Countess Dracula
(1971)
Director:
Peter Sasdy
Starring: Ingrid
Pitt, Nigel Green
Run Time: 93 mins
Certificate: 18
Plot Outline: In medieval Europe, the aging Countess Elisabeth rules
over her kingdom with the help of her lover, Captain Dobi. However one night
she inadvertently discovers that bathing in the blood of young virgins makes
her young again. She gets Dobi to start bringing her virgins with the
promise that she will marry him. However when she reverts back to a younger
age than Dobi, she wants someone of her own age and poses as her own
daughter to fall in love with the young soldier who was to marry her.
The Review: What do you do when a posh man with a fake set of fangs,
a tatty black cape and more make-up than a drag queen convention becomes
boring and unfashionable? Well that was the dilemma facing Hammer at the end
of the 60s when the Dracula series had pretty much run it's course. Well the
answer is a pleasing one - get Ingrid Pitt in the buff on the screen and
pretend she's the new threat facing Eastern European villagers the world
over. Technically not a vampire film, this is based on the infamous story of
Countess Elizabeth Bathory, a rich aristocrat from Hungary who is believed
to have killed around 300 young girls in an attempt to look younger. The
similarities with vampirism are evident enough, the only difference being
that the countess here just murders her victims instead of sucking their
blood.
Admittedly the film is pretty slow and plodding. As with most of Hammer's
films, the film keeps to the same couple of locations and it gets a bit
tiresome after the third visit to the dining area, the servants quarters or
the courtyard. Characters are always prime to a good Hammer flick and here
is no exception.
Ingrid Pitt's Countess Elisabeth is a ruthless,
selfish bitch who never for once thinks of anyone else during the film, be
it her wannabe lover Captain Dobi, her loyal servants and advisors in the
castle or even her own daughter. The way Pitt switches between the role of
the older, fragile Elisabeth and the ravishing temptress is one of the
highlights here. The scene with Ms Pitt giving herself a bloody sponge bath
is one that will certain linger in the mind too and is one of Hammer's more
iconic images of it's "sexing up" of horror. It's actually Nigel Green who steals the show
here as Dobi. He's a man obsessed with love and although you can never
reason for his actions (kidnapping and murder to name a few), he's always
done it for Elisabeth. The way she cruelly brushes him aside in favour of
younger men is pretty harsh on the old fella.
I get the feeling that this film could have done
with the talented touch of Terence Fisher in the director's chair. That's
not to say he's a bad director, he just doesn't seem to get the look and
feel of the film right, especially for a Hammer film. It's got a great set
(a leftover from a Universal film I believe) which expands on the usual
Hammer vision but despite the bigger set, the film itself seems content to
keep itself confined. Sasdy seems to be holding a lot back. Whether it was
the studio, the censors or the script, the film seems to imply a lot
more than actually happens. Yes, Elisabeth does kill a few virgins but
there's not a great deal of scope in the whole thing. It's all very low key,
something that the film should have tried to expand on. No further proof is
needed than the final third of the film which ends in a damp squib. Fisher's
talent at creating atmosphere out of nothing is sorely lacking here too.
Final Verdict: Countess Dracula is a solid Hammer effort held
back by a lack of depth to the whole thing. It's talky and largely
uneventful but come on, they don't make them like this anymore so what's
stopping you from watching Ms Pitt take a sponge bath?
Rating: