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Angharad Rees as Anna. |
After movies featuring mummies, vampires, Frankenstein, and generic psychos, it was inevitable that Hammer Films would get around to Jack the Ripper. However,
Hands of the Ripper (1971) is a bit of a surprise: a somber, well-acted tale focusing on the famous murderer's troubled daughter.
In the prologue, a young girl watches her father--the Ripper--stab her mother to death. Years later, Anna (Angharad Rees) has grown into a young woman who works for Mrs. Golding, a fake medium. After one of her seances, Mrs. Golding accepts money from a gentleman who wants to spend the night with Anna. When Anna resists the man's advances, Mrs. Golding intercedes, but the ensuing argument triggers Anna's horrid memories of her mother's murder. She grabs a poker and kills Mrs. Golding.
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Eric Porter as Dr. Pritchard. |
Dr. John Pritchard (Eric Porter), who suspects that Anna is the murderer, volunteers to care for the girl. In the beginning, Pritchard's interest in Anna is purely academic, as he wants to "cure" her. But, as their relationship progresses, he develops genuine feelings for the young woman that evolve from paternal to perhaps something more. There's only one problem: Anna can no longer control her murderous impulses.
For the lead roles, Hammer cast two fine performers: Eric Porter, who won acclaim as Soames in the television drama
The Forsyte Saga, and Angharrad Rees, the Welsh actress who would charm millions of viewers in the TV version of
Poldark. The duo take what could have been a lurid film and bring out the pathos in it.
Indeed, the film's first half is an engrossing Victorian drama that barely resembles a Hammer film. Alas, that gives way to a mounting number of blood-splattered corpses as the story reaches its inevitable downbeat conclusion. Still, if you can look past the violent murders,
Hands of the Ripper is worthwhile viewing thanks to its strong performances and production values.
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Peter Cushing as Lorrimer Van Helsing. |
At the other end of the spectrum,
The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973) is an inferior effort that wastes the talents of Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. It's a direct sequel to
Dracula A.D. 1972 and continues the contemporary setting.
The opening scenes generate some interest by promising an
Avengers-like plot--and even casting future
New Avengers star Joanna Lumley as Van Helsing's granddaughter. However, the story falls apart when Van Helsing learns that Dracula wants to release a new super strain of the Bubonic plague on the world. Van Helsing offers an explanation of why Dracula would want to do this (no plot spoiler here!) and while it's novel, it just doesn't make sense.
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A red-haired Joanna Lumley. |
It's a shame that screenwriter Don Houghton didn't streamline the story and just focus on Dracula as a wealthy recluse (think Howard Hughes) who recruits influential world leaders to do his bidding in return for eternal life.
That might have been a pretty good contemporary vampire film. Also, I feel obligated to mention that
Satanic Rites features the most boring destruction of Dracula on celluloid!
The Satanic Rites of Dracula wasn't released in the U.S. until 1978. It was re-edited and re-titled as
Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride. Fortunately, it wasn't the end of Hammer's
Dracula saga. The studio produced one last film featuring the Count: the goofy--but highly entertaining--mash-up of vampires and kung fu known as
The Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires (1974).