The Lost Continent (1968)

Giant hermit crab!
Watch out for the pincers!
Giant hermit crab attacks
Crab attack!

The tramp steamer Corita sails towards a hurricane, which could prove more dangerous than usual because Captain Lansen (Eric Porter) is smuggling barrels of the explosive Phosphor B, which can detonate if mixed with water. His ship’s passengers, unaware of this explosive danger, are a varied bunch of characters who have their own reasons for sailing in this rust-heap of a ship.

A very sweaty Michael Ripper gets mutinous
A very sweaty Michael Ripper gets mutinous

After an accident causes a leak in the room that holds the explosives, some of the crew (including Hammer regular Michael Ripper) mutiny and leave in a lifeboat. Then, when it becomes apparent that a broken generator cannot be fixed, Captain Lansen decides the passengers and the remaining crew should also sail from the ship in a lifeboat.

Tom Chantrell artwork
Tom Chantrell artwork

After a death-by-flare-gun incident and a fatal shark attack, Lansen’s lifeboat becomes ensnared in a mass of killer seaweed, and the boat eventually drifts back to the still-afloat Corita, which is also surrounded by the almost sentient weed. Lansen and the others climb back aboard the tramp steamer as it floats towards a mysterious, seaweed-festooned ship’s graveyard littered with vessels from different time periods, including a Spanish galleon. In this mysterious, fog-shrouded zone of the Sargasso Sea, the protagonists will encounter weird monsters, the descendants of conquistadores & the Spanish Inquisition, fur-clad barbarian-types (working for the Spanish) and a young woman called Sarah (Dana Gillespie), who traverses the weed-scape using buoyancy balloons and snowshoe-type footwear!

Ship's graveyard
Ship’s graveyard

As you can see by the above synopsis, THE LOST CONTINENT is a truly oddball, pulpy Hammer production. The film, directed by Michael Carreras, begins with an incongruously apt jazzy-lounge-pop theme tune by The Peddlers, then maybe spends too much time in the earlier part of the story delving into the melodramatic lives of the dubious passengers on board the tramp steamer. However, once the mutiny happens and the weed appears, this movie becomes luridly enjoyable!

Suzanna Leigh publicity shot
Suzanna Leigh publicity shot

‘Uncharted Seas’, the original Dennis Wheatley novel that THE LOST CONTINENT is based on, is nowhere near as enjoyably madcap as the movie adaptation: in the book the villains are descendants of slaves, whilst the movie boasts marooned conquistadors and their boy leader who, under the influence of his Spanish Inquisition mentor, feeds people who fail him to a rubbery Lovecraftian weed-monster in the hold of his stranded galleon!

The Inquisition in the galleon
The Inquisition likes very pointy hats!
Leper-faced Spanish Inquisition dude!
Leper-faced Spanish Inquisition dude!

The movie is purely set-based (apart from some Canary Islands landscape stock footage taken from ONE MILLION YEARS BC used during the credits), which gives the production a heightened sense of pulpy artifice, the whole cast takes the production very seriously, with Eric Porter on fine form as the captain and, oh yes, as mentioned earlier, you also get Dana Gillespie trudging across the surface of the weeds with the help of her harness of helium balloons! Suzanna Leigh adds more Hammer glamour and gets attacked by a tentacled, cyclopean octo-thing that leaves her covered in slime.
Weed-festooned madness!

Octo-beast attack!
Octo-beast attack!

As this blog is called Monster Zone, we’d better talk a little more about the monsters…

Weed attacks the ship interior
Watch out for the weed!

There are actually several types of weed in the film: the constricting seaweed that entraps vessels in the nicely-done, misty ship’s graveyard, there’s a more mobile weed-plant (with flowers) that gets into the ship via a porthole later in the story and, best of all, there’s the aforementioned plant-fungi thing that the Spanish Inquisition keeps in the hold of the galleon to gobble up people who displease them!

The plant-thing in the Spanish galleon
The plant-thing in the Spanish galleon

Robert Mattey’s creatures are criticised very often in reviews, and there’s no denying the glowing-eyed octo-creature is a bit iffy, though it does nicely exude green ooze from its severed foam tentacles.

