Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974)
Director:
Brian Clemens
Starring: Horst Janson, John Carson
Run Time: 91 mins
Certificate: 15
Plot Outline: Expert swordsman Kronos and his
hunchback assistant travel from village to village hunting vampires. Their
search leads them to a village where the young girls are being drained of
their youth. Suspicion immediately falls upon the newcomers but Kronos'
quest leads him to the local aristocrats, the Durwards.
The Review: Trying to revive their flagging
vampire formula in the 70s, Hammer turned to all manner of weird stories.
Ditching the period settings that had served them so well but ultimately
grown stale and old-fashioned, they tried transplanting Dracula into modern day England,
looked at lesbian vampires and even mixed it up a bit with the kung fu
genre, all with varying degrees of success both commercially and critically.
In an attempt to liven up their period pieces, they opted to go for broke.
Hammer combined
their traditional vampire formula with the old swashbucklers to give us
Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter, what was intended to be the first of a
series of films featuring the mysterious hunter. Unfortunately the film bombed due to poor distribution and
all plans for a series were cancelled which is a shame because despite it's
flaws, Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter is actually an entertaining
film.
One of the first things
you'll notice through watching is how the film tweaks around and plays with
the vampire lore. These fanged-fatales are now able to appear in mirrors.
Some are not affected by the sight of a crucifix. The film plays with the
notion that there are more than one type of vampire and each is susceptible
to different things. So what works on one will not work on another. This
leads to the film's most unintentionally funny scene in which Kronos and his
assistant have a vampire tied up to a chair and attempt to kill him using
their various methods of dispatch until they find one that finally finishes
him off. Also, the vampires no longer drain victims of their blood but of
their youth. Even the
main character of the vampire hunter makes a stark change of direction for
Hammer as their previous hunters had all been stuffy old men, full to the
brim of knowledge and facts. They were men of words and wisdom, not of
action and violence. Kronos is the opposite - he's like a prototype Blade,
despatching vampires without the scientific background that the likes of Van
Helsing had. In fact many of his gizmos and inventions that he uses to fight
vampires could well have inspired Blade in later years. He carries with him
a mirrored visor to reflect the hypnotic gaze of vampires and his sword
looks like a giant crucifix. Not only that but in attempt to differentiate
him from the "old men" hunters of the past, this guy smokes herbal remedies
(ahem) and is quite happy to receive "favours" from damsels he rescues. He's
not quite an anti-hero but more of a rebellious young man, someone that the
youth of the time would have responded to and associated with.
It's clear why Horst Jason
was chosen for the role. He's a big, athletic and handsome guy totally
suited to the role of an action hero and he does all of his own stunts and
sword fighting. But he's extremely wooden and when he's not sword fighting,
he's struggling with the dialogue and his accent. Maybe this works in his
favour though as he's somewhat aloof and enigmatic - definitely not your
common villager from down the street. He's ably supported by a fine
supporting cast including John Gater as his hunchback assistant (who
provides the token scientific jargon and background on vampire lore) and
Caroline Munro who despite being the damsel-in-distress early on, manages to
rise above her role as token love interest and adds more than a gorgeous
figure to the film. I'd safely say that Munro was one of the hottest things
to come out of the 70s and looks awesome in all of her films at this time.
Final Verdict: Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter
is
one of Hammer's most endearing and underrated films, simply for the fact
that it seems way ahead of it's time with it's ingenious re-writing of
vampire legend and light-hearted tone. Unfortunately it's more likely to be
remembered as the film that brought the downfall of the once invincible
studio.
Rating: