This
is one of the lesser efforts from Hammer that pales in comparison to
its Dracula and Frankenstein series, and that's rather a shame because
it's a solid little creeper in its own right.
In the early 1900's in the remote village of Vandorf, the details in a
series of very bizarre deaths are swept under the rug by the local
constabulary and medical/psychiatric authorities. Local legend has it
that a hideous spirit roams the land during full moons and over the
course of several years it has been responsible for the inexplicable
deaths of several locals. The story proper kicks into gear when a young
artist is informed by his girlfriend that she's pregnant, so the artist
storms off into the night to tell her father that, poor though he may
be, he intends to do the right thing and marry the girl. Worried that
her father will kill her lover when he finds out what's happened, the
girl tears of into the night to stop her boyfriend. Unfortunately for
her, she runs into something quite horrible (that the audience does not
see) and when she is later found by the authorities, her body has
somehow been turned to solid stone. That aspect of the case is kept from
public knowledge and the girl's lover is shortly thereafter found
hanged by the neck from a tree, a suicide. Using the convenient death of
the young artist as a scapegoat, the authorities and the creepy head of
the local mental hospital (Peter Cushing) spin the events to make it
look like the artist killed the girl and then, "in an act of remorse,"
offed himself as well. News of this obvious bullshit reaches the
artist's understandably irate father, who arrives to challenge the lies
and clear his son's good name, much to the annoyance of the locals who
seek to drive him out. During the course of his investigation, the
father learns of a local legend that claims a nearby abandoned castle is
home to Megara, one of the famed Gorgon sisters from Greek mythology
(the most famous of whom was Medusa, the one beheaded by the hero
Perseus) whose gaze turned the beholder into solid stone, and his
findings are met with apparent disbelief by the head of the mental
institution, but he clearly knows more than he's letting on.
Lesson learned from this film: a slow death by being turned to solid stone would really, really suck.
While searching the castle, the father has the misfortune of running
into Megara and he begins to slowly, agonizingly petrify, but not before
making his way back to his lodgings where he manages to write his
remaining son a three-page letter outlining his findings and suspicions.
(His turned-to-stone death is falsely and ridiculously officially
deemed death by heart failure, which his son quite correctly points out
as bullshit because no one takes the time to write a detailed three-page
letter while suffering a heart attack.) The remaining son receives the
letter and arrives in town to discover the particulars of the mysterious
deaths of his brother and dad, but is met with resistance from the
aforementioned authorities. Meeting with the head of the mental
hospital, he realizes the man knows more than he's letting on, and that
the fellow is rather possessive of his beautiful assistant, who was once
one of his patients (but she got better). The sparks fly between the
son and the assistant, which does not sit at all well with the doctor,
and things take a turn for the worse when the young man encounters the
Gorgon but does not get a direct look at her face; he glimpses her
reflection in a pool of water and rather than turn to stone, he is
visibly aged by the terrifying experience. As he convalesces in hospital
and comes to love the doctor's assistant (a love that is reciprocated),
his favorite college professor and friend of his late father
(Christopher Lee) arrives to see just what the fuck is going on and,
taking one look at the now aged face of his student, decides to take
charge of the situation, and believe me, he's badass enough to do it
(which does not please the doctor or the authorities).
All of this snowballs into a rather predictable reveal regarding the identity of the Gorgon and culminates with her inevitable beheading, but it left me with a number of unanswered questions:
- Exactly what the fuck is an ancient Greek monster doing in a German village in 1910?
- The Gorgons of classical mythology were Medusa, Stheno and Eurayle, so where the hell did this "Megara" come from? Gorgons were not exactly common or in any way numerous.
- We all know the fate of Medusa and now that of "Megara," but what of either of the remaining sisters? Perhaps they remained unexplored in hope of a sequel?
- In a small village, details of bizarre deaths would be virtually impossible to cover up, plus in this case there were several now-granite bodies remaining as evidence, so I don't buy the story not getting out past the borders of the place.
- If the bodies of Megara's victims are fully petrified — as is seen and demonstrated when one of them has a finger accidentally snapped off — how did the undertakers get the bodies into standard coffins for burial? Dealing with a certain amount of rigor mortis is standard, but how does one straighten out the solid stone corpse of a guy who was seated at a desk, hunched over to write a letter? When his son digs up his grave to see the body for himself, we see the rock-pop laying straight as an arrow.
- Since the doctor and the chief constable are aware of exactly what's going on, why didn't they consult the mythology books in the local library and find someone brave enough to pull a Perseus and have done with it rather than let statue after statue be generated?
For
all you DOCTOR WHO fans out there: the chief constable, the guy in the
helmet, is Patrick Troughton, who would go on to be the second actor to
play the Doctor. His tenure in that role lasted from 1966-1970. He
was also the blind seer Phineas in the classic JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS
(1963), as well as the alchemist Melanthius in SINBAD AND THE EYE OF THE
TIGER (1977).

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