Behind the scenes shot of the cyclopean octopus creature
Behind the scenes shot of the cyclopean octopus creature

The fight between a giant scorpion and a giant hermit crab on a small, rocky isle is pretty cool. These arthropod beasts are brought to life via full-scale mechanical models that I think look okay: I like the scorpion’s rapidly moving legs when it zips towards the crab to battle it. Though the full-scale hermit crab monster is less than mobile as a whole, it’s facial movements are really impressive: when you get a close-up of its rapidly chattering, beaky face I think it looks pretty good.

Giant hermit crab vs giant scorpion!
Giant hermit crab vs giant scorpion!
Close-up of the hermit crab's face
Close-up of the hermit crab’s face

Though I admit the film would definitely have benefitted from stop-motion critters (as, say, featured in Hammer’s ONE MILLION YEARS BC), this fog-enshrouded production is a sweaty, colourful, bizarre, pulp adventure treat.

The octo-creature attacks
Tentacles everywhere!
Various posters and promotional art
Tom Chantrell pre-production art
Tom Chantrell pre-production artwork
Possibly rough artwork design for a proposed Hammer promotional flyer by Tom Chantrell
Possibly rough artwork design for a proposed Hammer promotional flyer by Tom Chantrell
August 1968 issue of 'ABC Film Review'
August 1968 issue of ‘ABC Film Review’
Dana Gillespie and the scorpion pose for a publicity photo
Dana Gillespie and the giant scorpion pose for a publicity photo
Dana Gillespie promotional still
Another Dana Gillespie promotional shot

If you’ve not already seen this movie, please search it out, I’m sure you’ll have a fun time viewing it.

Monster hermit crab gif

The Incredible Melting Man (1977)

The melting man
Slimy, melting fun!

Three astronauts are exposed to a blast of cosmic radiation during a space mission, which kills two of them. Colonel Steve West (Alex Rebar) survives but, back on Earth in a hospital, his flesh begins to melt. West loses his mind and escapes the hospital after killing a nurse, going on a killing spree, consuming flesh to inhibit his melting, slightly radioactive flesh.

Taking off the bandages
Maybe he shouldn’t look under the bandages…

Scientist Dr. Ted Nelson (Burr DeBenning), a friend of West, starts searching for the melting man, helped first by General Perry and then by Sheriff Blake, following the trail of bodies and finally confronting West at a power station.

French poster
French poster

With a plot similar to FIRST MAN INTO SPACE (1959), this film hardly boasts the best dialogue or acting you’ll ever see, but it IS a schlocky sci-fi horror pic that makes up for its so-so storyline with some fine, gooey, gory practical FX by Rick Baker.

severed ear
Severed ear in a bush!
severed arm
Severed arm on the floor!

I first saw this film in the cinema as a teenager (in a double bill with THE SAVAGE BEES) and I loved all the gore, such as the severed fisherman’s head popping open in slow motion at the bottom of a waterfall. I enjoyed the film so much that I went back with my cousin to watch it again in the theatre that week – and, I guess, I have retained a soft spot for this pic ever since.

Savage Bees/Incredible Melting Man double bill UK quad poster
Savage Bees/Incredible Melting Man double bill UK quad poster
The fisherman's severed head
A fisherman’s head floats toward a waterfall…

It is definitely Rick Baker’s work that makes THE INCREDIBLE MELTING MAN worth viewing. I own Arrow Video’s high Definition Blu-ray release and it is great to watch Baker’s slimy creation shamble about the countryside in such a hi-def print.

Arrow Video Blu-ray
Arrow Video Blu-ray

In one of the extras on the Blu-ray, Rick Baker remembers quoting quite a high price to do the effects because he wasn’t sure he should be doing this film (it was originally titled THE GHOUL FROM OUTER SPACE) after working on bigger budgeted films like KING KONG (1976) – but his quote was accepted so he made the film. Result!

Melting man keeps on melting
His flesh keeps on liquifying!

If you are tolerant of a meandering storyline (probably made worse due to post-production reshoots), you will find a bunch of scenes to enjoy, such as the moment one of the melting man’s severed, radioactive ears is found hanging in a bush and the final scene, where the titular tragic character liquifies into a messy, bloody puddle on the floor that gets swept into a garbage can by an oblivious janitor!

gloppy-faced melting man
Gloppy goodness
Film poster
The first new horror creature!
The melting man loses an arm
He’s had a limb cut off but he’s not harmless!
He keeps melting
He just can’t stop melting…
Watch out!
Watch out!

Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)

One of my favourite monsters!
At one point the creature is captured, at least for a while...
At one point the creature is captured, at least for a while…
Lanscape format poster

An expedition heads into the Amazon jungle after the discovery of a skeletal fossil hand that seems to be an example of a missing link between sea and land creatures…

The Creature's claw
The webbed claw!

The expedition team, aboard the steamer Rita, speculate that the rest of the fossil skeleton could be located downriver, so they sail along a tributary that leads them to a lagoon…

…the Black Lagoon!

Once they are anchored in this mysterious stretch of water the team go diving and finally realise there is a living, breathing prehistoric, amphibious, humanoid Creature lurking nearby. And now the fun really starts!

The Creature on land
The Creature comin’ at ya!

Director Jack Arnold’s creature feature has lots of poking-at-the-lens moments that reflect the fact the film was shot in 3D (I once saw a 3D print of the film at a screening at my college and there were lots of shots of spearguns and claws looming at the screen!)

A claw reaches into a tent
The gill-man’s claw reaches into a tent… in 3D!

The story is pretty straightforward: scientists go hunting for missing link fossils in the Black Lagoon, the Creature attacks, they capture it, the gill-man escapes and tries to prevent them from leaving by blocking their escape with branches, the heroine gets abducted by the Creature, the rest of the team go to the rescue, etc. The very linear plot is fine, though, because it provides the foundation for a production that gels nicely and is endlessly enjoyable.

Julie Andrews & the Creature
Julia Adams screams!

To begin with, the film is great to look at: the underwater photography is really well done, the gorgeous Julia Adams is, well, gorgeous, and the gill-man is a brilliant monster suit design.

The gill-man rises from the waters
Gill-man alert!

The way the Creature ‘gulps’ at the air when it is on land is impressive: it looks like a gasping fish, which is such a cool touch for a movie from this period. The ‘underwater ballet’ sequence, where the Creature shadows Julia Adams as she swims in the lagoon, is rightly considered a standout moment and is unlike pretty much anything else seen in similar 50s creature features.

The creature shadows the heroine
The superb underwater swimming scene

The score is very bombastic which, added to the 3D-inspired photography, makes the film quite an in-your-face experience. Richard Carlson is a dependable leading man and Richard Denning, as Dr. Mark Williams, is a more interesting character, who vacillates between giving up the search early on when nothing is discovered to becoming overly obsessed with capturing or killing the Creature.

The Creature swims in the lagoon
The Creature in motion

The Creature is one of my all-time favourite screen monsters and it was played by Ben Chapman on land and by Ricou Browning for the underwater shots. It really is an amazing man-in-suit creation.

Ben Chapman
Ben Chapman
Ricou Browning
Ricou Browning

There’s been a lot of recent interest shown in the origin of the design of the gill-man, with much being made of the fact that Milicent Patrick designed the approved Creature look, but her role was then downplayed by lead makeup artist Bud Westmore. This is a shame, though it’s great that Milicent is receiving her due now, thanks to the book ‘The Lady From the Black Lagoon’.

Milicent Patrick
Milicent Patrick

The gill-man went on to appear in two sequels, REVENGE OF THE CREATURE (1955) and THE CREATURE WALKS AMONG US (1956), its influence has extended to the likes of Guillermo del Toro’s Oscar-winning homage THE SHAPE OF WATER (2017) and it really deserves its place in the line-up of classic Universal monsters.

