
Director: Peter Sasdy
Release Date: 1971
Contains spoilers
Having nothing at all to do with the Dracula cycle, this film takes its cue from the historical Erzsébet Báthory. In this case Countess Elizabeth, as it is anglicised, is played by Ingrid Pitt. There is some name confusion, the film does not credit a surname but imdb have listed her with the surname Nodosheen (the name of her unseen late husband, in the movie). Yet the film makes it quite clear that she is a Báthory and historically Erzsébet retained her familial name rather than take her husband’s, owing to the fact that her family where much more powerful than his.
As this is about Báthory you

The film starts with a funeral, attended late by Imre Toth (Sandor Elès) a young Lieutenant who has been summoned to the funeral at the request of the dead Count, owing to the fact that he is named in the will. The funeral party rides back to the castle and a peasant grabs the side of the coach begging the Countess for work. He is whipped off by Captain Dobi (Nigel Green) and run over. As they enter the castle a peasant woman shouts “Devil woman”
At the reading of the will the young Lieutenant, whose father had saved the Count’s life, is given all his horses, the stables and a small cottage. Fabio (Maurice Denham), the historian, is given the library, Dobi is given some suits of armour and weapons and the bulk of the estate is split between the Countess and her daughter Illona (Lesley-Anne Down), who has not returned yet from Vienna where she has lived since she was a young child.
The

As her daughter is due to arrive she arranges for the coach to be attacked,

As things go on Elizabeth (in the guise of Illona) becomes engaged to Imre, and both Dobi and Julie are led deeper into her web of murder and deceit. Julie wants her mistress to be happy and Dobi is promised sexual favour, although his motivation seems to be more misplaced love. Each time Elizabeth ages she looks older than the last

Imre, however, is shown the truth of Illona/Elizabeth by Dobi and he is blackmailed by Elizabeth into still marrying her. Thus they are all held in the castle when the bailiffs, having found the other bodies, ‘investigate’ the crime. Dobi has brought another victim back

Well I was bored when I first watched this, bored when I revisited it for the review and bored as I wrote the synopsis, hence it not being as exacting as most of the other Hammer reviews so far. This is the biggest flaw in the movie. Báthory was a serial killer and if half of what is commonly held about her is true, then her story would make a fascinating and disturbing movie of sadistic proportions. In this case it is a yawn fest, there are courtly intrigues which are simply not intriguing and a plot about replacing her daughter that leaves the audience cold.
Other than Pitt there is a failure to provide any outstanding performance and we are so cold to the principle characters that we could not care what happens to any of them. Half the fault of this is the script. For example we know Dobi is driven by his love for Elizabeth and we also know he tries to talk her out of her path but then the obstacles he throws in her path are so half-hearted they are pointless. The film goes to great pain to ensure we know that Fabio is aware of what is going on; he is taken into the ‘inner circle’ and yet, out of nowhere betrays them. Worse, he is murdered by Dobi who then, virtually straight away, reveals to Imre the very thing Fabio was killed for trying to reveal. It doesn’t add up, whichever way you look at it. Pitt, however, is great when turned back into old Elizabeth crying dementedly, spiteful, dour and thoroughly despicable. When young she portrays a more care-free character, but one who is, beneath it all, a complete bitch.
The costumes are laughable. Actually that is unfair; it is just that Imre’s giant hat sticks out as a truly memorable moment for all the wrong reasons. There is the occasional flash of skin and a belly dancing routine but those fail to titillate as we are already in torpor.
One of the nudity scenes actually becomes painful to watch. Dobi takes Imre into the Countess’ rooms to see what he is marrying and finds Elizabeth, stood naked in her bath and washing with blood.

This truly is the low of Hammer vampire movies and I am giving it a very poor 2 out of 10.
The imdb page is here.
Truly terrible (the movie, not the review).
ReplyDeleteGreat potential gone to waste.