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With the agreement in place, Hammer's executives had their pick of Universal International's horror icons and chose to remake ''The Invisible Man'', ''The Phantom of the Opera'' and ''The Mummy''. All were to be shot in Technicolor at Bray Studios, by the same team responsible for ''Dracula'', ''Curse of Frankenstein'' and ''Revenge of Frankenstein''. ''The Mummy'' was made in [[1959 in film|1959]], ''[[The Phantom of the Opera (1961 film)|The Phantom of the Opera]]'' followed in [[1961 in film|1961]], but ''The Invisible Man'' was never produced.
With the agreement in place, Hammer's executives had their pick of Universal International's horror icons and chose to remake ''The Invisible Man'', ''The Phantom of the Opera'' and ''The Mummy''. All were to be shot in Technicolor at Bray Studios, by the same team responsible for ''Dracula'', ''Curse of Frankenstein'' and ''Revenge of Frankenstein''. ''The Mummy'' was made in [[1959 in film|1959]], ''[[The Phantom of the Opera (1962 film)|The Phantom of the Opera]]'' followed in [[1962 in film|1962]], but ''The Invisible Man'' was never produced.


Principal photography for ''The Mummy'' began on [[23 February]], [[1959]] and lasted until [[16 April]], [[1959]]. It starred both Peter Cushing (as John Banning) and Christopher Lee (as the Mummy, Kharis), and was again directed by Terence Fisher with a screenplay from Jimmy Sangster. ''The Mummy'' went on general release on [[23 October]], [[1959]] and broke the box-office records set by ''Dracula'' the previous year, both in the U.K. and the U.S when it was released there in December.<ref>Kinsey. p. 166.</ref>
Principal photography for ''The Mummy'' began on [[23 February]], [[1959]] and lasted until [[16 April]], [[1959]]. It starred both Peter Cushing (as John Banning) and Christopher Lee (as the Mummy, Kharis), and was again directed by Terence Fisher with a screenplay from Jimmy Sangster. ''The Mummy'' went on general release on [[23 October]], [[1959]] and broke the box-office records set by ''Dracula'' the previous year, both in the U.K. and the U.S when it was released there in December.<ref>Kinsey. p. 166.</ref>

Revision as of 15:48, 25 April 2006

File:Dracula Prince of Darkness Poster.jpg
A poster for Dracula Prince of Darkness (1966).

Hammer Film Productions is a film production company in the United Kingdom. Founded in 1934, the company is best known for a series of Gothic "Hammer Horror" films produced from the late 1950s until the 1970s. Hammer also produced science fiction, thrillers and comedies — and in later years, television series. Hammer films were cheap to produce but nonetheless appeared lavish, making use of quality British actors and cleverly designed, or second-hand, sets. During its most successful years, Hammer dominated the horror film market, enjoying worldwide distribution and considerable financial success. This success was due, in part, to distribution partnerships with major United States studios, such as Warner Brothers.

During the late 1960s and 1970s the saturation of the horror market by competitors and the loss of American funding forced changes to the previously lucrative Hammer-formula, with varying degress of success. The company eventually ceased production in the mid-1980s and has remained in effective hibernation since. In 2000 the studio announced plans to begin making films again, however this move has so far failed to materialise.

The term "Hammer Horror" is often used, incorrectly, to refer to other films of the period made in a similar style by different companies, such as Amicus Productions and Tigon British Film Productions.

Early history (1935 to 1937) — Hammer Productions

In November 1934, William Hinds, a comedian and businessman registered his own film company — Hammer Productions Ltd.[1] — based in a three-room office suite at Imperial House, Regent Street, London. The company name was taken from Hinds' stage name, Will Hammer.

Work began almost immediately on the first Hammer film, The Public Life of Henry the Ninth at the MGM/ATP studios, with shooting concluding on 2 January, 1935. During this period Hinds met Spanish émigré Enrique Carerras, a former cinema owner, and on 10 May, 1935 they formed a film distribution company Exclusive Films, operating from a single office at 60-66 National House, Wardour Street.[2] Hammer produced a further four films distributed by Exclusive:

  • The Mystery of the Marie Celeste (US: The Phantom Ship) featuring Bela Lugosi (1936)
  • The Song of Freedom featuring Paul Robeson (1936)
  • Sporting Love (1937)
  • The Bank Messenger Mystery (1936)

A slump in the British film industry forced Hammer into bankruptcy and the company went into liquidation in 1937. Exclusive, however, survived and on 20 July, 1937 purchased the leasehold on 113-117 Wardour Street, and continued to distribute films made by other companies.[3]

Resurrection (1938 to 1955) — Hammer Film Productions

James Carreras (son of Enrique) joined Exclusive in 1938, closely followed by William Hinds' son, Anthony. At the outbreak of World War II, both James Carreras and Anthony Hinds left to join the armed services and Exclusive continued to operate only in a limited capacity. In 1946, James Carreras rejoined the company after demobilisation. He resurrected Hammer as the film production arm of Exclusive with a view to supplying 'quota-quickies' - cheaply made films designed to fill gaps in cinema schedules and support more expensive features.[4] He convinced Anthony Hinds to rejoin the company, and a revived 'Hammer Film Productions' set to work on Death in High Heels, The Dark Road, Crime Reporter and Dick Barton Special Agent (an adaptation of the successful Dick Barton radio show). All were all shot at Marylebone Studios during 1947. During production of 1948's Dick Barton Strikes Back, it became apparent that the company could save a considerable amount of money by shooting in country houses instead of professional studios. For their next production — Dr Morelle - The Case of the Missing Heiress (another radio adaptation) — Hammer rented Dial Close, a 23 bedroom mansion next to the River Thames, at Cookham Dean, Maidenhead.[5]

On 12 February, 1949 Exclusive finally registered "Hammer Film Productions" as a company with Enrique and James Carreras, and William and Tony Hinds as company directors. Hammer moved into the Exclusive offices in 113-117 Wardour Street, a building that would come to be known as "Hammer House", and still bears that name today.[6]

In August 1949, complaints from locals about noise during night filming forced Hammer to leave Dial Close and move into another mansion, Oakley Court, also on the banks of the Thames between Windsor and Maidenhead.[7] Five films were shot there: The Man in Black (1949), Room to Let (1949), Someone at the Door (1949), What The Butler Saw (1950), The Lady Craved Excitement (1950). In 1950, Hammer moved again to Gilston Park, a country club in Harlow Essex, which hosted Black Widow, The Rossiter Case, To Have and to Hold and The Dark Light (all 1950).

In 1951, Hammer began shooting at what was to become its most famous home, Down Place, also on the banks of the Thames. Down Place would eventually be renamed Bray Studios, and would be Hammer's home during the height of its success in the late 1950's and early 1960s. The company took out a one year lease and began its 1951 production schedule with Cloudburst. The house, a virtual derelict, required substantial work, but the building was also unencumbered with the kind of construction restrictions which had prevented Hammer from customising its previous homes. A decision was therefore made to turn Down Place into a substantial, custom-fitted studio complex.[8] Its expansive grounds were used for almost all of the later location shooting in Hammer's films, and are a key part of the "Hammer look".

During the final picture of 1951, Hammer made one of its most significant appointments when it hired film director Terence Fisher, who would go on to play a critical role in the forthcoming horror boom of the 1950s.

Also during 1951, Hammer and Exclusive signed a four-year production and distribution contract with Robert Lippert, an American film producer. The contract meant that Lippert and Exclusive would, in effect, exchange product for distribution on their respective sides of the Atlantic — beginning in 1951 with The Last Page and ending with 1955's Women Without Men (AKA Prison Story).[9] It was Lippert's insistence on an American star in the Hammer films he was to distribute that led to the prevalence of American leads in so many of the company's 1950s productions.

Towards the end of 1951, the one-year lease on Down Place expired, and with its increasing success Hammer looked back towards more conventional studio-based productions. A dispute with the Association of Cinematograph Technicians, however, blocked this proposal, and instead the company purchased the freehold of Down Place. The house was renamed Bray Studios after the nearby village of Bray and it remained Hammer's principal base until 1966.[10]

1952 brought the first of Hammer's science fiction films: Four Sided Triangle and Spaceways.

The birth of Hammer Horror (1955 to 1959)

Hammer's first significant experiment with horror came in the form of a 1955 adaptation of Nigel Kneale's BBC Television science fiction serial The Quatermass Experiment, which was directed by Val Guest. As a consequence of the contract with Robert Lippert, American actor Brian Donlevy was imported for the lead role, and the title was changed to The Quatermass Xperiment to cash in on the new X certificate for horror films. The film was an unexpectedly big hit, and led to an almost equally popular 1957 sequel Quatermass 2 — again adapted from one of Kneale's television scripts, this time by Kneale himself and with a budget double that of the original: £92,000.[11] In the meantime, Hammer had produced another Quatermass-style horror film X the Unknown. At the time, Hammer voluntarily submitted its scripts to the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) for comments before beginning production. Regarding the script of X the Unknown, one reader/examiner (Audrey Field) commented on the 24 of November:

"Well, no one can say the customers won't have had their money's worth by now. In fact, someone will almost certainly have been sick. We must have a great deal more restraint, and much more done by onlookers' reactions instead of by shots of 'pulsating obscenity', hideous scars, hideous sightless faces, etc, etc. It is keeping on and on in the same vein that makes this script so outrageous. They must take it away and prune. Before they take it away, however, I think the President [of the BBFC] should read it. I have a stronger stomach than the average (for viewing purposes) and perhaps I ought to be reacting more strongly."[12]

The Curse of Frankenstein

Main article: The Curse of Frankenstein

As production began on Quatermass 2, Hammer started to look for another U.S. partner willing to invest in and handle the American promotion of new product. They eventually entered talks with Associated Artists Pictures (AAP) and its head, Eliot Hyman. During this period, two young American film-makers, Max J. Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky, submitted to AAP a script for an adaptation of the novel Frankenstein. Although interested in the script, AAP were not prepared to back a film made by Rosenberg and Subotsky, who had only one film to their credit. Eliot Hyman did, however, send the script to his contact at Hammer.[13]

File:Curseoffrankenstein1957-1.jpg
Christopher Lee as Frankenstein's monster

Anthony Hinds was unsure about the script, as Universal Pictures had already made a series of successful Frankenstein films. Although the script was based on the novel, and therefore an adaptation of public domain material, there was a risk that Universal would see a new adaptation as copyright infringement. In addition, a great deal of polishing and additional material was also needed as the script had a running time of only 55 minutes — far less than the minimum of 90 minutes needed for distribution in the U.K. Accordingly, comments on the script from Hammer's Michael Carreras were less than complimentary:

"The script is badly presented. The sets are not marked clearly on the shot headings, neither is DAY or NIGHT specified in a number of cases. The number of set-ups scripted is quite out of proportion to the length of the screenplay, and we suggest that your rewrites are done in master scene form." — Michael Carreras' letter to Max Rosenberg.[14]

Further revisions were made to the script, and a working title of Frankenstein - The Monster! was chosen. Plans were made to shoot the film in Technicolor — a decision which caused further worry at the BBFC. Not only did the script contain horror and graphic violence, but it would be portrayed in vivid colour.[15]

The project was handed to Tony Hinds who was even less impressed with the script than Michael Carreras, and whose vision for the film was a mere black and white 'quickie' made in three weeks. Concerned that Subotsky and Rosenberg's script still had too many similarities to the old Universal films, Hinds commissioned Jimmy Sangster to rewrite it as The Curse of Frankenstein. Sangster's treatment impressed Hammer enough to rescue the film from its place on the 'quickie' treadmill and restore it as a colour shoot.

Sangster submitted his own script to the BBFC for examination. Audrey Field's report on the 10 October, 1956 read,[16]

"We are concerned about the flavour of this script, which, in its preoccupation with horror and gruesome detail, goes far beyond what we are accustomed to allow even for the 'X' category. I am afraid we can give no assurance that we should be able to pass a film based on the present script and a revised script should be sent us for our comments, in which the overall unpleasantness should be mitigated."[17]

Regardless of the BBFC's stern warnings, Hinds supervised the shooting of a virtually unchanged script.[18]

The film was directed by Terence Fisher, with a look that belied its modest budget. Peter Cushing's performance as Baron Victor Frankenstein, and Lee's as the imposingly tall, brutish monster provide the film with a further veneer of polish. With a budget of £65,000 and a cast and crew that would be the backbone of later films,[19] Hammer's first Gothic horror went into production. The use of colour encouraged a previously unseen level of gore. Until The Curse of Frankenstein horror films had not shown blood in a graphic way, or when they did it was concealed by monochrome photography. In this film, it was bright red, and the camera lingered upon it.

The film was an enormous success, not only in Britain, but also in the USA, where it inspired numerous imitations from, amongst others, Roger Corman and his American International Pictures. It also found success on the European continent, where Italian directors and audiences were particularly receptive.

Dracula

Main article: Dracula (1958 film)

The huge box office success of The Curse of Frankenstein lead to the inevitable desire for a sequel in The Revenge Frankenstein,[20] and an attempt to give the Hammer treatment to another horror icon. Dracula was yet another successful film character for Universal, and the copyright situation was even more complicated than Frankenstein. A full legal agreement between Hammer and Universal was not completed until 31 March, 1958 — after the film had already been shot — and was 80 pages long.[21]

File:Dracula1958-1.jpg
John Van Eyssen as Jonathan Harker in Dracula (1958)

Meanwhile, the financial arrangement between AAP and Hammer had broken down when money promised by AAP had not arrived. Hammer began looking for alternatives, and with the success of The Curse of Frankenstein signed a deal with Columbia Pictures to distribute the sequel The Revenge of Frankenstein and two films from the defaulted AAP deal The Camp on Blood Island and The Snorkel. Hammer's financial success also meant the winding down of the parent film distribution company Exclusive, leaving Hammer to concentrate solely on film-making.[22]

Work continued on the script for Dracula, and the second draft was voluntarily submitted to the BBFC. Audrey Fields, 8 October, 1957,

"The uncouth, uneducated, disgusting and vulgar style of Mr Jimmy Sangster cannot quite obscure the remnants of a good horror story, though they do give one the gravest misgivings about treatment. [...] The curse of this thing is the Technicolor blood: why need vampires be messier eaters than anyone else? Certainly strong cautions will be necessary on shots of blood. And of course, some of the stake-work is prohibitive."[23]

Despite the success of Curse of Frankenstein, the financing of Dracula proved awkward. Universal were not interested, and the search for money eventually brought Hammer back to AAP's Eliot Hyman, through another of his companies, Seven-Arts. Although an agreement was drawn up, the deal was never realised and funding for Dracula would eventually come from the National Film Finance Council (£32,000) and the rest from Universal in return for worldwide distribution rights.[24]

With an eventual budget of £81,412, Dracula began principal photography on 11 November, 1957.[25] Peter Cushing starred as Van Helsing and Christopher Lee as Count Dracula, with direction by Terence Fisher and set design by Bernard Robinson that was radically different from the Universal adaptation.[26] Many consider Dracula to be Hammer's finest film.

Dracula was an enormous success, breaking box-office records in the UK, the United States (released as Horror of Dracula), Canada, and across the world. On 20 August, 1958 the Daily Cinema reported,

"Because of the fantastic business done world-wide by Hammer's Technicolor version of Dracula, Universal-International, its distributors, have made over to Jimmy Carreras' organisation, the remake rights to their entire library of classic films"[27]

The Mummy

Main article: The Mummy (1959 film)

File:Themummy1959-2.jpg
Christopher Lee as Kharis, in The Mummy (1959)

With the agreement in place, Hammer's executives had their pick of Universal International's horror icons and chose to remake The Invisible Man, The Phantom of the Opera and The Mummy. All were to be shot in Technicolor at Bray Studios, by the same team responsible for Dracula, Curse of Frankenstein and Revenge of Frankenstein. The Mummy was made in 1959, The Phantom of the Opera followed in 1962, but The Invisible Man was never produced.

Principal photography for The Mummy began on 23 February, 1959 and lasted until 16 April, 1959. It starred both Peter Cushing (as John Banning) and Christopher Lee (as the Mummy, Kharis), and was again directed by Terence Fisher with a screenplay from Jimmy Sangster. The Mummy went on general release on 23 October, 1959 and broke the box-office records set by Dracula the previous year, both in the U.K. and the U.S when it was released there in December.[28]

During the period 1955-1959 Hammer produced a number of other horror and non-horror films, including The Hound of the Baskervilles starring Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes, and comedies such as Don't Panic Chaps!. Nevertheless, it is the three films, The Curse of Frankenstein, Dracula and The Mummy that set the direction and provided a template for many future films, and for which the company is best known.

Sequels (1959 to 1969)

Hammer consolidated their success by turning their most successful horror films into series. Six sequels to The Curse of Frankenstein were produced between 1959 and 1974:

All starred Peter Cushing as Baron Frankenstein, except The Horror of Frankenstein, where Ralph Bates took the title role.