Classic Universal monsters
Classic Universal monster line-up!
Pressbook cover
Pressbook cover
Pressbook inner page
Webbed claw in lobby!
The Creature looms...
The Creature looms…
German poster
Swedish poster
Belgian poster
Belgian poster
Italian poster

Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor

The two-headed giant
Watch out for the two-headed giant!

Three Technicolor Popeye two-reelers (Popeye Color Specials) came out in the thirties, with POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR (1936) being the one that’s full of monsters and creatures.

Giant snake monster
Giant snake monster!

In this 16 minute story Sindbad the Sailor (Bluto) lives in a castle on an island full of chained creatures, including lions, vultures, reptiles, apes, dragons and even a two-headed giant. He also has a pet roc that he sends to kidnap Olive Oyl and sink Popeye’s boat, which is sailing past the isle. Popeye gets to fight the roc (which he serves up like a big roast chicken), the giant and, with the help of his spinach, he finally has a brawl with Sindbad.

The roc!

The story is mainly told in song, with Sindbad proclaiming himself to be the greatest sailor and a most remarkable, extraordinary fellow. (He even namechecks King Kong!) The characterisations are straightforward and fun, with anarchic, rubbery, Fleischer-style animation that is loose and free, with no effort to mimic reality. This short also showcases some impressive scenes using the Fleischer Studio’s ‘setback process’.
Here’s a little background info on the ‘setback’ rig: it consisted of a forced-perspective, miniature set mounted on a turntable. This served as the background to the cel art that was held in a vertical glass plate. The turntable would be rotated incrementally behind the cels, creating the effect of a ‘tracking shot’, with the 2D animated character, in a side-view walk cycle, traversing a quite realistic-looking 3D environment.

The ‘setback process’ in action
The roc takes off!

Interestingly, Ray Harryhausen credited POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINDBAD THE SAILOR as an inspiration for his movie THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958). Ray’s movie featured a dragon and a roc – and a sequence was planned set in a valley of serpents, but this wasn’t shot. In the Popeye cartoon, however, Sindbad sings about going into a Valley of Serpents and we see him make two big, green snakes faint simply by giving them a ‘dirty look’.

Sindbad and two serpents
Sindbad gives the serpents a dirty look
Popeye serves up the roc!
Popeye serves up the roc!

The short has a creepy (at least for modern audiences) running gag featuring Wimpy chasing after a yellow duck with a meat grinder, presumably wanting to grind it up alive to make a hamburger!

Wimpy wants the duck
Watch out, duck!

This Popeye short was deemed culturally significant by the United States Library of Congress and was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.

So many critters!
Lots of creatures!
A dragon!
Just some of the creatures on Sindbad’s island!

Night of the Demon (1957)

The demon
I love this demon!

Also known as CURSE OF THE DEMON in America, this British horror movie is an adaptation of the 1911 M.R. James story ‘Casting the Runes’. Its plot focuses on Dr. John Holden (Dana Andrews) travelling from the USA to England to meet with colleagues and investigate a black magic cult that is linked to the death of Professor Harrington (who is shown being killed by a demon at the very beginning of the film).

The UK poster
UK poster

As the story unfolds Holden is approached by suspected cult leader Dr. Julian Karswell (Niall MacGinnis) in the library at the British Museum, where the well-mannered cultist offers to show Holden a rare book kept at his mansion. Holden does go to Karswell’s home, accompanied by Joanna (Peggy Cummins), Professor Harrington’s niece, where they see Karswell entertaining the local children dressed as a clown. After a strong storm ruins the party, Karswell says that he had actually created the wind himself with a spell. Holden remains sceptical, even when Karswell tells him that he will die in a few days time.

Karswell plays the clown
Karswell plays the clown

Some people (including the director) think that the demon should not have been shown at the start of the movie (or anywhere else) because this gives the game away that there actually is a demonic monster doing the killings. I don’t agree: because we viewers have SEEN the creature in the first reel murdering Harrington, we know that Dana Andrews’ self-assured, I-know-best, skeptical hero IS in trouble!

US poster
US poster
Smokin'!
Smokin’!

