The Gorgon (1964)
Director:
Terence Fisher
Starring: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing
Run Time: 83 mins
Certificate: 15
Plot Outline: Professor Jules Heitz travels to the
remote Eastern European village of Vandorf when one of his sons is accused
of murder before taking his own life. However he encounters hostility from
the locals and suspects that they are hiding something from him. Despite
threats of violence, Heitz elects to stay in Vandorf to find out the truth.
During the dead of night, the calls of a siren lure him to the ruins of the
castle where he has a fatal encounter with Magera, a snake-haired gorgon
from Greek mythology who could turn a man to stone with her gaze. In his
last hours, he manages to send a letter to his surviving son, Paul, who
promptly arrives in Vandorf to be greeted by the same hostility and violence
as his father. Paul also has an encounter with Magera, although he is lucky
enough to escape. Realising he needs help to combat this creature, he sends
for his mentor and together the two men seek to break through the wall of
silence from the villagers and expose the gorgon once and for all.
The Review: Hammer had started to run out of ideas after their
initial boom of bringing the old Universal classics into glorious colour.
Once they'd worked their magic on Frankenstein, Dracula and the Mummy, they
had to come up with new fiends for their actors to battle. Numerous
offerings such as The Reptile and The Plague of the Zombies
sprung up in the years following and here we have one of their first
attempts to try the Hammer magic onto something other than a Universal
reworking. The Gorgon bares all of the hallmarks of the Hammer series
but there's something missing here which is evident from the get go.
The first half of the film works the best simply because there's not as many
characters running around, the story has a set direction and it's drenched
in atmosphere for the first few scenes around the ruins of the castle. Like
many a Hammer film, there's an otherworldly presence lurking around in the
night scenes. You're half-expecting the gorgon to pop out at any time whilst
her victims stumble aimlessly around the castle. Of course being a low
budget film, you're not going to see this creature until the very end.
Thankfully the film plays upon this and the odd glimpse you do get of
the gorgon is via silhouette or even a reflection in a fountain. It even
messes with the gorgon mythology too so the victims don't immediately turn
to stone. A slow and painful process of fossilisation sounds nasty and looks
like it as a few of the characters here don't die straight away, adding a
bit of drama to their final moments. It's when the film slowly starts to
unravel where the problems begin. From a decent period flick, the film turns
into more of a murder mystery with the main characters trying to work out
who Magera is. Well stupidly enough, only one female character is actually
given any screen time so it won't take a rocket scientist to work out who it
is from the start. And, because you know straight away who the gorgon is,
it's actually pretty dull watching the characters run around trying to work
it out for themselves. You'll find yourself screaming at the TV the name of
the character in the hope that someone hears! After the opening intrigue,
the film gets bogged down with dialogue a little too much. When you've just
busted a nut to create a decent set-up, the last thing you need to do is
blow it all away like they do here. Thankfully the finale is a perfectly
tense and poignant scene where the gorgon is confronted in the castle once
and for all.
Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing star together here and it's refreshing to
see them swapping their usual roles. Cushing gets to play the villain (well
not so much a villain but a misguided lover) whilst Lee gets to save the day
as the hero (even though his character is brash and obnoxious). It's not
their best work together but you're never going to get sloppy phone-in
performances from either of them - consummate professionals! There's good
support from a variety of other actors including Patrick Troughton and
Barbara Shelley. I love Hammer films simply for this reason. They had a
great pool of talent from which to assemble their supporting cast and they
all do reliable, sometimes superb jobs.
Final Verdict: The Gorgon is a rather talkative and patchy
Hammer film which has it's good moments (namely the scenes in and around the
castle) but they are too few and far between to make it a classic. Although
if you're like me, you'll only watch it to see Peter Cushing and Christopher
Lee star together. Even though their screen time together is limited, it's
still worth it - kind of like a horror version of Heat where Pacino
and DeNiro faced off for a few minutes!
Rating: