gets the local FCC reps into the investigation, and he kills a man, which brings in the cops. All three Wilder films seem to be aping the trend of 1950s SF-films to idolize "professional men" of any kind, whether cops, soldiers, scientists or government officials, but the Wilders show no awareness that the audience might like to see such characters given human traits in order to make them somewhat relatable. Indeed, the lead cop in the investigation, a fellow named Bowers, might be more likely to alienate audiences. The alien kills his victim when the latter attacks him, and the two witnesses-- the man's wife and his neighbor-- are automatically disbelieved when they tell their story of a man in a "diving suit," whose face seemed to be invisible inside the helmet. Bowers, on no evidence whatever, tries to float the idea that the neighbor killed the victim to get with the victim's wife. Not exactly Columbo here.
Eventually, even Bowers has to believe that something weird is going on. A night watchman also sees the diving-suit guy, and relates how the stranger ventures near an oil tank and blows it up through his mere presence. Again, where a lot of SF-films of the time would have faulted the various witnesses for their xenophobia, the script is silent on this topic. The cops and the other investigators also encounter a pretty young lab assistant, Barbara. It's quickly established that she's married to another scientist, though their relationship has no greater significance to the story.
The alien-- called an "x-man" once or twice in the film-- has another property: whenever he takes off his spacesuit, he becomes invisible to human sight. At no time in the story is it made clear how the "Phantom" survives, even briefly, in Earth's atmosphere without his suit. Given that it's an important point in the story that the "x-man" needs to replenish his breathing-resources somehow, scripter Myles seems to be pretty cavalier in coming up with a gimmick where his alien can doff his suit whenever he pleases. The alien has no way of communicating with Earthmen, suggesting-- though it's never stated outright in the script-- that he's a castaway who didn't mean to land on Earth. Yet, aside from one scientist in the investigating group-- the fellow brought in to supply the technical exposition-- no one seems particularly bowled over by this contact with extraterrestrial life. Hazen's attitude toward his quarry often seems to be a mirror for the director's attitude toward the film: he just wants it to be over with.
Eventually, thanks to input from the military, the investigators figure out that their visitor can be tracked by his radioactivity. However, the spaceman foils them by taking off his suit and disappearing. Hazen and company take the suit with them back to their HQ at Griffith Observatory, and, unbeknownst to them, the alien stows away in one of their cars. At his first opportunity, the Phantom regains his suit and takes Barbara prisoner. Though he rips her lab-coat once, his main motive seems to be trying to communicate, attempting to establish a code by making rhythmic tapping sounds. However, the scripter is too impatient to deal with how an intelligent castaway might try to establish communication, and so the alien's efforts are interrupted and he's on the run again. At the anti-climactic climax, the alien's breathing apparatus is destroyed and the Earthmen use ultra-violet lights to foil his invisibility-- at which point he takes a fall and dies.
I can see why some SF-fans like this better than Wilder's other SF-films, since there are a few scenes in which the Phantom is scientifically analyzed. However, I found these scenes to be marginal in their impact, when compared to their stultifying effect of the documentary-style narrative. Most Hollywood professionals of the period, whether they really liked SF or not, got the gist of the genre's appeal and successfully emulated it. In all three pictures, Wilder seems fundamentally at odds with the demands of the genre, as if he's trying as hard as possible to minimize the effects of his SF-boogiemen. Only in KILLERS FROM SPACE, despite all of its problems, are the monsters even slightly memorable.
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
THE LIVING GHOST (1942)
PHENOMENALITY: *uncanny*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *comedy*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *cosmological*
One year before William Beaudine directed THE APE MAN, his first Bela Lugosi cheapie for Monogram, the director turned out this comedy-mystery with a minimal fantastic content.
After a rich patriarch disappears, his family suspects kidnapping. A friend of the family brings in oddball private detective Nick Trayne (James Dunn) to investigate. Since Nick has moved on from being a detective, having become a "professional listener" who gives ear to people's problems for dough, the old friend encourages the family's cute private secretary Billie (Joan Woodbury) to give Nick a little ribbing so he'll catch the shamus bug again. Nick lets himself be talked into the case, and joins the family-- not nearly as eccentric as one usually finds in horror-comedies-- at their country house. But before Nick finds out much of anything, the missing man turns up-- not dead, but a "living ghost" in that he seems to be in a zombie-like state of unresponsiveness.
The mystery part of the film is efficient but forgettable, and it seems likely that the filmmakers were largely banking on the sparks between Dunn and Woodbury to sell the film with B-movie audiences. Both actors play their limited parts with vivacity, though Dunn's smart-ass dick gets a bit tiring at times. As for supporting players, only Minerva Urecal distinguishes herself as a would-be mystical type.
In terms of the metaphenomenal content, a consulting doctor gives Nick a lecture on the scientific means by which the rich man's will has been paralyzed. Though the explanation may well be nonsense in a scientific sense, the gist within the movie is that the method of "zombie-fication" is something within the bounds of science, slightly extended, so that it fits into the category of the uncanny. Neither the "zombie" nor its creator are particularly compelling, which leaves the acid-tongued detective in the position of center stage.
The film does include with a bit of pre-marital byplay that would be verboten today. Early in the film Nick promises to paddle Billie for her mockery if given the chance, and when she agrees to marry him at the end, she duly receives her punishment-- also in the end. I suspect that any adults watching the film in 1942 would have regarded the assertion of male privilege as nothing more than a joke.
Monday, January 21, 2019
KILL BABY KILL (1966)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *sociological*
Mario Bava’s mid-sixties exercise in
Gothic excess is no BLACK SUNDAY, though at times Bava--who collaborated on the script for KILL BABY KILL with two other authors-- seems to be
attempting to turn some of the earlier film’s tropes on their
respective heads.
Following various mysterious deaths in
a small Carpathian town, a medical expert is called in to certify the
causes of death. Young doctor Eswai is characterized only by his
utter disbelief in the superstitions of the locals, who blame the
deaths on a mysterious curse. The locals so resent Eswai’s
intrusion that they rough him up once, but he makes an important (and sexy) ally: a young
female medical student named Monica (Erika Blanc). Unlike Eswai she’s a liminal
figure, having been born in the town though she went away to receive
her medical education. To be sure, Monica never contributes any
medical acumen to the case.
As in many such haunted European towns,
the spectre of an aristocratic presence still endures. Here it takes
the form of the aged Baroness Graps, though she makes only minimal
appearances in the film’s first half, and her ultimate significance
is not prefigured by the rambling script. Far more consequential are
two other female figures: a little blonde girl named Melissa, soon
revealed to be the ghost of the baroness’s long-dead daughter, and Ruth, a dark-haired witch-woman. Whereas in BLACK SUNDAY Bava utilized the
familiar trope “good blonde female/ bad brunette female,” that dichotomy is reversed here, with the blonde ghost-girl being the
source of the killings while the dark-haired witch-woman seeks to
allay the ghost’s malice.
Compared to BLACK SUNDAY or even THE
WHIP AND THE BODY, Bava’s visuals are undistinguished, except for
one bracing scene in which Monica flees her ghostly nemesis down a
winding staircase. Only in the final third of the film does the role
of the Baroness become significant, as she’s revealed to be the
medium that called forth the ghost-child’s vengeance.
In fact, the role of the Baroness is
less interesting in itself than in the possible influence of KILL
BABY KILL on a later classic horror-film. It’s long been hazarded
that the second FRIDAY THE 13TH film might have picked up some visual tropes from Bava’s 1971 slasher-precursor, TWITCH
OF THE DEATH NERVE. Yet DEATH NERVE has nothing in its script that’s
at all comparable to FRIDAY’s big reveal, that the killer is
actually the aggrieved mother of a child who died as a result of the
camp-supervisors’ neglect. KILL BABY KILL turns upon a very similar revelation: that the reason the Baroness has unleashed Melissa against
the town is because some of the citizens trampled the girl to death
during a raucous celebration.