As events become harder to explain away in a scientific manner, Holden must finally admit that supernatural forces are at work, and he realises that he must find a way to return a rune-covered parchment to Karswell before the giant demon comes calling…

Dan Andrews is chased through the woods
The chase is on…

I really, really like this movie. It is well written by Charles Bennett and directed wonderfully by Jacques (CAT PEOPLE, I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE) Tourneur, who creates a movie permeated with a moody, spooky atmosphere. He handles the escalation of events intelligently, carefully ramping up the chills, building the sense of approaching doom slowly and effectively.

A major asset of this movie is Niall MacGinnis, who is especially memorable as the occultist Karswell. He adds immeasurably to the quality of the film with his multifaceted turn: he is sometimes playful, sometimes courteous, sometimes threatening and finally he is just fear-filled after he realises the runes have been returned to him.

Niall MacGinnis is amazing as Karswell

Despite the artistic differences (between the film’s producer and the director & writer) concerning whether or not to actually show the demon onscreen, I think this supernatural creature is the icing on the cake for this perfect horror picture. There’s a medieval feel to the massive demon’s horned, pointy-eared design, and its appearances are made that bit more haunting thanks to the use of swirling, glowing smoke and creepy music & sound effects as the hell-creature takes form in our world. I love the look of its scowling face!

The demon reaches out
The demon reaches out…

NIGHT OF THE DEMON is a perfectly formed tale of the occult, effectively highlighting the conflict between ancient superstition and modern day scientific rationality in a brisk, articulate manner.

This is one of my favourite movies: I can re-watch it and know I will enjoy it just as much this time as I have done previously… and, of course, it boasts a huge, winged, grimacing, furry demon!

The demon amongst the trees
It’s in the trees! It’s coming!

Okay, there have always been conflicting claims about different running times of the UK and US versions of this film.
These, I believe, are the facts (based on information/versions contained in Indicator’s 2-disc Blu-ray edition): there was a 96 minute UK pre-release version and the US re-issue, which was the same length but went out under the American title CURSE OF THE DEMON. There were then the original UK and US theatrical cuts, both of which had running times of 82 minutes.

Is it an oncoming train... or oncoming demon?
Is it an oncoming train… or oncoming demon?
Karswell gets his comeuppance...
Karswell gets his comeuppance…

The Ritual (2017)

God-monster!
God-monster!
Poster
Don’t enter the forest, guys…

Based on Adam Nevill’s immersive, creepy 2011 novel, this movie tells the story of a group of male friends, including guilt-ridden Luke (played by Rafe Spall), hiking across the Swedish countryside as a tribute to their dead friend Rob.

When one of the group sprains his knee, the fateful decision is made to take a shortcut through a forest, where they stumble upon runes carved in trees, a gutted deer and finally a cabin, which they sleep in to avoid the rain. From now on things get ever-creepier, after a statue of a headless human body, made from twigs and antlers, is discovered in one of the cabin’s rooms…

THe friends together
Remembering Rob
The statue
The weird headless twig statue

This is a very satisfying horror tale with a well-sustained atmosphere, shot impressively on location in a seemingly endless forest. Rafe Spall’s character has some well-handled flashbacks/nightmares of the night Rob was murdered in a bungled store robbery and the inference is that these ongoing nightmares aren’t solely due to Luke’s guilt over not helping Rob, but also because something has got into his head and is messing with his emotions. Luke isn’t alone in this, as his buddies are also suffering from bad dreams, with one of them (Arsher Ali) seemingly praying to the twig statue whilst asleep.

The creature grabs Luke
Just what the hell is this?

As the friends trudge onwards through the forest, they soon realise they are being stalked by a creature, something massive enough to push aside trees as it passes through them. This is where THE RITUAL really stands out, creating a very intriguing beast referred to as a Jötunn, a god-creature from Norse legend: a bastard-offspring of Loki.

The Jötunn
The Jötunn comes calling…

We find this out after the two surviving friends enter a forest village inhabited by people who pray and sacrifice to this creature in return for a kind of immortality. This everlasting life is shown to be quite a ghastly fate when Luke goes into an attic and finds a large group of withered ‘corpses’ that are actually still alive, imbued with a horrible version of eternal life through their worship of the Jötunn.

The Jötunn in all its glory
Such an amazing critter!

As the finale kicks-in we are shown the Jötunn in all its glory: a huge elk-monster with a very weird head that sports human arms, small glowing eyes and antlers. This beast is very novel-looking and it helps make a good horror movie even more special.

Behind the scenes…
Here’s the maquette of the beast, based on concept designs by Keith Thompson. The model stands 2 feet tall and was used as photogrammetry reference for the VFX department for details and colour.

The maquette
The maquette for the creature

Here are behind the scenes shots of dummies used for the ‘congregation’ (the living dead ‘corpses’ seen in the attic). Two of these dummies had components for puppeteering. There were also eight background makeups on actors used to complete the congregation group. Head sculptures were by Clint Ziccoli, based on designs by Keith Thompson, and animatronics & fabrication by Mark Villalobos.

corpse dummies
corpse dummy
Dummies used for the ‘congregation’
Ritual gif
What a creature!

About the novel…

One of the cover designs used for the novel
One of the cover designs used for the novel

Adam Nevill’s original novel is different in places, compared to the movie plot, though the central story is the same: the characters go on a trekking holiday through a Scandinavian forest, though it is not undertaken as a tribute to a murdered friend, which is the trigger for the trip in the movie.

The main character in the book (played by Rafe Spall in the film) isn’t wracked with guilt, as in the movie, but is someone who struggles with a quick-fire temper and feelings of bitterness, caused by his perceived lack of success with jobs and relationships compared to his better off friends.

The creature in the novel is very different, and is effective in its own way, racing through the trees like some long, black, hard-to-see beast that can easily merge into the background foliage.

The people living in the forest that the protagonists encounter are also quite different compared to those portrayed in the film. These odd denizens in the novel are pretty interesting characters, including some young, black metal-loving dudes and a hoofed old lady, though I think the forgotten community of Norse villagers seen in the movie are equally as compelling .

Where the book really scores highly, however, is in its ability to really place the reader in the midst of an almost impenetrable, ancient forest, where each step becomes a struggle to push onwards past roots, sharp twigs and closely-packed tree trunks. You really feel like you are stuck in that dank, dark place with the characters. Great stuff.

King Kong vs Godzilla (1962) or Godzilla vs Kong (2021)… which is your favourite?

The two posters

KING KONG VS GODZILLA (1962) is a Toho critter classic featuring a great Godzilla suit and a not so great Kong suit. This movie is retro fun with suitmation & scale model sets. It was a big money maker at the time!
GODZILLA VS KONG (2021) is the new MonsterVerse epic that boasts a final neon-lit battle of the CGI god-beasts in Hong Kong. The most successful release of the lockdown period!
Enter the poll below to let Monster Zone know if you’re a fan of the Toho movie or the Legendary release… or maybe you’re a fan of both?

Feed the Gods (2014)

Bigfoot or Wild Man?

Two bickering brothers decide to trace their biological parents, leading them to a forgotten, backwoods town. Accompanied by the younger brother’s girlfriend (Emily Tennant), they eventually discover that the townsfolk sacrifice people to the local bigfoot creatures via a pact, which allows some of the locals to leave the town if they want to.

The protagonists
The trip begins!

Tyler Johnston plays the younger, sensible, lawyer brother Kris and Shawn (DIARY OF THE DEAD) Roberts plays Will, the older slacker brother who is a wannabe filmmaker and looks like he works out a lot. These two bicker throughout the film, with Kris being the more snarky of the two and Will coming across as impulsive but easy going. This constant sniping works some of the time but can get a bit much.

Poster
Nice poster

I think the premise of this movie, about the secret sacrifice to the local wild man ‘gods’, is great – plus there are interesting moments, such as when Will stumbles upon the skull of a creature in a cave.

A creature's skull
The skull

I enjoyed the movie till the start of the third act, when the plot should really have shifted gears, giving us more interactions & confrontations between the protagonists and the mysterious wild man/bigfoot creatures. This, unfortunately, doesn’t happen.

Film poster
He’s a legend. You’re history

Instead of this, the plot just keeps its focus on the leads and the local townsfolk who are part of the sacrificing-outsiders-to-the-bigfoot pact.

 up of creature
The creature's face
The creature is always shown in close up

Another element of the story that gets ridiculous is the way Will keeps accidentally killing people. He does this not just the one time, not twice, not three times… but four times! It just gets silly how he keeps inadvertently offing people, including the time he manages to kill one villain by pushing the guy onto a bear trap that is hanging on the wall, primed to snap shut! Now that’s what I call a dangerous living room decoration!

Snap!

The plot remains bogged down with the townsfolk planning the sacrifices, capturing the protagonists, etc, rather than showing the main characters encountering the creatures – and, when a bigfoot/wild man does appear near the very end of the film, the makeup is not anything special.

Roaring bigfoot
Angry bigfoot!

Such a shame, really, as the film did show a lot of promise in its premise.

Poster
The bigfoot looks a bit like the Grinch here!

The Reptile (1966)

Don't get bitten!
Don’t get bitten!
The Reptile poster

Harry Spalding (Ray Barrett) moves into his late brother’s cottage in a village in Cornwall with his new wife Valerie (Jennifer Daniel). The village’s inhabitants are all on edge due to the odd deaths that are plaguing the place and only the local pub owner (Michael Ripper) is friendly to the newly arrived couple.

Hammer regular Michael Ripper!

The nearest place to the Spalding’s cottage is Well House, which is owned by Dr. Franklyn (Noel Willman), who lives there with his daughter Anna (Jacqueline Pearce) and a moody Malay servant. As the deaths continue to occur the horrific truth is eventually revealed, involving curses and bodily transformation.

Anna entertains the guests
Anna entertains the guests

THE REPTILE was shot back to back with THE PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES by John Gilling, shares some of that film’s sets, and several actors appear in both of the films (Ripper & Pearce). It was released on a double bill with RASPUTIN THE MAD MONK.

Double bill poster
UK quad poster

Jacqueline Pearce is affecting as the tragic daughter in this Hammer horror tale about a woman cursed by a cult to become a murderous snake creature – and the look of the reptile woman that Pearce turns into is quite striking, I think, despite the low-tech techniques used to bring her to life. Roy Ashton created the makeup, which entirely covers Pearce’s head, and only the unblinking eyes detract somewhat from an otherwise memorable creation.

The reptile attacks
The reptile attacks!

Ashton’s treatment of the faces of all the victims bitten by the creature involves turning them green/black and adding foam that dribbles from their mouths. One of these unfortunates is Mad Peter, played by John (DAD’S ARMY) Laurie.

Mad Peter dying
He’s doomed!

Hammer regular Michael Ripper is likeable in his role as the helpful local publican and Noel (KISS OF THE VAMPIRE) Willman plays Dr. Franklyn, who tries to keep his daughter’s condition secret, as someone who is equal parts sinister and guilt-ridden. There’s an effective moment when Franklyn, full of revulsion and impotence, lashes out at his daughter’s shed snakeskin lying on her bed.

The father is attacked
The father eventually becomes a victim of his cursed daughter…

If there’s a problem with THE REPTILE it’s the fact the film treats its story as something of a mystery, despite the poster showing us what is causing all the deaths, resulting in the reptile woman attack scenes feeling a little too rushed in the latter parts of the movie.

The Reptile face-on
Were-snake-woman!

But, hey, this is a Hammer film about a were-snake-woman and I will always be fond of it!

Italian poster
Italian poster
French poster
French poster
She's fangtastic!
She’s fangtastic!

