PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *metaphysical, psychological*
It’s been alleged that Columbia’s
RETURN OF THE VAMPIRE may have started out as an attempt to make a
sequel to Universal’s DRACULA, presumably without actually drawing
on that movie but rather on the public domain novel. But Universal’s
legal department blocked that idea, so Columbia came up with a
“Dracula-under-another-name.” This character, Armand Tesla,
inevitably reproduced the physical image of Universal’s Dracula
since he was played by Bela Lugosi.
The legal complications might not have
had any real impact on the script for RETURN, since its authors would
have been drawing from Bram Stoker’s novel from the first anyway.
That said, the writers also brought in elements foreign to Stoker,
some of which may have been borrowed from contemporaneous horror
films. Yet there are aspects of the Columbia vampire saga that are
more faithful to Stoker than one sees in Tod Browning’s 1931
adaptation. For instance, though the script doesn’t exactly give
Armand Tesla an origin as such, there’s the implication that he was
once a scholar back in 1700 who became so infatuated with the subject
of vampirism that he somehow transformed himself into one of the
undead. This fragment of a backstory bears some resemblance to one of
the origins Stoker gives to Count Dracula, who’s said at one point
to have been a student at a college called the Scholomance, which
somehow led to his vampiric descent.
To be sure, some structural elements
just make good sense for the whole subgenre. The vampire needs to
have a base from which to carry out his depredations, and he’s
generally impatient enough to fixate on a victim or victims within
easy access. Armand Tesla is first seen fanging an innocent woman in
the London of World War One, and he likes the taste enough to follow
her to a medical clinic. His activities, however, trigger two persons
affiliated with the clinic, Doctor Saunders and Lady Jane Ainsley, to
thwart the vampire’s initial attack. Angered by the resistance,
Tesla tells his lupine slave Andreas (Matt Willis) that he plans to
punish Saunders by making his small granddaughter into a bloodsucker.
But the vampire hunters strike first, driving a metal spike through
Tesla’s heart, and he dies, albeit temporarily. With the expiration
of his master, Andreas reverts to human status and lives for the next
twenty-something years with no werewolf-style transformations,
working for Lady Jane at the clinic.
Andreas, of course, is RETURN’s
version of Renfield, who in both Stoker and in Browning is a madman
influenced by Dracula’s power, though in very different ways. The
script implies that somehow Tesla has transformed Andreas, a normal
human, into a hairy monster, though this ploy might seem
counter-intuitive since Andreas does not seem able to transform back
to human even at his master’s behest. (Late in the film Andreas is
stopped by two cops, and though the wolf-man fights off the
constables, having a lupine appearance probably didn’t help him
avoid trouble.) Though the script does not reference Stoker’s claim
that vampires can command wolves to do their bidding, this is
apparently at the root of the writers’ decision to make Andreas a
wolf-man, so that he would obey Tesla in all things. Yet it’s also
possible that they were riffing on the general idea of supernatural
contagion by having a vampire capable of creating not only
vampire-slaves, but a werewolf-slave as well. The scripters may also
have taken some influence from 1941’s THE WOLF MAN, where a
werewolf (played by the then-ubiquitous Lugosi) passes on his curse
to Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr, to whom Matt Willis bears a nodding
resemblance).
Some twenty years later, Saunders has
passed on of natural causes but his granddaughter Nikki (Nina Foch)
has become a young woman in her twenties. She’s engaged to John
(Roland Varro), the son of Lady Jane—making their relationship a
trifle odd for a horror-film of the time, since John and Nikki are
the movie’s romantic couple, yet are a good twenty years apart in
age. (Almost surprisingly, Foch and Varro were both accurately cast
with respect to their real ages.) A local constable heralds trouble,
though, for he confronts Lady Jane with a recording by Saunders,
detailing how he and Lady Jane killed a vampire. In a bit possibly
derived from the 1935 DRACULA’S DAUGHTER, the policeman explains
that the law takes a dim view of driving spikes through people,
accused vampires or not.
However, fate, and the Second World
War, intervene to make possible the vampire’s return from death. A
bombing-raid by German planes unearths the spiked corpse of Tesla.
Two groundsmen come across the impaled body, assume that the spike
was put there by the bomb-blast, and they pull out the metal
intruder. In due time Tesla returns to his unholy unlife, which
includes asserting his mastery of Andreas once more and assuming a
new identity, the better to get close to Saunders’ granddaughter
and turn her into one of his own kind.
After this original twist on the idea
of resuscitating an undead, the movie largely falls into a routine
pastiche of the customary vampire tropes: the evildoer’s stalking
of his victim, her wasting illness, the slow realization of the
vamp’s true identity. The only novelty of the film’s middle part
is that for the first time the main vampire hunter is a woman of
mature years, Lady Jane (Frieda Inescourt). It’s also of interest
that, whereas Tod Browning’s adaptation uses crosses and other holy
paraphernalia in an offhand manner, the script for RETURN strongly
emphasizes through Lady Jane’s dialogue the sanctity of Christian
icons and their ability to repel Satanic evil. This emphasis also
appears at the climax, in which Andreas uses a Christian cross to
defy his master, propelling him to his doom in the sunlight. The
script doesn’t provide any explanation as to why vampires dissolve
in daytime but remain whole when they’re spiked/staked. In Stoker’s
book, either staking or sunlight can slay a vamp, but vamps only
decompose if they have cheated time long enough that they fall apart
once their unnaturally prolonged lives are terminated.
The script is strong in terms of
keeping things busy with lots of incidents, though RETURN never
escapes a feeling of being a bit too derivative. The movie’s
primary distinction is that it seems to be the first film to
articulate the image of a vampire controlling a werewolf, even though
Andreas makes a very atypical lycanthrope. This trope, though it only
appears occasionally, has the distinction of having shown up in such
diverse places as Jack Kirby’s JIMMY OLSEN comic and Whitley Streiber’s novel WOLFEN. Lugosi is satisfactory in the role of
Tesla but the role doesn’t really give the actor any standout
lines, whereas Inescourt manages to dominate every scene she’s in.
The ending, in which the dopey constable breaks the fourth wall for
the sake of a lame joke, has been rightly castigated by almost
everyone.