There’s
also a throwaway revelation that Monica’s life-history is a lie,
and that she like Melissa is also one of the Baroness’s children.
But both of them are such boring characters that there’s no tension
to this reveal, just as Eswai’s conversion to the reality of the
supernatural lacks any deeper resonance.
THEY CAME FROM BEYOND SPACE (1967)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *cosmological*
This low-budget “alien possession” tale was adapted by Amicus producer Milton Subotsky from an American SF-novel, THE GODS HATE KANSAS. I have not read the original novel, but Subotsky and the all-Brit cast do a creditable job of transferring the action to the British Isles, so that BEYOND seems of a piece with such similar Brit-works.
This low-budget “alien possession” tale was adapted by Amicus producer Milton Subotsky from an American SF-novel, THE GODS HATE KANSAS. I have not read the original novel, but Subotsky and the all-Brit cast do a creditable job of transferring the action to the British Isles, so that BEYOND seems of a piece with such similar Brit-works.
BEYOND’s main character is scientist
Curt Temple (Robert Hutton), who frequently collaborates with his girlfriend and fellow scientist Lee Mason (Jennifer Jayne). Prior to her departure to collaborate with another scientific
group, Curt humorously remarks that he doesn’t want other
scientists to find out that Lee is the “real brains” of their
partnership.
Then bodiless aliens descend to earth
via a meteor-shower, and within the film’s first fifteen minutes
they take possession of Lee and her fellow eggheads, all of whom
immediately speaking in highly affected tones. They set up their own
base, co-opting the resources of the British government. Curt becomes
aware of Lee’s strange behavior and investigates the base, though
he’s unable to convince the authorities of the group’s sinister
plans.
Since both Curt and Lee are very flat
character-types, her constant rejections of his attentions doesn’t
carry much resonance. There’s some potential for romantic conflict
when a blonde town-girl tries to chat up Curt during his period of rejection.
But though she later succors Curt after his possessed girlfriend
shoots him with a stun-ray (complete with a groovy “spiraling
circles” effect), the town-girl fades out of the story and is one
of the characters slain by an apparent plague. The plague is one of
the aliens’ stratagems for keeping the authorities away from their
operations, but Curt sees through their charade. In the end Curt
penetrates the base and “deprograms” his girlfriend. However, at
the eleventh hour the aliens reveal that they haven’t really killed
anyone and that everyone who apparently died will be made whole. The
film ends with Curt vowing to help the aliens out of their
difficulties.
THEY CAME FROM BEYOND SPACE is a pretty
ordinary low-octane thriller, but there are at least a few lively
moments here and there. That’s more than I could find in Amicus’s
same-year SF-flick THE TERRORNAUTS, also adapted from a little-known
American SF-novel.
Friday, January 18, 2019
THE SNOW CREATURE (1954)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *sociological*
THE SNOW CREATURE, one of the first "Yeti" films, is also the last of three low-budget SF-films on which director W. Lee ("brother of Billy") Wilder collaborated with his son Myles Wilder (though the two also worked on other, non-SF projects). Both PHANTOM FROM SPACE and the similarly titled KILLERS FROM SPACE are far more watchable, though CREATURE gets a few points for not being a total ripoff of its main influences, 1933's KING KONG and CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON, which appeared in theaters about six months before Wilder's Yeti.
Whereas the explorers of CREATURE are looking for their fishy quarry, narrator-and-viewpoint-character Parrish undertakes his expedition to the Himalayas looking for rare botanical subjects. His only companions are another American, a photographer named Wells, and several Sherpas, implicitly Tibetan though they are played by Japanese actors. Only three of the Tibetans are named: the leader Subra, his wife Tala, and his brother Leva.
