May 25, 2012

Films

The Satanic Rites of Dracula – 1973 | 87 mins | Horror | Colour

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Plot Synopsis

The Satanic Rites of Dracula

Following Dracula A.D. 1972 came Hammer’s modern-dress entry in the Dracula series. The Satanic Rites of Dracula is a science fiction/horror/thriller hybrid lacking in Hammer’s usual Gothic flavour and bursting with new ideas, viewed by some as a cross between Dracula and The Avengers; it’s well-paced but suffers from Alan Gibson’s careless direction and cross-cutting. The script, by Doctor Who scribe Don Houghton creates an amusing allegory between capitalism and vampirism. Christopher Lee desired to put the character behind him and his wish was granted, providing him with the most dialogue he ever delivered as Dracula. The serene Peter Cushing produces his customary excellent performance as a descendant of the original Van Helsing. Joanna Lumley takes one of her final ingénue film roles as Helsing’s red-headed grand-daughter before moving into television and finding fame in The New Avengers.

A top-secret government department are investigating a group of esteemed VIPs; General Freeborne, John Porter MP, Lord Carradine, Prof. Julian Keeley and an unknown fifth man, who visit Pelham House, home to the Physic Examination Research Group. When one of their undercover agent’s returns battered, bruised and barely alive and with his dying words gives a hint that the group are meddling in the occult, department heads Peter Torrence (William Franklyn) and Colonel Matthews (Richard Vernon) recruit Scotland Yard’s Inspector Murray (Michael Coles) and occult expert Prof. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing) to investigate the organisation.

As Keeley is a former friend, this is Van Helsing’s first port of call. He finds Keeley a nervous wreck and discovers he has been experimenting with an accelerated new strain of bubonic plague – but before he can reveal who commissioned the experiment, a PERG hitman murders Keeley. Meanwhile, Murray and Torrence visit Pelham House via the front entrance, whilst Van Helsing’s grand-daughter Jessica (Joanna Lumley) creeps in at the rear of the building. They discover a cluster of female vampires in the cellar and are chased from the building by motorbike henchmen.

It transpires that the fifth member of the organisation and financial donor is property tycoon recluse, D.D Denham (Christopher Lee), aka Count Dracula! The St Bartolph’s churchyard where Van Helsing killed Dracula has since been redeveloped and is now home to the Denham Group skyscraper, and when Van Helsing visits he is greeted by the person he expected: Count Dracula. Torrence and Col Matthews are killed by Dracula’s henchman, whilst Van Helsing and Murray are taken prisoner at Pelham House to see the legendary Count destroy the human race with a new strain of bubonic plague and take a new wife: Jessica.

Production Team

Alan Gibson: Director
Lionel Couch: Art Direction
Brian Probyn: Cinematography
Chris Barnes: Film Editing
George Blackler: Makeup Department
Maude Onslow: Makeup Department
Philip Martell: Music Department
John Cacavas: Original Music
Roy Skeggs: Producer
Don Houghton: Script
Claude Hitchcock: Sound
Terry Poulton: Sound

Cast

Christopher Lee: Count Dracula
Lockwood West: General Sir Arthur Freeborne
Patrick Barr: Lord Carradine
Barbara Yu Ling: Chin Yang
Richard Vernon: Col. Mathews
Joanna Lumley: Jessica Van Helsing
Freddie Jones: Prof. Julian Keeley
William Franklyn: Torrence
Michael Coles: Insp. Murray
Peter Cushing: Prof. Lorrimer Van Helsing



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