Cushing also appeared in the first Dracula sequel, Brides of Dracula (1960), in which David Peel played a decadent Dracula substitute "Baron Meinster". Christopher Lee returned to play Dracula himself in six sequels:

The first three were direct sequels to the original film, and employed much ingenuity in finding ways to resurrect the Count. Hammer broke continuity with Scars of Dracula in an attempt to re-imagine the character to appeal to a younger audience. The commercial failure of this film led to another change of style with the latter two films, which were not period pieces like their predecessors, but had a then-contemporary 1970s London setting. Peter Cushing appeared in both films playing a descendant of Van Helsing.

Sequels to The Mummy were relegated to second feature status, and had markedly lower production values than the Dracula and Frankenstein films which filled Hammer's release schedule throughout the 1960s. The sequels were The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb (1964), The Mummy's Shroud (1966) and Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971). The latter was a modern day version of Bram Stoker's The Jewel of Seven Stars and featured Valerie Leon as a reincarnated Egyptian Princess, rather than an actual mummy. The same novel also served as the basis for the 1980 Charlton Heston film The Awakening.

From the mid-1960s, the "Mummy" films and some of Hammer's other horror output were increasingly designed for double-billing. Two films would be shot back-to-back with the same sets and costumes to save money. Each film would then be shown on a separate double-bill to prevent audiences noticing any recycling. for example The Plague of the Zombies and The Reptile (both 1965),

Hammer also made occasional one-off forays into new territory, and would sometimes import American stars, including Bette Davis, Tallulah Bankhead and Raquel Welch.

Examples include:

Running alongside production of the Gothic horror films, Hammer also made a series of what were known as "mini-Hitchcocks". These very low-budget suspense thrillers, often in black-and-white, were made in the mould of Psycho and, lacking a distinctive visual style, are not often recognised as Hammer productions. Examples include Paranoic (1964) and Hysteria (1965).

On 29 May, 1968, Hammer was awarded the Queen's Award to Industry in recognition of their contribution to the British economy. The official presentation ceremony took place on the steps of the Castle Dracula set at Pinewood Studios, during the filming of Dracula Has Risen from the Grave.[29]

Market changes (early 1970s)

As audiences became more sophisticated in the late 1960s, with the release of artfully directed, subtly horrific films like Roman Polanski's Rosemary's Baby, the studio struggled to maintain its place in the market. It responded by bringing in new writers and directors, testing new characters, and attempting to rejuvenate their vampire and Frankenstein films with new approaches to familiar material.

Dracula AD 1972 and The Satanic Rites of Dracula, for example, abandon period settings in pursuit of a modern-day setting and "swinging London" feel. These films were not successful, and drew fire not only from critics, but from Christopher Lee himself, who refused to appear in more Dracula films after these. Speaking at a press conference in 1973 to announce The Satanic Rites of Dracula, then called Dracula is Dead... and Well and Living in London, Lee said:

"I'm doing it under protest... I think it is fatuous. I can think of twenty adjectives - fatuous, pointless, absurd. It's not a comedy, but it's got a comic title. I don't see the point."[30]

The film itself also indulges the turn toward self-parody suggested by the title, with more humour appearing in the script, undercutting any real sense of horror.

Hammer films had always sold themselves, in part, on their violent and sexual content. After the release of films like Bonnie and Clyde and The Wild Bunch, audiences were increasingly able to see more explicit gore, more expertly staged, in relatively mainstream films. Night of the Living Dead, too, set a new standard for graphic violence in horror films. Hammer tried to compete as far as possible - Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell, for example, features a scene where the Baron stands on a discarded human brain - but realised quickly that, if they couldn't be as gory as new American productions, they could follow a trend prevalent in European films of the time, and play up the sexual content of their films.

In the Karnstein Trilogy, based loosely on J. Sheridan Le Fanu's early vampire novella Carmilla, Hammer showed some of the most explicit scenes of lesbianism yet seen in mainstream English language films. Despite otherwise traditional Hammer design and direction, there was also a corresponding increase in scenes of nudity in the films during this era. The Karnstein Trilogy comprises:

These three were written by Hammer newcomer Tudor Gates, who was recruited at about the same time as Brian Clemens (creator of The Avengers). Clemens wrote two unusual films for Hammer. Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971) featured Ralph Bates and Martine Beswick and Captain Kronos, Vampire Hunter, which he also directed, were not successful at the time, but have since become cult favourites. The experimental films of this period represented a genuine attempt to find new angles on old stories, but audiences did not seem interested.

