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Scars of Dracula
(1970)
Plot
After being caught in bed with the burgomaster's daughter,
Paul Carlson jumps into a nearby coach and makes a hasty escape. He winds up at
Castle Dracula where he becomes Dracula's latest victim. His brother, Simon, and
girlfriend find out that he's missing and set about trying to track down his
last whereabouts. This leads to an eventual confrontation with Dracula.
Review
Yeah, it's pretty thin on the ground for story but I guess it
beats Dracula setting out for revenge again. The sixth of the Hammer Dracula
films, Scars of Dracula is often heralded as the 'point of no return' for
the series in which the films got really bad after this. That's being a bit
harsh on The Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires, a hugely enjoyable
kung-fu horror romp not to be taken too seriously. But the next two sequels, in
which the story was transported into the then-current time period, are shambolic. However in my opinion, the series really lost it's
way after Dracula, Prince of Darkness and the following sequels simply
rehashed the same sort of story with lesser results and ever-diminishing
budgets. This is clear with Scars of Dracula, a film in which it's lack
of budget works to destroy any sort of suspense or dread better than any
shocking script could do.
I bleated in my reviews for the
previous couple of sequels that the first half of them were all about building up to a
pivotal resurrection scene halfway through when Dracula would burst back onto
the screen. Then the last half of the film would involve characters trying to
kill him again. But you won't get that here, at least with the resurrection bit.
Dracula is revived within the first few minutes here and there's no point in
trying to make any sense of it as it involves a cheap bat-on-a-string and a few
drops of blood. Like Freddy Kruger and Jason Voorhees many years later, it's
best not to try and think about the ridiculousness of the situation and just
focus on the fact that the main villain is alive and kicking again. Compared to
the amazing resurrection sequence in Dracula, Prince of Darkness, this
one looks downright feeble. So with Dracula all ready to within the opening act,
the stage is set for us to finally see more Christopher Lee. He gets more screen
time here than the previous few sequels combined and is a lot more like the
character he was portrayed as in the original - coming off as a well-mannered
distinguished gentleman when he needs to and then turning into a snarling,
ravenous beast when he gets the urge. The irony now is that we perhaps see too
much of him and any sense of mystery or aurora of the supernatural just
evaporates. The more you see of him, the less you think of him as Dracula, the
ultimate vampire, and the more you just see him as a run-of-the-mill
bloodsucker.
Scars of Dracula is probably the
bloodiest of all of the Dracula films and the gore quota has been upped
dramatically. Like any horror series, you know the creativity is decline when
there's more blood on show and this is evident here. Dracula doesn't care how he
gets the blood from his victims this time around, even going so far as to stab a
woman in the stomach just to be able to drink her blood. A massacre inside a
church and torture scenes making this one of Hammer's most violent and graphic
films. But when everything else is as routine as it is, the only thing you could
really change is the amount of blood. Like the majority of their output, there's
no such thing as a 'bad' Hammer horror film. It does it's job adequately in
almost every department. It's just that the series never really tried to do
anything new (until the next couple of sequels!) so the vampiric shenanigans all
seem forced.
There's decent support from the likes of Patrick Troughton,
Hammer regular Michael Ripper and the attractive Jenny Hanley but they can only
inject so much energy into proceedings before they are engulfed by the film's
stagnant appearance. The script could really have done with a Van Helsing type
character because without the famous vampire hunter, Dracula always seemed to be
one step higher on the food chain than the rest of the characters (until he was
killed at the end of each film however!)
Verdict
Scars of Dracula is the weakest of the period Dracula
films. It's derivative of it's predecessors, fails to inject any new life into
the tired story and simply goes through the motions very awkwardly. It's not a
bad film by any stretch of the imagination, it's just perfectly demonstrative of
Hammer's later output when they tried and failed to keep interest in their big
franchises. |