Dracula A.D. 1972

Dracula holds out his hand
Respect the ring!
Dracula AD 1972 poster

In 1872 Count Dracula (Christopher Lee) battles Van Helsing (Peter Cushing) atop a runaway coach in London’s Hyde Park. Dracula gets impaled on a broken wheel spoke, causing him to disintegrate. Van Helsing also dies… just as a youthful Dracula acolyte (Christopher Neame) arrives on the scene and collects the powdery remains of Dracula. He hides the evil dust in a church graveyard where Van Helsing has just been buried, then the camera points up at the sky… and a jet plane flies overhead!

Dracula AD 1972 titles
A jet plane! In a Hammer Dracula film?!
Dracula is impaled!
Dracula gets spoked!

This entry in Hammer’s Dracula series is very enjoyable!

This was the first of Hammer’s Dracula series to take place in a contemporary setting, with Dracula being brought back to life in modern London by an acolyte called Johnny Alucard (also played by Neame). Dracula then preys on a group of young ‘hip’ partygoers, one of whom is actually a descendant of his arch enemy… Van Helsing.

Johnny Alucard
Johnny Alucard! Wait… what if you spell that backwards?

DRACULA A.D. 1972 (1972) was the sixth Hammer film to star Christopher Lee as Dracula, with Peter Cushing returning to play Van Helsing: the last time he’d played the part was in THE BRIDES OF DRACULA (1960), which hadn’t featured Lee. So this film was also the first to star both Lee and Cushing in their respective roles since DRACULA (aka HORROR OF DRACULA) in 1958.

Caroline Munro
Caroline Munro’s character doesn’t find the ceremony that funny anymore

This film is looked down upon by many Hammer fans and critics, and I am aware of its shortcomings. Dracula never strays from the derelict deconsecrated church and the ‘swinging London’ trappings seemed dated even at the time of the film’s release (as filmmaker Brett Piper pointed out to me a while back: the “kids” are some old men’s idea of “the younger generation”). It’s also hard not to smile at the scene where Cushing needs to use a pen and paper to work out that ‘Alucard’ is ‘Dracula’ spelled backwards!

Lobby card
Groovy!

But I think the modern day setting does add to the story: just how many more period-set Hammer Dracula stories could have been made? The ‘hippy’ protagonists are far more interesting than the rather bland leads in the previous couple of Dracula outings, Christopher Lee looks great as the Count and Cushing is good, as always, playing a descendant of Van Helsing. Christopher Neame is memorable as smarmy acolyte Johnny Alucard, who has a great fight with Van Helsing, Caroline Munro & Stephanie Beacham supply the Hammer glamour and Michael Coles provides solid support as Inspector Murray.

Johnny Alucard meets his end in the bath!
Bath time for Johnny
Michael Coles would go on to play Inspector Murray again in the next Hammer Dracula movie
Stephanie Beacham's character would also return in the next film, but this time played by Joanna Lumley
Stephanie Beacham’s character would also return in the next film, but this time played by Joanna Lumley

There’s an enjoyable final showdown between Lee and Cushing, where the contemporary score (guitars, etc) contributes to the sequence as Van Helsing combats the Count in the church ruin with a silver knife, holy water and a stake-filled pit.

Dracula is in trouble!
Van Helsing vs Dracula
Fight!

Mike Vickers’ great soundtrack has a blaxploitation vibe to it, really adding to the viewing pleasure of this film, which has been re-evaluated by the likes of Kim Newman, who chose DRACULA A.D. 1972 as one of his top 10 favourite vampire movies. Newman also featured a character called Johnny Alucard in his fantastic ANNO DRACULA series of novels.
Author and actor Mark Gatiss is a fan too, setting the third episode of his BBC/Netflix DRACULA (2020) miniseries in modern times. The episode sees the descendent of Van Helsing lying in a hospital bed, and the number of her ward is… AD | 072.

Dracula AD 1972 poster
The place: Kings Road, Chelsea

Give the movie another viewing, I’m sure you’ll dig it, man!

Dracula decays
Dracula is defeated once more… until the next time

Hammer pre-production flyer, illustrated by Tom Chantrell, for Dracula Chelsea '73", which became Dracula AD 1972
Hammer pre-production flyer, illustrated by Tom Chantrell, for Dracula Chelsea ’73”, which became Dracula AD 1972

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