Final years of film production (late 1970s)

In the latter part of the 1970s, Hammer made fewer films, and attempts were made to break away from the then-unfashionable Gothic horror films on which the studio had built its reputation. Neither The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires, a co-production with Hong Kong's Shaw Brothers which attempted to combine Hammer's Gothic horror with the martial arts film, or To the Devil a Daughter, an adaptation of the Dennis Wheatley novel, were very successful. The company did, however, have some surprising commercial success with the film version of the ITV sitcom On the Buses, which was popular enough to produce two sequels, Holiday on the Buses and Mutiny on the Buses. Hammer's last production, in 1979, was a remake of Hitchcock's 1938 thriller The Lady Vanishes, starring Elliot Gould and Cybill Shepherd. The film was a failure at the box office and all but bankrupted the studio.

Critical response

The Hammer Horror films were often praised by critics, although rarely taken seriously. "Altogether this is a horrific film and sometimes a crude film, but by no means an unimpressive piece of melodramatic storytelling" wrote one critic of Dracula in The Times (May 28, 1958, p10). Terence Fisher's direction has been praised, however, in, for example, Richard Roud's Cinema: a Critical Dictionary. Critics who specialise in cult films, like Kim Newman, have praised Hammer Horror more fully, enjoying their atmosphere, craftsmanship and camp appeal.

Television series (1980s)

In the early 1980s Hammer Films created a series for British television, Hammer House of Horror, which ran for 13 episodes. In a break from their cinema format, these featured plot twists which usually saw the protagonists fall into the hands of that episode's horror. These varied from sadistic shopkeepers with hidden pasts, to witches and satanic rites. The series was marked by a sense of dark irony, its haunting title music, and the intermingling of horror with the commonplace.

Notable episodes include:

  • "The House That Bled To Death", in which a young couple and their daughter moving into a new home, unaware that its previous tenant murdered his wife.
  • "The Silent Scream", in which Peter Cushing plays an apparently personable pet shop owner working on the concept of "prisons without walls" whilst harbouring a dark secret.
  • "The Two Faces Of Evil" - a surreal episode, featuring forced camera angles, stylized sets, bizarre perspective shots and a plot revolving around dopplegangers and malevolent twins.
  • "Charlie Boy", in which an African fetish exerts a fatal influence and leads to several deaths.
  • "Rude Awakening" - Denholm Elliott stars as an estate agent whose increasingly strange but realistic dreams give him serious trouble distinguishing fantasy from reality.
  • "The Children of the Full Moon" - Diana Dors plays a kindly bumpkin with an extended family, but no husband. When a recently married couple stumble upon this unusual situation, the truth is gradually revealed.

Episodes were directed by Brian Gibson, Peter Sasdy and Tom Clegg, among others.

A second television series, Hammer House of Mystery & Suspense, was produced in 1984 and also ran for 13 episodes. The stories were originally to have been the same 1-hour length as their previous series, but it was decided to expand them to feature-length so as to market them as 'movies of the week' in the US. The series was produced in association with 20th Century Fox and as such, some of the sex and violence seen in the earlier series was toned down considerably for US television. Each episode featured a star, often American, well-known to US viewers. This series was Hammer's final production of any kind to date.

Hammer House of Horror

Title UK Transmission Date Notable cast members
Witching Time 13 September 1980 Jon Finch, Patricia Quinn, Prunella Gee, Ian McCulloch
The Thirteenth Reunion 20 September 1980 Michael Latimer, Julia Foster, Dinah Sheridan, Richard Pearson, Norman Bird, Warren Clarke
Rude Awakening 27 September 1980 Denholm Elliott, Lucy Gutteridge, James Laurenson, Pat Heywood
Growing Pains 4 October 1980 Gary Bond, Barbara Kellerman
The House that Bled to Death 11 October 1980 Nicholas Ball, Rachel Davies, Brian Croucher, Patricia Maynard
Charlie Boy 18 October 1980 Leigh Lawson, Marius Goring, Angela Bruce, Frances Cuka, Michael Culver
The Silent Scream 25 October 1980 Peter Cushing, Brian Cox, Elaine Donnelly
Children of the Full Moon 1 November 1980 Diana Dors, Christopher Cazenove, Celia Gregory, Victoria Wood
Carpathian Eagle 8 November 1980 Suzanne Danielle, Anthony Valentine, Sian Phillips, Pierce Brosnan
Guardian of the Abyss 15 November 1980 Ray Lonnen, Barbara Ewing, John Carson, Rosalyn Landor
Visitor from the Grave 22 November 1980 Kathryn Leigh Scott, Gareth Thomas, Simon MacCorkindale
The Two Faces of Evil 29 November 1980 Gary Raymond, Anna Calder-Marshall, Philip Latham
The Mark of Satan 6 December 1980 Peter McEnery, Emrys James, Georgina Hale

