Añade un argumento en tu idiomaWhen car trouble strands a honeymooning couple in a small Southern European village, an aristocratic family in the area reaches out to help them with sinister consequences.When car trouble strands a honeymooning couple in a small Southern European village, an aristocratic family in the area reaches out to help them with sinister consequences.When car trouble strands a honeymooning couple in a small Southern European village, an aristocratic family in the area reaches out to help them with sinister consequences.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
- Party Servant
- (sin acreditar)
- Mourner
- (sin acreditar)
- Woman at Graveyard
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
The praise:Ominous and entrancing. The scenes which are most effective are the ones when there is an air of unknowing and quiet terror, and a lot of creepy hypnotic feel. The masque scene is a masterpiece in structure, and Roman Polanski was definitely influenced by this in the making of his great suspenseful comedy "The fearless Vampire killers".The acting is solid , and the film is gorgeously ornate to look at, the Castle Ravna is being a place of complex architecture and decorative flourishes. The plot is pretty simple, but this small gem is all about mood.As well, the scene before Gerald and Marianne Harcourt come in is bloody good.
The flaws: The climax doesn't come together as well as the rest of the movie.
Originally intended by the studio as a Dracula film, the count's name is never mentioned in this film. The young couple (Edward De Souza, Jennifer Daniel) have much of the screen time and are both pretty bland as performers. De Souza's character is a bit of a dope (at least to experienced horror fans who can well see ahead in the story as to what is about to happen to them) while Daniel adequately serves her role's requirements by being young and attractive. Let's face it, folks, the cult of vampires don't want her attendance at the party because of her conversational ability.
The two most noteworthy cast contributions to the film are provided by Noel Willman, as the aristocratic Dr. Ravna, the cultured castle owner and head of the cult (watch out for those teeth when he gets up close and personal) and Clifford Evans as an alcoholic professor, the Van Helsing rep here, so to speak, who previously lost his daughter to the cult but knows the black arts and how to summon demonic forces in order to destroy the cult.
James Bernard supplies a big, booming musical score bringing impact to the visuals and handsome sets, in much the same manner as he had a few years before with Horror of Dracula. The climax, originally intended for that of Brides of Dracula, has special effects that seem barely adequate by today's standards but still remain fun to view even if you can't take them too seriously.
While Kiss of the Vampire is not quite in the same league as a blood chilling horror entertainment as the studio's Horror of Dracula or Brides of Dracula, fans of the genre should still be satisfied with the end results. It certainly plays much better than some of those later films in the Dracula series with Christopher Lee.
Thankfully, the action picks up during the creepy masquerade ball. I also enjoy watching our hapless hero (played by the somehow likable Edward DeSouza) get humiliated by the vampires when he attempts to rescue his wife.
The sets are cool and Gothic, if obviously studio-bound; this is the kind of movie that many would call cheap, but tolerant and loving horror fans would probably describe it as quite lavish.
I have some plot-related problems. Professor Zimmer's transformation from tottering drunkard to know-it-all savior is too abrupt and unconvincing. I can't understand why he doesn't stop the Harcourts from visiting Ravna, since he's so sure that the latter is a vampire. All he does is issue cryptic warnings - who's that going to put off? I also don't understand why the vampires try to convince de Souza that he never had a wife. Do they really think that trick's going to work? Of COURSE he knows he had a wife! They really should just kill or convert him; setting him loose to make trouble is an unconscionably stupid decision. Anyway, they drop this little lie so quickly that one wonders why they bothered in the first place.
Other problems include a scene involving whiny, panicking vampires (hardly the most terrifying villains), and the strange lack of music in the climatic scene. As usual for a horror film, certain casual asides in the dialogue are more interesting than the story itself; Zimmer describes his daughter's conversion into a vampire in the most fascinating terms, and even suggests that vampires can be redeemed through faith in God. All of which amounts to nothing, of course, since Hammer films can never be too deep. What we get is the usual fight over a pretty girl, the staple of vampire movies for way too many years.
Groaning aside, all Hammer films do have a certain charm, including the slow ones. A worthwhile attempt is made to make the vampires seem elegant and mysterious, and their eerie piano song does add to the atmosphere. I just wish the movie held up a little better; with a rewrite and some nips and tucks, this could've been one of the greats. Alas, as it stands, it's merely mediocre.
"The Kiss of the Vampire" is a different but attractive vampire movie where there is no reference to Dracula. The vampires fear the cross and garlic as usual, but they can walk during the cloudy day and can eat and drink wine. Indeed they are a cult led by the notorious Dr. Ravna. The sets and costumes are very beautiful and the vintage car is a piece of art. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Beijo do Vampiro" ("The Kiss of the Vampire)
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe director Don Sharp admitted, years later, that he wasn't keen on horror films. However, he decided to make "Kiss of the Vampire" slightly different to the usual Hammer movies.
- PifiasWhen the newlyweds arrive at the hotel, they get caught in a sudden downpour. Water can be seen on their shoulders and on their hats, as well as on the wooden porch as they ring the doorbell. They are however bone dry when they step into the reception, despite the innkeeper remarking that they are soaked through.
- Citas
Dr. Ravna: [referring to Marianne] I will not say that she has not changed in any way, Mr. Harcourt. She has, as you may put it, grown up. Tasted the more sophisticated, more exotic fruits of... life.
Gerald Harcourt: [realizing that she has been initiated into vampirism] Oh, my God!
Dr. Ravna: [officiouly] God is hardly involved, Mr. Harcourt.
- Versiones alternativasRetitled "Kiss of Evil" for American TV, and considerably tampered with. Bloody scenes are cut: e.g., when Herr Zimmer cauterizes his wrist after Tanya bites him, and the pre-credits scene in which blood gushes from the coffin of Zimmer's daughter after he plunges a shovel into it (even her scream is cut from that scene). A couple of the cuts result in scenes that don't make sense any more: in the cut-for-TV version, we never do find out what Marianne sees behind the curtain, a sight which makes her scream. And when Harcourt frees his hands after being clawed by Tanya, the TV version has him escape by running across the room untouched by the vampires, who just watch him get away. As originally filmed, Harcourt, after freeing his hands, immediately smears the blood on his chest into a cross-shaped pattern: the vampires now *can't* touch him. The cut running time was made up for by the addition of scenes of a family (middle-aged husband and wife; teenage daughter) who fret and argue about the influence of the vampiric Ravna clan, but never interact with anybody else in the movie. The married couple are inserted into the pre-credits graveyard scene in place of a couple of old crones. Even the final scene of the tampered-with version features this family, instead of the original cast! The theme of the family's scenes is the social disruption the vampires bring to town: specifically, women get uppity. The wife becomes the breadwinner (by sewing the vampire clan's white robes!) as the husband's business suffers, and she browbeats him about it. The daughter disses her boyfriend in favor of Carl Ravna. Carl, unseen in these scenes, has given her a music box which plays the same hypnotic tune that he plays on the piano elsewhere in the movie. The final scene has the men magnanimously forgiving the women, who meekly apologize as they all head off to church.
- ConexionesEdited into Cynful Movies: Kiss of the Vampire (2019)
- Banda sonoraVampire Rhapsody
Performed by James Bernard
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- The Kiss of the Vampire
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Black Park, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Forest Exteriors)
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 28 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
- 1.66 : 1