Theatre of Blood

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Theatre of Blood

Film poster for Theatre of Blood
Directed by Douglas Hickox
Produced by Gustave Berne,
Sam Jaffe,
John Kohn,
Stanley Mann
Written by Anthony Greville-Bell (screenplay),
Stanley Mann & John Kohn (idea)
Starring Vincent Price,
Diana Rigg,
Ian Hendry
Music by Michael J. Lewis
Cinematography Wolfgang Suschitzky
Editing by Malcolm Cooke
Distributed by United Artists (UK & USA, theatrical),
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (video)
Release date(s) April 5, 1973
Running time 104 min
Country Flag of the United Kingdom UK
Language English
IMDb profile

Theatre of Blood is a 1973 horror film starring Vincent Price as vengeful actor Edward Lionheart and Diana Rigg as his daughter Edwina Lionheart. It was directed by Douglas Hickox.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Edward Kendall Sheridan Lionheart (Vincent Price), who sees himself as a great Shakespearean actor, is in fact a hammy, over-the-top actor. Aided by his daughter Edwina (Diana Rigg), Lionheart sets about murdering, one by one, a group of critics who individually had ridiculed his acting throughout his career, and ultimately declined to present him the "Critic's Circle Award" for his acting in a season he believed to be his best, which had driven him to attempt suicide. The critics are played by a distinguished cast of British actors, including Harry Andrews, Coral Browne, Robert Coote, Jack Hawkins, Michael Hordern, Arthur Lowe, Robert Morley and Dennis Price.

The manner of Lionheart's revenge on each critic is inspired by deaths of characters in the plays of Lionheart's last season of Shakespeare. In most cases the critic is first duped by Lionheart's acting initially to "play the part" before Lionheart's murderous intentions are revealed, followed by a forced recantation and an ironic, humiliating and grotesque dispatch of the critic. The first victim is butchered by a group of tramps on March 15 (the Ides of March), in a reenactment of the death of Julius Caesar. The next is speared and then dragged behind a horse, Hector's fate at the hands of Achilles in the Trojan war play, Troilus and Cressida. The Merchant of Venice is reworked so that Shylock gets his pound of flesh as the critic's steaming heart. Other murders include: a drowning in a butt of wine, based on the murder of the Duke of Clarence in Richard III; the wife of one critic awakens to find her husband decapitated, as Imogen awoke to find the headless body of Cloten in Cymbeline; quasi-cannibalism--the effeminate Meredith Merridew is tricked into eating his "babies" (his beloved poodles) just as Queen Tamora was fed the flesh of her two sons, baked in a pie, in the climax of Titus Andronicus; one critic is tricked into believing his wife has been unfaithful, driving him to smother her in a jealous rage (like Othello); a female critic (played by Coral Browne, Price's real-life wife) is electrocuted by hair curlers as Lionheart recites a passage in which Joan of Arc is burnt at the stake, "Spare for no fagots [bundles of sticks], let there be enough..." (from Henry VI, part 1). Many of the deaths are patterned to the weaknesses of the critics- the one that got his heart ripped out showed lusty behaviour earlier, the one drowned in wine is an alcoholic, a rigged hair curler killed off a vain woman and a gluttonous person choked on pie while being force-fed. Each critic can be seen to represent one of the Seven Deadly Sins, with punishment fitting the particular sin.

Somewhere in the middle of all this is a "duel" scene, which features Lionheart and the chief critic Devlin bouncing around on trampolines while slashing at one another with rapiers, after the swordfight between Tybalt and Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet. Lionheart uses this appearance to establish that he did indeed survive his suicide attempt, and thereby get his daughter released from police custody. Lionheart spares Devlin, who has recognized him, and whom, as head of the Critic's Circle, he intends to save for last.

The audience and sometime-participants in the mayhem are methylated spirit drinking tramps, who have saved Lionheart from drowning after his attempt at suicide by leaping into the river. As the cheap but toxic methylated spirits have damaged their senses, Lionheart finds them easy to manipulate to help him murder the critics. After the principal series of killings, one of these meths-drinkers is disguised as Lionheart as a diversion to lure the police away while the remaining critic Devlin is kidnapped. Police capture the drunk and using the lure of hard alcohol, get him to divulge the whereabouts of Lionheart.

The film ends following Lionheart's attempt to force the remaining critic, Peregrine Devlin, to present him with the "coveted" Critic's Circle Award for Best Actor. Taking the blinding of the Duke of Gloucester in King Lear as inspiration, Lionheart has arranged a contraption containing two red-hot daggers, which are poised to blind the critic should he fail to see things Lionheart's way. Unlike all of the other critics, however, Devlin stands his ground despite the menace and refuses to change his original choice for the award. The slow-moving contraption is released; however, police sirens are heard outside and the device becomes stuck temporarily. Lionheart sets fire to the theater to thwart the police, who save Devlin just in the nick of time. The group of tramps who helped Lionheart turn on him and one kills Edwina, hitting her over the head with the award. Lionheart retreats, carrying Edwina's body to the roof and delivering Lear's final monologue just before the roof caves in and plunges, flaming to his death. To this, Devlin comments "A remarkable performance. He was overacting as usual, but he knew how to make an exit."

[edit] Deaths

  1. George Maxwell: stabbed, slashed to ribbons and hacked to death by an army of homeless people on the ides of March. (Modeled after Julius Caesar.)
  2. Hector Snipe: impaled in the chest with a spear by Lionheart after hearing the words and then his body is dragged off, tied to a horse's tail. (Hector in Troilus and Cressida.)
  3. Horace Sprout: head sawn off while in bed by Lionheart. (Cloten in Cymbeline.)
  4. Trevor Dickman: heart cut out whilst still alive. (The "pound of flesh" death that Antonio in The Merchant of Venice is saved from.)
  5. Oliver Larding: drowned in a barrel of red wine. (Clarence in Richard III.)
  6. Maisie Psaltery: smothered with a pillow by her own husband. (Desdemona in Othello.)
  7. Ms. Chloe Moon: electrocuted with hair curlers. (The burning of Joan of Arc in Henry VI, Part One.)
  8. Meredith Merridew: choked to death on a pie made from his two dogs. (Tamora in Titus Andronicus.)
  9. Sergeant Dogge: Codenamed "Fortinbras" as he goes undercover to help apprehend Lionheart, run over by a train while hiding in the trunk of Devlin's car as he is radioing Inspector Boot as "Horatio" for help.
  10. Edwina Lionheart: skull cracked by an award trophy.
  11. Edward Lionheart: burnt and then fell off the roof of the theatre taking his dead daughter with him. (King Lear.)

[edit] Critical reception

This film is considered by some to be among Price's greatest work, and it was a personal favourite of his, as he always wanted the chance to act in Shakespeare, but found himself being typecast due to his work in horror films.[citation needed] Before or after each death in the film, Lionheart recites passages of Shakespeare, giving Price a chance to show his acting ability, delivering choice speeches such as Hamlet's famous fifth soliloquy ("To be, or not to be, that is the question..."); Marc Antony's self-serving eulogy for Caesar from Julius Caesar ("Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears..."); "Now is the winter of our discontent..." from the beginning of Richard III; and finally, the raving of the mad King Lear at the loss of his faithful daughter.

Some of these sequences take place in an abandoned theatre that Lionheart has used as his hideout, which is where the title of the film originates (it was originally to be called Much Ado About Murder). Some critics disliked the film -- as you might expect -- as Price made Lionheart such a sympathetic character, especially compared to his enemies, the critics.

[edit] Filming locations

Lionheart's fictional hideout, the "Burbage Theatre", was actually the Putney Hippodrome in London, which had been built in 1906 and was vacant and dilapidated for over a decade before being used in the film. It was later demolished in 1975 to make way for housing units. The Hippodrome was also used in director Hickox's previous film, Sitting Target (1972) with Oliver Reed and Ian McShane.

Lionheart's tomb is an actual monument in Kensal Green Cemetery, London. It belongs to the Sievier family, and shows the sculpted figures of a seated man, one hand placed on the head a woman kneeling in adoration, while the other holds the Bible, its pages opened to a passage in the Book of Luke. This monument was altered for the film by plaster masks of Price and Rigg substituting for the statue's real ones, the Bible became a volume of Shakespeare and there is a suitable engraving at the front with Lionheart's name and dates.

[edit] Cast and roles include

Actor Role
Harry Andrews Trevor Dickman
Renée Asherson Mrs. Maxwell
Brigid Erin Bates Agnes
Stanley Bates Meths Drinker
Coral Browne Chloe Moon
Tony Calvin Police Photographer
Robert Coote Oliver Larding
Diana Dors Maisie Psaltery
Eric Francis Meths Drinker
Sally Gilmore Meths Drinker
John Gilpin Meths Drinker
Joyce Graeme Meths Drinker
Charles Gray Voice of Solomon Psaltery
Jack Hawkins Solomon Psaltery
Ian Hendry Peregrin Devlin
Joan Hickson Mrs. Sprout
Michael Hordern George Maxwell
Tutte Lemkow Meths Drinker
Arthur Lowe Horace Sprout
Jack Maguire Meths Drinker
Robert Morley Meredith Meredew
Declan Mulholland Meths Drinker
Milo O'Shea Insp. Boot
Dennis Price Hector Snipe
Vincent Price Edward Lionheart
Bunny Reed Policeman
Diana Rigg Edwina Lionheart
Charles Sinnickson Vicar
Madeline Smith Rosemary
Eric Sykes Sgt. Dogge
Peter Thornton Policeman

[edit] New adaptation

The film has been recently adapted for the stage by British company Improbable, with Jim Broadbent playing Edward Lionheart and Rachael Stirling, Diana Rigg's daughter, playing her mother's role of Edwina. The play differs from the film as the critics are from the major British newspapers (examples including The Guardian and The Times), and it is all set within an abandoned theatre. The play is also set in the seventies rather than contemporary times, and makes fun of the politics of theatre at that time. Another change is the reduction in the number of deaths, and the police characters are more or less entirely removed. The killings based on Othello and Cymbeline have been omitted, presumably because they would have to take place outside the theatre due to their impact on secondary characters. Also, the name of Lionheart's daughter is changed from 'Edwina' to 'Miranda' to enhance the Shakespearean influence. This adaptation ran in London at the National Theatre beween May and September 2005.

[edit] External links