After a few days of monotonous travel through the Himalayan snows, a Yeti appears at Subra's house and steals Tala. Leva overtakes the expedition and relates this story to Subra, who believes it implicitly. He asks the two Americans for help, but neither of them believe in abominable snowmen, and they decline to go Yeti-hunting. In one of the film's few original touches, Subra hijacks the expedition for that purpose, forcing Parrish and Wells to go along if they don't want to be left behind to freeze in the snows.
Though the Americans try a few tricks to take control of the situation, Subra heads them off and the group finally comes across evidence of a Yeti's passage: the prints of his "big feet" in the snow. However, there's no proof that the Yeti they're tracking has Tala in his possession, though the group does find one of Tala's shoes. However, Tala is never seen again in the movie, nor is there more than circumspect acknowledgment that she's been abducted to help breed more Snow Creatures. Wells shows himself to be a minor-league Carl Denham, asking Subra if he might want to profit from any creatures they find, rather than simply killing them. Parrish can only think of making a new discovery that will benefit his career, though even before seeing any snowmen, he's oddly certain that the creature is just some kind of animal (contradicting his narration about their being a "crude civilization" of Yetis).
The expedition follows the tracks to a series of caves, and they find not one but three Snow Creatures-- an adult male, an adult female, and a child-- though the latter two are barely seen. Since Wilder's script has no use for them, the scripter resorts to a peculiar device to get rid of them. When the male Yeti sees the outsiders, he tries to bring down the ceiling on them, but only succeeds in killing his own family and stunning himself. Parrish and Wells steal back their guns from Subra, forcing all of the Sherpas to give up the search for Tala, though it's possible that Subra believes her to have died in the cave-in. However, thanks to a handy syringe filled with a knockout drug, Parrish can keep the Snow Creature unconscious as the Sherpas drag him back to the nearest city. Once there, big-hearted Parrish declines to press charges against the rebellious Tibetans, but there's a new source of conflict. Wells thinks they should exploit the creature for profit, while Parrish simply wants him examined by scientists, for which purpose he sends the snowman back to the States in a "refrigerator unit." Strangely, unlike most noble scientists in 1950s films, Parrish is utterly indifferent to the Creature's possible human status. In a later scene Parrish reaffirms that it's only an animal, though he does so in part to allay Wells' attempt to publicize the new find as a "snow man."
The sketchy debate about the Creature's status ends when the snowman breaks free of its prison in a California city. The Wilder script seems to agree with Parrish: there are absolutely no scenes to suggest that the monster can think or even express puzzlement over his surroundings. The Snow Creature is just a primitive libido on the loose, for, apart from fighting back against police, his only action is to attack women in two very discreetly handled scenes. Finally, Parrish is able to advise the police to look for the beast-man down in the sewer system, at which point the cops eventually overtake and kill the monster with a minimum of fuss.
Though it may be presumptuous to do so, I can't help expressing that the absolute disinterest of both of the Wilders in the creature's mentality signals their lack of investment in the making of SF-films about monsters and aliens. Father and son worked on three other films together, two of which have metaphenomenal content even though they don't qualify as mainstream SF. After that, Myles Wilder had a long career in episodic TV-- including another "caveman," KORG 70,000 B.C.-- and W. Lee only directed a few more films, ending his career with yet one more fantasy-flick, THE OMEGANS.
ADDENDA: I considered the possibility that the Yeti might reflect attitudes of 1950s Caucasians toward so-called "savage races." However, there's not much to back up this sort of sociological reading, particularly since the Yeti people prey most of all upon "persons of color." It seems more likely that the ham-fisted script conceived of the snow creatures as a menace to all humanity, like nasty Cro-Magnons still trying to get one up on those intruding Neanderthals.
THE SNOW CREATURE, one of the first "Yeti" films, is also the last of three low-budget SF-films on which director W. Lee ("brother of Billy") Wilder collaborated with his son Myles Wilder (though the two also worked on other, non-SF projects). Both PHANTOM FROM SPACE and the similarly titled KILLERS FROM SPACE are far more watchable, though CREATURE gets a few points for not being a total ripoff of its main influences, 1933's KING KONG and CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON, which appeared in theaters about six months before Wilder's Yeti.
Whereas the explorers of CREATURE are looking for their fishy quarry, narrator-and-viewpoint-character Parrish undertakes his expedition to the Himalayas looking for rare botanical subjects. His only companions are another American, a photographer named Wells, and several Sherpas, implicitly Tibetan though they are played by Japanese actors. Only three of the Tibetans are named: the leader Subra, his wife Tala, and his brother Leva.
After a few days of monotonous travel through the Himalayan snows, a Yeti appears at Subra's house and steals Tala. Leva overtakes the expedition and relates this story to Subra, who believes it implicitly. He asks the two Americans for help, but neither of them believe in abominable snowmen, and they decline to go Yeti-hunting. In one of the film's few original touches, Subra hijacks the expedition for that purpose, forcing Parrish and Wells to go along if they don't want to be left behind to freeze in the snows.
Though the Americans try a few tricks to take control of the situation, Subra heads them off and the group finally comes across evidence of a Yeti's passage: the prints of his "big feet" in the snow. However, there's no proof that the Yeti they're tracking has Tala in his possession, though the group does find one of Tala's shoes. However, Tala is never seen again in the movie, nor is there more than circumspect acknowledgment that she's been abducted to help breed more Snow Creatures. Wells shows himself to be a minor-league Carl Denham, asking Subra if he might want to profit from any creatures they find, rather than simply killing them. Parrish can only think of making a new discovery that will benefit his career, though even before seeing any snowmen, he's oddly certain that the creature is just some kind of animal (contradicting his narration about their being a "crude civilization" of Yetis).
The expedition follows the tracks to a series of caves, and they find not one but three Snow Creatures-- an adult male, an adult female, and a child-- though the latter two are barely seen. Since Wilder's script has no use for them, the scripter resorts to a peculiar device to get rid of them. When the male Yeti sees the outsiders, he tries to bring down the ceiling on them, but only succeeds in killing his own family and stunning himself. Parrish and Wells steal back their guns from Subra, forcing all of the Sherpas to give up the search for Tala, though it's possible that Subra believes her to have died in the cave-in. However, thanks to a handy syringe filled with a knockout drug, Parrish can keep the Snow Creature unconscious as the Sherpas drag him back to the nearest city. Once there, big-hearted Parrish declines to press charges against the rebellious Tibetans, but there's a new source of conflict. Wells thinks they should exploit the creature for profit, while Parrish simply wants him examined by scientists, for which purpose he sends the snowman back to the States in a "refrigerator unit." Strangely, unlike most noble scientists in 1950s films, Parrish is utterly indifferent to the Creature's possible human status. In a later scene Parrish reaffirms that it's only an animal, though he does so in part to allay Wells' attempt to publicize the new find as a "snow man."
The sketchy debate about the Creature's status ends when the snowman breaks free of its prison in a California city. The Wilder script seems to agree with Parrish: there are absolutely no scenes to suggest that the monster can think or even express puzzlement over his surroundings. The Snow Creature is just a primitive libido on the loose, for, apart from fighting back against police, his only action is to attack women in two very discreetly handled scenes. Finally, Parrish is able to advise the police to look for the beast-man down in the sewer system, at which point the cops eventually overtake and kill the monster with a minimum of fuss.
Though it may be presumptuous to do so, I can't help expressing that the absolute disinterest of both of the Wilders in the creature's mentality signals their lack of investment in the making of SF-films about monsters and aliens. Father and son worked on three other films together, two of which have metaphenomenal content even though they don't qualify as mainstream SF. After that, Myles Wilder had a long career in episodic TV-- including another "caveman," KORG 70,000 B.C.-- and W. Lee only directed a few more films, ending his career with yet one more fantasy-flick, THE OMEGANS.
ADDENDA: I considered the possibility that the Yeti might reflect attitudes of 1950s Caucasians toward so-called "savage races." However, there's not much to back up this sort of sociological reading, particularly since the Yeti people prey most of all upon "persons of color." It seems more likely that the ham-fisted script conceived of the snow creatures as a menace to all humanity, like nasty Cro-Magnons still trying to get one up on those intruding Neanderthals.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
MASTER MINDS (1949)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *comedy*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological*
I'd tend to agree with the dominant online opinion that this Bowery Boys film probably owes more than a little to the previous year's successful monster-comedy ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN. In that film, Glenn Strange played the Frankenstein Monster, and a mad scientist working for Count Dracula wanted to transplant Lou Costello's simple brain into the monster's skull. Here, a mad scientist named named Druzik (Alan Napier) has control of a hairy brute named Atlas (Strange again), whom Druzik wants to improve upon. But instead of using the tried-and-true brain-transplant mode, Druzik employs lots of Frankensteinian elecrtical arcs to effect a personality-transfer-- and thus Atlas's brutish body comes to be inhabited by the timid consciousness of Sach (Huntz Hall), the resident dingus of the Bowery Boys.
Perhaps so that filmmakers could keep their comedy's plot a little distinct from that of the A&C film, MASTER MINDS starts out with a fantasy-trope that's largely irrelevant to the main story. Sach eats too much candy and somehow gains the power to make accurate prophecies. His leader Slip (Leo Gorcery) and the rest of the middle-aged "boys" immediately set Sach up to be a carnival fortuneteller. Druzik sees the act and for some reason thinks that a prognosticating man-monster might prove useful, so he and his aides kidnap Sach. Once the personality transfer takes place, "Sach.," now in the body of a behemoth, seeks out his old pals and eventually leads them to Druzik's laboratory, resulting in assorted silliness.
In comparison with some of the earlier Bowery Boys adventures into the supernatural, this one benefits from good casting, particularly with Napier as the silver-tongued scientist, whose aides include Skelton Knaggs and Jane Adams, both of whom had worked alongside Strange in 1945's HOUSE OF DRACULA, But the most interesting aspect of MINDS is how well Huntz Hall throws himself into playing the ferocious Atlas once the monster's mind has been placed in Sach's body. Strange also has a little fun playing the part of the timid Sach despite his gangling form, but Hall doesn't try to mug in his role, although it's pretty much what one would expect of such light comedies. Huntz Hall was certainly not what anyone call a versatile actor, but it's refreshing to see him step, however briefly, outside his usual routines.
INSANITY (1993)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological*
While clearing off some old tapes I came across this Hong Kong ghost-tale.
INSANITY is basically a "woman-in-peril" story crossed with a familiar Chinese trope in which houses can be haunted not by human ghosts, but by spirits of evil embodied in old artifacts. In this case, Mr. and Mrs. Wong have just acquired been married and have moved into a new house, so that everything looks rosy for them. However, Mister Wong's shrewish mother brings them a demonic-looking statue as a house-warming gift. Soon the young wife is being haunted by strange apparitions, including imagining that her OB-GYN turns into a slavering maniac.
There's a sloppily constructed subplot, in which the statue's evil is somehow linked to a cop (played by the best-known actor in the film, Simon "FULL CONTACT" Yam). The cop goes crazy, kills his wife, and then shows up on Mrs. Wong's doorstep. Apparently the statue doesn't have any power to do anything but aimlessly terrorize the young pregnant woman, so it summons the cop to assault Mrs. Wong.
The only distinguishing thing about this routine ghost-and-madman thriller is the way the script (written by the same fellow playing Mr. Wong) provides a rationale early in the film for a climactic decapitation.
