Dir: PETER SASDY
Country: UNITED KINGDOM
For me the most intriguing and
interesting period in Hammer Film Productions’ long history is from 1970-76. By
this stage Hammer were no longer the despised whipping boys of the critical
cognoscenti but were establishment figures. In a remarkable about turn from the
late 1950’s they were now the acceptable face of the horror genre in British
film culture. But some things are more important than critical acceptance, and
one of those things is commercial success. At the turn of the decade Hammer
found themselves out of step and out of time, thanks in no small part to the
cynical nihilism of hard hitting horror productions such as Witchfinder General (1968) and Night of the Living Dead (1968), and the
subtle and nuanced terrors of rigorously modern films like Rosemary’s Baby (1968). The release of controversial films such as Straw Dogs (1971), A Clockwork Orange (1971), The
Devils (1971), and later horror titles such as The Exorcist (1973) and The
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) would only further dilute Hammer’s
horrifying visions. Hammer had little choice but to turn to nudity,
increased violence, and scenes of softcore lesbianism, in a series of films which
had little to differentiate them from the sexploitation product distributed
with seemingly unending regularity in mainland Europe.
With this in mind their 1971 production Hands of the Ripper now emerges as one
of their finest films of their fraught latter period. It certainly delivered in
the area of graphic violence with a series of impressive murder sequences
involving a red hot poker, hat pins, and a particularly gruesome throat
slashing. In a surprising turn of events the film had sixteen seconds of this
violent content trimmed for its theatrical release in the United States. In the
UK the film slipped out via J. Arthur Rank with all of its violence intact. But
Hands of the Ripper is much more than
its violent moments, owing to an offbeat premise that sees Anna (Angharad Rees)
possessed by the brutal impulses of her long dead father Jack the Ripper. This
is established in a neat prologue which sees the heavily scared Ripper
slaughter his wife in front of his uncomprehending daughter; a kiss from daddy,
and the shimmer of jewellery later to become a trigger to acts of murder. It is
somewhat surprising that Hammer had not dealt with Jack the Ripper in greater
detail owing to the volume of films they made set in the late Victorian period; only Room to Let (1950) and Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971)
utilise the mythical properties of the character. While the latter plays on
revisionism, subversion, and comedy, Hands
of the Ripper is entirely straight-faced. This is one of its strengths as
L. W. Davidson’s well plotted screenplay builds to a tragic and moving
conclusion.
One of the films weaknesses though is
that much of it is easy to predict. But the decision to spend the majority of
the films running time with psychiatrist Dr. John Pritchard (Eric Porter) is a
wise move. Pritchard is an unusually complex protagonist for a Hammer film, and
in the hands of Shakespearean actor Eric Porter, his scientific zeal, moral
dilemma, and guilt are brought vividly to life. Pritchard is motivated by a
number of things. In Anna he sees an opportunity to implement the new
theoretical concepts of Freud, and to solve the riddle of what makes people
murder. There is also a romantic underpinning; Pritchard clearly has an
association between Anna and his late wife. Pritchard is willing to sacrifice
other lives to achieve his scientific aims, puts his blind daughter-in-law’s
life at risk, and his own life, in a bid to challenge the conception that Anna
is possessed by the spirit of her father. Even so Pritchard never becomes verbose or over-bearing. He is
dangerously driven, but Porter invests the character with a subtle humanity
that separates him from the numerous rogue scientists of horror and
science-fiction. He is perhaps most like Baron Frankenstein in Hammer’s earlier
Frankenstein Created Woman (1967), a
film to which Hands of the Ripper
shares a number of similarities.
The emphasis on Freudian psychoanalysis
goes hand in hand with a very evocative late Victorian East End setting rife
with horse drawn carriages, cobbled streets, the bawdy beats of vulgar
prostitutes, and in the films climax a replica of St. Paul’s Cathedral. The
film makes particularly good use of a séance, and in one tightly constructed series
of sequences sets up Pritchard’s attitude to this trade and at the same time
his dedication to science, the corruption of the political elite (Derek
Godfrey’s Dysart is excellent, his arched eyebrows a challenge for Jack
Nicholson’s in The Shining [1980]),
and Anna’s murderous impulses. This is a stylishly mounted production from the
unfairly maligned Peter Sasdy. Sasdy isn’t perhaps the most convincing director
when it comes to pace, at only 85 minutes Hands
of the Ripper is at times a touch stately, exposition on occasion leaden.
But Sasdy has an undeniable talent during the murder sequences, and is no
slouch at creating a suitably gothic atmosphere. It is no surprise to me that
he was re-employed by Hammer a number of times; he evinces a strong competency
with the cinematic means. It is somewhat ironic then that his greatest work was
The Stone Tape (1972), a television
production for the BBC. Perhaps Hands of
the Ripper’s most distinguishing feature though is the lyrical, lush, and
emotive music of Christopher Gunning, who opts for subtlety over bombast. An
intelligent, tragic, and thematically rewarding film, Hands of the Ripper works very well with the supremely entertaining,
but considerably dumber Twins of Evil
(1971) with which it was double billed.
© Shaun Anderson 2015
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