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The Pyx

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The Pyx
Directed byHarvey Hart
Screenplay byRobert Schlitt
Based onThe Pyx
by John Buell
Produced byJulian Roffman
Starring
CinematographyRene Verzier
Edited byRon Wisman
Music byHarry Freedman
Release date
  • September 17, 1973 (1973-09-17)
Running time
111 minutes[1]
CountryCanada
LanguagesEnglish
French
BudgetCA$1 million

The Pyx, also known as The Hooker Cult Murders and La Lunule, is a 1973 Canadian supernatural horror film based on John Buell's 1959 novel of the same name, and starring Karen Black and Christopher Plummer.

Plot

In Montreal, a motorist witnesses a woman falling or jumping from a tenement building. Police arrive on the scene and find a crucifix and a small metal pyx gripped in her hand. Detective Sergeant Jim Henderson is assigned to the case, and soon determines the woman's identity as Elizabeth Lucy, a heroin-addicted prostitute. Henderson determines that the apartment she leapt from was unoccupied, and that the building also serves as a brothel operation. Leading up to her death, Elizabeth, a lapsed Catholic, was struggling to get her life in order.

Henderson interviews Meg, the madame of a brothel where Elizabeth was sometimes employed. Meg tells him that Elizabeth frequently worked outside the brothel against Meg's wishes, who felt it was unsafe. Upon returning to re-question Meg at the brothel the following day, Henderson finds both her and one of her employees dead, their throats slashed. He subsequently interviews the building superintendent and shows him Elizabeth's crucifix, but he refuses to speak. Later, Henderson meets with Elizabeth's gay roommate and close friend, Jimmy, who tells him that Elizabeth had acted erratically the day of her death, making oblique references to a new, rich client. Henderson escorts Jimmy back to the apartment he shared with Elizabeth, but the two are ambushed by an unseen assailant who shoots Jimmy to death. A shootout follows between police and the assailant, who hides out on a docked boat.

Henderson concurrently pieces together the narrative of Elizabeth's final weeks leading up to her death: Meg had phoned Elizabeth one afternoon, informing her she had given several "special" clients Elizabeth's contact information. Meg explains that these clients could offer her and Elizabeth a significant amount of money. Elizabeth meets with one of the men, Keerson, a mysterious French-Canadian man who owns the building in which Meg's brothel is located. Elizabeth presumes their first meeting will be a sexual transaction, but instead Keerson merely has her disrobe and tell him her life story.

Elizabeth grows paranoid after she finds herself being followed by Keerson's associates, but Meg dissuades her fears. On the night of her death, Elizabeth arrives at the brothel for the planned "festivities" for which Meg has promised a large payoff. There, Meg drugs Elizabeth's drink. Shortly after, Keerson—in fact a Roman Catholic priest—and other elite occultists arrive to hold a Black Mass. Before the other occultists, Keerson offers Elizabeth a desecrated host from a pyx. Elizabeth takes the host, but moments later throws herself from the window to her death before the occultists can complete the ritual.

Having gotten Keerson's name from Jimmy before his death, Henderson traces Keerson to the his parish, convinced he is responsible for Elizabeth's death. There, Keerson admits to performing the black mass, and reveals to Henderson knowledge of intimate details of his life, such as that Henderson was happy upon receiving the news that his wife had died in a car accident. When Keerson implies that he is possessed by Satan himself, Henderson shoots him multiple times. Before Keerson dies, he tells Henderson, "You have set me free."

Cast

Production

Filming began on August 24, 1972, and was completed on October 2, 1972. It was filmed in Montreal, Canada, and includes much French dialogue, alongside the main dialogue in English.

Ken Flaherty, the director of The Doomed Gallery in Dalston, accidentally destroyed a print of the film. Whilst he working he was ifcs, a film cleaning company in Park Royal, he put the reel on a film cleaning machine and went for a cigarette, only to come back and discover that he had destroyed the print.

Music

The music was composed by Harry Freedman, with actress Karen Black lending her vocal talents.

Release

The Pyx premiered in Canada on September 17, 1973.[2] It subsequently opened in the United States the following week, in cities such as Detroit[3] and Rochester.[4] It subsequently opened in Montreal on October 5, 1973.[5]

References

  1. ^ Muir 2011, p. 288.
  2. ^ "World Premiere of a Distinguished Canadian Film". Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa, Ontario. September 15, 1973. p. 21 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "City I & II". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. September 29, 1973. p. 42 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "The Pyx: Rochester Premiere Friday!". Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York. September 24, 1973. p. 19 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Kapica, Jack (September 29, 1973). "Montreal's gift to acting profession". The Montreal Gazette. Montreal, Quebec. p. 17 – via Newspapers.com.

Sources