Hammer House of Mystery & Suspense

Title UK Transmission Date Notable cast members
Mark of the Devil 5 September 1984 Dirk Benedict, Jenny Seagrove, George Sewell, John Paul, Tom Adams, Burt Kwouk, James Ellis, Reginald Marsh, Alibe Parsons
Last Video and Testament 12 September 1984 Deborah Raffin, Oliver Tobias, David Langton, Clifford Rose
Czech Mate 17 January 1986 Susan George, Patrick Mower, Roy Boyd, Richard Heffer, Peter Vaughan
A Distant Scream 24 January 1986 David Carradine, Stephanie Beacham, Stephen Greif
The Late Nancy Irving 7 February 1986 Cristina Raines, Marius Goring, Simon Williams, Tony Anholt, Zienia Merton
In Possession 7 March 1986 Carol Lynley, Christopher Cazenove, Judy Loe
Black Carrion 14 March 1986 Season Hubley, Leigh Lawson
The Sweet Scent of Death 4 April 1986 Dean Stockwell, Shirley Knight, Michael Gothard, Carmen du Sautoy, Robert Lang
Paint Me A Murder 11 April 1986 Michelle Phillips, James Laurenson, David Robb, Alan Lake
The Corvini Inheritance 18 April 1986 David McCallum, Jan Francis, Terence Alexander
And the Wall Came Tumbling Down 25 April 1986 Gareth Hunt, Peter Wyngarde, Carol Royle, Brian Deacon, Patricia Hayes
Child’s Play 2 May 1986 Mary Crosby, Nicholas Clay
Tennis Court 9 May 1986 Peter Graves, Hannah Gordon, Jonathan Newth

Recent developments

In recent years, although the company has seemed to be in hibernation, frequent announcements have been made of new projects. In 2003, for example, the studio announced plans to work with Australian company Pictures in Paradise to develop new horror films for the DVD and cinema market.

Notes and references

  1. ^ A different company than the one known today — Hammer Film Productions.
  2. ^ Kinsey. p. 9.
  3. ^ Kinsey. p. 10.
  4. ^ Kinsey. p. 11.
  5. ^ Kinsey. p. 13.
  6. ^ Kinsey. p. 13.
  7. ^ Kinsey. p. 16.
  8. ^ Kinsey. pp. 20-22.
  9. ^ Kinsey. p. 22.
  10. ^ Kinsey. p. 22.
  11. ^ Kinsey. p. 50.
  12. ^ Kinsey. p. 41.
  13. ^ Hammer's entry into the gothic period horror market was, therefore, built (albeit loosely) on the work of Subotsky and Rosenberg who would go on to found Amicus Productions — a company that would, in later years, become a rival to Hammer.
  14. ^ Kinsey. p. 51.
  15. ^ Kinsey. p. 80.
  16. ^ Kinsey. p. 60.
  17. ^ Kinsey. p. 60.
  18. ^ Kinsey. p. 63.
  19. ^ Kinsey. p. 63.
  20. ^ The original title of the script was Blood of Frankenstein.
  21. ^ The agreement was between Cadogan, a Hammer subsidiary, and Universal. Kinsey. p. 86.
  22. ^ Kinsey. pp. 67, 91.
  23. ^ Kinsey. p. 94.
  24. ^ Kinsey. p. 92.
  25. ^ Kinsey. p. 96.
  26. ^ So radical, in fact, that Hammer executives considered paying him off and finding another designer. Kinsey. p. 99.
  27. ^ Kinsey. p. 144.
  28. ^ Kinsey. p. 166.
  29. ^ Rigby, Jonathan, (2000). English Gothic: A Century of Horror Cinema. Reynolds & Hearn Ltd. ISBN 1-903111-01-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Haining, Peter (1992). The Dracula Scrapbook. Chancellor Press. ISBN 1-851521-95-X.

Bibliography

  • Kinsey, Wayne (2005). Hammer Films: The Bray Studios Years. Reynolds & Hearn Ltd. ISBN 1903111447.

See also