Daily Archives: December 7, 2019

Our Mother’s House (1967)

Our Mother’s House
Directed by Jack Clayton
Written by Jeremy Brooks and Haya Harareet from a novel by Julian Gloag
1967/UK
IMDb link
First viewing/YouTube rental

[box] Tagline: The children’s story that is not for children…[/box]

So fantastic to find a sleeper like this.  And with my beloved Dirk Bogarde to boot!

Mother bore seven children, now ranging from about three to sixteen.  She is a religious fanatic, does not believe in doctors, and has evidently been bedridden for some time.  The house is a poor one but very well ordered.  When mother dies, the children, fearing they will separated or sent to an orphanage, bury her in the backyard.  They get along pretty well by forging mother’s monthly welfare checks and sticking to her rules.  The rules are sometimes harsh.

When one of the girls gets sick and the others refuse to get her medical care, a brother reaches out to mom’s estranged husband Charlie (Bogarde).  Charlie moves in and vacillates between loving playmate and debauched opportunist.  I’ll end the plot summary here.  With Pamela Franklin and Mark Lester among the children.

I thought this was pretty great. I don’t think I’ve seen Bogarde play a Cockney before but he knocks it out of the park as usual.   The film has some of the  haunting feeling of Clayton’s earlier The Innocents (1961).  The mixture of childhood merriment and impending doom is handled extremely well.  Also includes a good Georges Delarue score. Recommended.

Trailer – spoiler

Frankenstein Created Woman (1967)

Frankenstein Created Woman
Directed by Terence Fisher
Written by Anthony Hinds
1967/UK
Hammer Films
IMDb link
First viewing/Netflix rental
They Shoot Zombies Don’t They

[box] Baron Frankenstein: Everything we don’t understand is magic – until we understand it.[/box]

One of the better late Hammer Horror entries.  Not to be confused with The Bride of Frankenstein!

As the film begins, a man is executed by the guillotine as his terrified son looks on.  Later, Baron Frankenstein (Peter Cushing) is awoken from his cryogenic slumber raring to start reanimating the dead.  Conveniently, the now grown son is executed in the same manner leaving his sweetheart Christina to commit suicide.

The Baron combines the body of the beauty with the brains of the decapitated lover. Christina is now out to get revenge on the sadistic town swells who caused both their misery.

As the Hammer Horror franchise matures, it becomes more hit or miss for me.  This one was a hit.  Cushing played Frankenstein over and over.  This time he is so good that one hardly misses Christopher Lee.  Terence Fisher’s direction certainly doesn’t hurt. Recommended to fans of this genre.