Monday, January 14, 2019
KILL OR BE KILLED (1980), KILL AND KILL AGAIN (1981)
PHENOMENALITY: (1) *uncanny,* (2) *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *sociological*
Both of these martial-arts films were filmed in South Africa with casts mostly unknown to American audiences. Both follow the trope of the "tournament-film," in which some character, usually a villain, hosts a tournament that attracts fighters from all over the world, all of which follow in the deep footprints led by ENTER THE DRAGON.
Now, while I did judge DRAGON to be a metaphenomenal film, it wasn't because the villain organized a tournament, but because he used weird weapons like a metal hand and a maze of mirrors. General Rudloff, the villain of KILL OR BE KILLED, has nothing special in his arsenal, but he's weird in another way: he's a "perilous psycho" in that he wants to re-stage a previous such tournament that *supposedly* took place back in the 1940s, *supposedly* involved the Germans pitted against their allies the Japanese, and *supposedly* was sponsored by historical Nazi figure Albert Speer.
Though KILL OR BE KILLED is poor in terms of script and production values, I've got to give the filmmakers credit for putting forth such a brain-damaged idea. Certainly there were no martial-arts tournaments back in WWII, though the film's alternate title, KARATE OLYMPIAD, suggests that the script-writer was really thinking Olympic thoughts. One never knows what Rudloff's been doing following the fall of the Axis Powers, but apparently nothing matters to him more than the Olympiad he lost to the Japanese. After assembling kung-fu fighters from all over-- including main hero Steve Chase (James Ryan)-- Rudloff challenges the same Japanese general whose fighters devoted those of Rudloff (though the general claims that his men were bought off). Most of the story concerns Chase and his girlfriend (supposedly another fighter, though she can't fake-fight to save her life) first escaping Rudloff's tyrannical hold, and then returning in order to destroy the general's mad scheme.
KILL AND KILL AGAIN is still cheesy, but it easily makes it into fantasy-film concordances because this time Steve Chase's villain is a mad cult-leader with a sci-fi gimmick. Nasty Marduk, who has even less background than General Rudloff, kidnaps a prominent scientist who intended to create a super-fuel from potatoes, because Marduk has learned how the same formula can be used to control the minds of his cultists. However, the professor has a daughter, the coyly named "Kandy Kane," who convinces Chase to go after Marduk. Chase, having already dealt with one madman, decides that this time out he could use a little more help than he got from his former girlfriend (who is never mentioned, of course). So he appeals to four previous acquaintances to infiltrate Marduk's compound and to liberate Kandy Kane's father. Not surprisingly, Kandy herself also goes along for the ride, and the actress playing her, Anneline Kriel, at least does some creditable if short fight-scenes.
Though Marduk is not as wild an evildoer as the Nazi with the Olympics fetish, KILL AND KILL AGAIN is a little funnier than the first film, thanks to a lot of goofy lines given to Chase and his friends, anticipating the rise of the equally goofy A-Team in 1983. Fight-scenes overall are better but nothing to write home about.
Monday, January 7, 2019
AQUAMAN (2018)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *cosmological, psychological, sociological*
AQUAMAN became one of DC's best-known heroes through a weird confluence of events: after a one-season cartoon devoted to his adventures, he became a regular participant in many seasons of the long-lived ABC animated series SUPER FRIENDS. Aquaman in his own cartoon came off like a tough if G-rated hero, but in SUPER FRIENDS, he was a literal fish out of water. As a result he was often reduced to a joke, a loser who couldn't do anything unless he could find some fish to do his fighting for him.
JUSTICE LEAGUE made some minor progress in dispersing the hero's dominant pop-culture image as a waterlogged wimp, but even here he was dwarfed by more colorful characters. His first feature-film, however, makes him a beefy brawler who can get shot by ray-guns and shrug it off with an "Ow." Throughout the film, both he and other members of his people, the submarine Atlanteans, are capable of ripping through steel and falling from planes with only minor scuff-marks.
