Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Vampire Circus (1972)


A village in Nineteenth Century Europe is at first relieved when a circus breaks through the quarantine to take the local's minds off the plague. But their troubles are only beginning as children begin to disappear and the legacy of a long-ago massacre is brought to light.  Written by David Carroll 

When thoughts come to mind of Hammer classic horror films, what usually pops up is the Dracula or Frankenstein series.  Lost in the shuffle is this gem of a film Vampire Circus. Hammer creates a stylish period piece here with a modest budget and an above average story.  It's erotic, chilling, grotesque and most of all, bloody. It's one of the last great horror films Hammer created.

Count Mitterhaus
The film starts off showing us how the townsfolk have finally had enough of their children disappearing and storm the castle of Count Mitterhaus.  They manage to stake the evil count and with his dying breath curses the town and promises to bring death to them all.  Jump forward 15 years and the plague has struck the town and they are cut off from the rest of the world. Gunmen circle the outskirts of town and keep anyone from entering or leaving so the plague can be contained. Somehow a traveling circus manages to get access and their purpose of arriving is not only to entertain the sick.  They are instead a group of vampires intent on resurrecting Count Mitterhaus and dealing revenge.

The blood flows freely in Vampire Circus
 This film holds up even to today's modern viewer.  Even though there is lots of gore, violence and nudity, the film creates a surreal mood and atmosphere with the circus's creepy characters.  The clown midget stands out as he leads some towns people on the way out of town, only to have them ripped to shreds by the circus panther.  His evil laughter and delight over the carnage actually sent a little chill up my spine. Anthony Higgins steals the show with his performance as the shape shifting vampire even though all the villains do an excellent job of portraying menace.  David 'Darth Vader' Prowse makes an appearance here as the circus strongman. He would later show up in more Hammer horror as the monster in "Frankenstein And The Monster From Hell".

Evil lurks at the Circus.
The film was directed by Robert Young and was his directorial debut. The film was written by Judson Kinberg and it would certainly fall under the term "sexploitation film".  It has has hints of pedophilia, bestiality and incest all wrapped up in one package. It offers an unusual twist that most vampire films don't have.  If you haven't seen this film, and few have, then head to Amazon and get the Blu-ray copy.  Fans of vampire films or horror films in general will be entertained and delighted on what they find here.

Kevin Booker

Trivia:
According to various books on Hammer films, this film went over schedule and some key scenes were never filmed. Ironically Rank called it Hammer's best film in a decade.

Shot in six weeks.

Three of the cast – Laurence Payne, Adrienne Corri and Lalla Ward – would be reunited in the 1980 season of the British sci-fi/fantasy series Doctor Who in the serial The Leisure Hive. The film also heralded the screen debut of Lynne Frederick, who would later marry comic Peter Sellers.

AllMovie called the film "one of the studio's more stylish and intelligent projects". PopMatters also called it "one of the company's last great classics", writing, "erotic, grotesque, chilling, bloody, suspenseful and loaded with doom and gloom atmosphere, this is the kind of experiment in terror that reinvigorates your love of the scary movie artform."



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