PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *metaphysical, psychological, sociological*
Someone has said that artists are like
sorcerers who can be bound by their own spells. Certainly this is
true of those creators who become so enraptured by certain themes
that they repeat them obsessively. That said, obviously there are
also creators to whom spell-casting is just a job, and they use magic
after the fashion of Mickey Mouse’s junior magician in FANTASIA.
This line of thought comes to me as I
grapple with the fact that the film under review seems to reproduce the
esoteric aspects of an archaic Egyptian story, “The Tale of the Two
Brothers.” Yet the career of the movie’s primary architect
Michael Carreras does not seem to follow any thematic pattern in the
various films that he wrote and/or directed for Hammer Studios. In
contrast, some of the films that Carreras simply produced, such as
HORROR OF DRACULA and CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF, qualify as two of the
most mythic films in the Hammer oeuvre. Based purely on the works
that Carreras did write or direct, then, I tend to think that
Carreras merely flirted with the esoteric content of the Egyptian
myth—that of a sibling rivalry expressed through ancient
magic—in order to sell a new mummy-movie. Carreras deserves some
credit for finding a novel approach to this subgenre of
monster-films, since it would have been the easiest thing in the
world for Hammer to grind out a simple pastiche of Universal’s
mediocre Kharis-flicks. But Carreras’s use of the fresh material is
still executed with the style of the journeyman filmmaker.
Certainly CURSE starts out with one
standard trope of most mummy-movies. Circa 1900, the tomb of an
ancient Egyptian royal, Ra-Antef, is unearthed by a team of European
archeologists, consisting of French professor Dubos, his daughter
Annette, her British fiancée John and another scholar, Sir Giles.
When the archeologists clash with a representative of the Egyptian
government, the possibility of a mystic curse comes up. In addition,
ill fortune, not explicitly mystical in nature, befalls Dubos, who is
captured by Bedouins who kill him and cut off one of his hands. These raiders,
whose antipathy for the expedition remains mysterious for much of the
film, also arrange a surprise for Annette, leaving the severed hand
in her bedding to shock her.
But even though these developments
disturb the Europeans, the man financing the expedition, a
money-minded promoter named King, won’t allow anything to interfere
with his plans to exploit the unearthed mummy. Much to the
displeasure of both Sir Giles and the Egyptian emissary Hashmi, King
plans to take Ra-Antef on tour, charging yokels a quarter to view the
remains of the mummified prince. Giles breaks off relations with
King, but John and Annette continue to work for the exploitative
American financier, helping him plan his traveling sideshow. It’s
possible that the two of them stay with King in order to build up
their monetary reserves in preparation for their planned marriage,
though neither character makes this justification.
The members of the expedition depart
Egypt for England, and two incidents take place on the ship. A
knife-wielding assassin assaults Giles, and when John interferes, the
young man throws the killer overboard to his presumed death. As a
result of this scuffle, John, Giles and Annette make the acquaintance
of another traveler from England, a well-to-do nobleman named Adam
Beauchamp. No one can explain the assassin’s attack, nor does
anyone connect the incident with the murder of Professor Dubos by
Egyptian fanatics. Beauchamp for his part professes a great interest
in Egyptology and once the group reaches England, the nobleman
invites John and Annette to have dinner with him. In the ensuing
days, it becomes evident that Beauchamp is putting the moves on
Annette whenever John is too busy to accompany her, due to his work
on King’s exhibit. At one point, someone breaks into said exhibit,
stealing a list of the Egyptian artifacts, but at this point nothing
has transpired that might not be the relatively mundane activities of
a murderous cult.
Annette relates to the fascinated
Beauchamp the history of the mummy. In Pharaonic Egypt Ra was a great
scholar fascinated with the occult preservation of life. Ra’s
jealous brother Be, reputed to have been a self-indulgent sensualist,
poisons the minds of the people against Ra, forcing Ra’s father to
exile the sinless prince. Ironically, it’s in this exile that Ra
stumbles across a nomadic tribe that possesses knowledge of the
secrets of life and death, embodied in a sacred medallion—which
also happens to be one of the items recovered from Ra’s tomb in the
present era. However, the archaic tale ends with Be taking preventive
action against Ra’s return to the throne, by sending assassins who
slay Ra, cutting off one of the prince’s hands as proof of the
kill. There the ancient tale ends, or seems to end.
In her conversations with Beauchamp,
Annette discloses a bit of a father-complex, mentioning that she
followed in her father’s archeological footsteps to catch her
negligent parent’s attention, and Beauchamp responds by flattering
her for her intellect. John, apparently not knowing how to regain his
fiancee’s wandering affections, busies himself investigating the
medallion in the possession of Sir Giles, but someone breaks into
John’s house, knocking him out and stealing the artifact.
Immediately thereafter, the mummified corpse of Ra-Antef goes missing
from the exhibit, presumably stolen by the same person(s) who
attacked John.
But the mummy wasn’t stolen; rather
it was revived with the use of the mystic medallion. The bandaged
behemoth begins stalking all those who violated his tomb, killing
both King and Sir Giles. And at last Annette learns Adam Beauchamp’s
true reason for following the members of the expedition: he’s not
only responsible for reviving the mummy, he wants Ra-Antef to kill
him. It seems that Beauchamp is none other than Ra’s evil brother
Be, rendered immortal by the curse of his Pharaoh-father so that his
life can only end at Ra’s hands. For some reason—antipathy toward
the modern world, perhaps? —Be wants Ra to slay Annette as well.
However, the mummy still possesses some of the good prince’s better
nature, and spares Annette while destroying Be (after significantly
crushing one of Be’s hands). Then Ra brings down the roof on his
own head, so that he will be once more entombed and removed from the
living world. There’s no guarantee that John and the straying
Annette will be united once more, and the film’s final spoken words
consist of an unexplained phrase: “Rest, my father, rest.”
In a script less concerned with piling
up mysterious occurrences to be solved by the Big Reveal, some of
Carreras’ motifs—particularly the quasi-Freudian emphasis on
severed hands—might have sustained a deeper symbolic discourse. Yet
CURSE OF THE MUMMY’S TOMB is mostly concerned with just solving a
mystery rather than delving into psychological or metaphysical
mysteries, so its mythicity can only be judged as “fair.”