Lust for a Vampire
Lust for a Vampire | |
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File:Lustforvampire.jpg | |
Directed by | Jimmy Sangster |
Produced by | Michael Style, Harry Fine |
Written by | Tudor Gates based on characters by Sheridan Le Fanu |
Starring | Ralph Bates, Barbara Jefford, Suzanna Leigh |
Music by | Harry Robinson |
Cinematography | David Muir |
Edited by | Spencer Reeve |
Distributed by | American International Pictures (USA, theatrical), MGM |
Release dates
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Running time
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95 min / USA:91 min |
Country | United Kingdom & United States |
Language | English |
Lust For a Vampire (also known as Love for a Vampire or To Love a Vampire) is a 1971 British Hammer Horror film directed by Jimmy Sangster, starring Yutte Stensgaard, Michael Johnston and Barbara Jefford. It was given an R rating in the United States for some violence, gore, strong adult content, and nudity. It is the second film in the so-called Karnstein Trilogy loosely based on the J. Sheridan Le Fanu novella Carmilla. It was preceded by The Vampire Lovers and followed by Twins of Evil (1971). The three films do not form a chronological development, but use the Karnstein family as the source of the vampiric threat and were somewhat daring for the time in explicitly depicting lesbian themes.
Production of Lust For a Vampire began not long after the release of The Vampire Lovers.
The film has a cult following although some Hammer Horror fans have accused it of being overly camp and silly. Its most noted scene shows Yutte Stensgaard drenched in blood and partially covered by blood-soaked rags, although the filmed scene is not as explicit as that shown in a promotional still.[1]
Other notable actors in the film are Ralph Bates, Harvey Hall (who has a different role in each film of this series), David Healy and popular radio DJ Mike Raven as Count Karnstein. Karnstein's voice, however, is dubbed by an uncredited Valentine Dyall.[2]
Contents
Synopsis
In 1830, at a finishing school in Styria, Mircalla arrives as a new student. A visiting author, Richard Lestrange, instantly falls in love with her; but Mircalla is a vampire—Carmilla Karnstein—who has been resurrected by her vampiric family. As students in the school, inhabitants of the nearby village and those who suspect Mircalla is responsible start to die, suspicion turns toward the Karnsteins and their ominous castle.
Cast
- Yutte Stensgaard as Mircalla Herritzen/Carmilla Karnstein
- Michael Johnson as Richard Lestrange
- Ralph Bates as Giles Barton
- Barbara Jefford as Countess Herritzen
- Suzanna Leigh as Janet Playfair
- Helen Christie as Miss Simpson
- Mike Raven as Count Karnstein
- Harvey Hall as Inspector Heinrich
- Michael Brennan as Landlord
- Pippa Steel as Susan Pelley
- Judy Matheson as Amanda
- David Healy as Raymond Pelley
- Jonathan Cecil as Biggs
- Erik Chitty as Proffessor Herz
- Jack Melford as Bishop
- Christopher Neame as Hans
- Kirsten Lindholm as Peasant girl
- Luan Peters as Trudi
- Christopher Cunningham as Coachman
- Nick Brimble as 1st Villager
- Sue Longhurst as Schoolgirl
Production
Jimmy Sangster replaced Terence Fisher as director at very short notice. Partially due to censorship restraints from the British Board of Film Classification,[3] this film and its sequel had increasingly less overt lesbian elements in the story. Carmilla, for example, in this film falls in love with a man. Ingrid Pitt was offered the lead but turned it down. Peter Cushing was supposed to have appeared in the film but bowed out to care for his sick wife. Cushing was replaced by Ralph Bates, who described Lust for a Vampire as "one of the worst films ever made".[4] Bates had earlier appeared in Taste the Blood of Dracula with Madeline Smith, who starred in the previous Karnstein film, The Vampire Lovers. The song "Strange Love" was recorded for the film by Tracy, a teen singer from Wembley, produced as a 45" by Bob Barratt.
Critical reception
The Hammer Story: The Authorised History of Hammer Films panned the film, calling it a "cynical and depressing exercise...", noting that "...one can only imagine what Fisher, Cushing and Bray's craftsmen might have made of Gates' reasonably literate draft."[5] However, The Hammer Vampire: British Cult Cinema by Bruce G Hallenbeck, says that "there is much to recommend it. I think it was a very good script," Tudor Gates told me (Hallenbeck), "I think, in a way, it was the better of the first two", with Hallenbeck noting that Gothic atmosphere is "ably evoked".
See also
References
- Sources
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External links
- Use dmy dates from November 2014
- Use British English from November 2014
- Pages with broken file links
- 1971 films
- English-language films
- 1971 horror films
- British films
- British LGBT-related films
- Elstree Studios films
- British erotic films
- Films set in the 1830s
- Films based on horror novels
- Films based on works by Sheridan Le Fanu
- Hammer Film Productions horror films
- 1970s LGBT-related films
- Vampires in film
- Gothic horror films
- LGBT-related horror films
- Lesbian-related films