Young nun Catherine Beddoes (Nastassja Kinski) is raised in seclusion by
a heretical order led by an excommunicated priest (Christopher Lee) and
when she is let out for an annual birthday visit with her father, her
panicky dad (Denholm Elliot) leaves her in the care of a friend
(Richard Widmark) who's an expert on the occult. Ordered by her father
to have no contact with anyone save for the occult expert, the nun
becomes the object of a search by the excommunicated priest so that she
can be the focal point of a ritual that will make her into the earthly
host for the arch-demon Astaroth, aka The Devil.
If truth be told, the only reason I even bothered to post about TO THE
DEVIL A DAUGHTER was so I could warn any fellow Hammer-lovers who
haven't seen it yet. Three years on from the massive international box
office success of THE EXORCIST and studios were still churning out
devil-themed flicks so sate the public's interest, so it was perhaps
inevitable that Hammer films, once a trendsetting groundbreaker in the
field of cinematic horror, would want to wet its beak. Sadly, the
studio's best days were behind it by at least five years and each
release in the 1970's brought less and less to the table. Working from
Dennis Wheatley's source novel, TO THE DEVIL A DAUGHTER would prove to
be the last of the line for Hammer films and it's a damned shame that
they went out on such a feeble note. The film is slow-moving to the
point of near-torpor, boring to a fault, not scary in the least,
completely wastes the talents of Christopher Lee, and bears absolutely
none of the signature flavor and mojo that made Hammer films one of the
great horror houses. The only thing that made me sit up and really pay
attention was a sequence involving full-frontal nudity from Nastassja
Kinki — with whom I was understandably obsessed with during my high
school years — a scene that works more for shock than 'batin' material,
and one that made me feel rather skeeved-out afterward because she was
only an obvious fifteen years of age at the time. I very much doubt if
they could get away with such a scene today. And even though it opened
within a month of THE OMEN, the film bears a number of stylistic touches
that one could easily mistake as bold-faced thievery from THE OMEN's
anti-Christ-driven narrative.
Anyway, the bottom line is that TO THE DEVIL A DAUGHTER was an ignoble
swan song to a studio that contributed a slew of great additions to the
genre for about a nineteen-year run, and I advise giving it a miss if
you don't want to see the last vestiges of the once mighty Hammer
sputter out like a weak fart.
Poster from the theatrical release.


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