Director James Wan, who's also credited on the original story, serves up a fast-paced quest tale with a lot of sprightly comic relief, often at the expense of the tough-guy hero. Thanks to a ton of CGI visual effects, Wan also has the distinction of bringing forth the most impressive incarnation of an undersea city of water-breathers-- though the list of such movies is pretty small to start with.
As the film starts, Aquaman, a.k.a. Arthur Curry, is still something of an enigma to the surface world, and he's a loner with no one in his life but his surface-dwelling father. Arthur's Atlantean mother Atlanna had fled her native city to escape a forced marriage. However, after a few years of marriage to Arthur's dad, she had to return to the sea in order to prevent the city's warriors from attacking her husband and son.
As an adult, this Aquaman occasionally prevents crime at sea, encountering early-on the violent pirate who will become the hero's best-known villain, Black Manta. However, he receives the call to kingship from Atlantean princess Mera. Arthur's half-brother Orm currently rules one of the seven realms spawned from the sinking of the original Atlantis, but he aspires to unite all of the realms-- including that of Mera's father Nereus-- in a massive war against the surface world. Aquaman, after seeing his own father almost killed by one of Orm's forays, signs on for the campaign.
Most of the characters in the story are defined simply, in terms of loyalty to their parents. Aquaman hates Atlantis because he's been told that the city-dwellers executed Atlanna for her transgressions. Mera is loyal to her father but doesn't want to be betrothed to Orm. (Comics-readers know that she's destined to be Arthur's love-interest, but Wan and crew keep the romance from seeming too pre-ordainted.) Black Manta wants to avenge the death of his father, Orm feels shame because of his mother's crimes, and that's about it.
The essential thrust of the quest is that Aquaman can only unseat Orm if he gains a fabulous trident from the first ruler of Atlantis, though he and Mera have to follow various clues to find the thing. Though the storyline lacks any of the major plot-problems seen in most Marvel Universe movies, there are some hiccups here. Once Mera and Arthur find their quest, Mera doesn't seem to realize that it's the legendary Trench, the very place where Atlanna was sacrificed-- and if that brief description doesn't signal to the individual viewer a major revelation for the hero, the viewer's just not paying attention.
Jason Momoa and Amber Heard don't always have the best interpersonal chemistry, but they both due yeoman work in bringing Aquaman and Mera to life. In fact, Mera's in the story so much that I tend to see her as being a partner-figure, rather than a supporting type-- just as she was in some if not all of the comics-serials. The script gives all of the characters memorable little bits, and though there are no major mythic concepts here, at least Wan and his collaborators don't fall on their faces as badly as the overambitious stories of BLACK PANTHER and CIVIL WAR.
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
FRANKENSTEIN VS. THE WOLFMAN IN 3-D (2008)
PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological*
Here's the tagline from this 18-minute short:
"Tonight, two icons of terror will come face to face-- for the last time!"
Well, the short does OK in rendering a somewhat iconic version of the Frankenstein Monster. True, one can cavil about the idea that the Monster has somehow managed to gain custody of his maker's castle and can go into town just like any other Carpathian citizen. But he looks good, a bit reminiscent of the Robert deNiro version as well as the classic Karloff creation, and he has a good characterization, reminding one of the self-educated being from Mary Shelley's novel. Though a solitary type, the Monsters befriends three orphan kids after one of them points out that they're like him in having no parents. He also ends up saving them from the other monster of the title.
And that's why the short's hype is not so accurate. This is no "iconic Wolfman," it's just a dime-a-dozen werewolf. Yes, there's the expected werewolf lore, and at one point his mortal alter ego is called "Talbot." But whereas the Universal classic crossover fleshed out both the Monster and the Wolf Man, this time the furry fellow gets the short end of the stick.
The home-computer animation is not very good, but it's a nice script and it has its Universal-loving heart in the right place.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)