Mark of the Devil (1972)
Yazar: thingsyoucantelljustbylookingatherblog on 18 Ocak 2010 – 23:39 -Whatever the merits of Michael Reeves’ bleak The Witchfinder General (U.S. title: The Conqueror Worm, 1968), the attainment of that picture spawned a mini-genre of imitators, the most fabled assuredly being the West German origination Note of the Beast (Hexen bis aufs Blut gequalt, 1970), which takes Reeves’ then-fashionable hopelessness and appalling scenes of inhuman torture a variety of steps further. But it doesn’t enlarge on that film’s themes, only the degree of its torture.
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The argument could be made that Mark of the Devil splits the Vincent Price’s title character in Witchfinder General — a man so obsessed with purging evil from the world that he becomes evil himself — into three church-appointed witch-burners in various degrees of moral degradation. The picture opens with busty barmaid Vanessa (Olivera Vuco) threatened by sadistic local witchfinder Albino (the cadaverous Reggie Nalder who, despite his name, isn’t albino but rather flush-faced, suntanned even). Albino tries to have his way with Vanessa, warning her, “I could have you denounced as a witch!”
Strong-willed Vanessa will have none of it, however: “It’s the only way you could ever get a woman!” Ouch! With that, Albino is ready to burn her at the stake, but then word comes that Albino’s local authority is being usurped by esteemed witch hunter Count Cumberland (Herbert Lom), whose arrival has been preceded by a disciple, Count Christian von Meruh (Udo Kier). Christian puts a stop to Albino’s persecution of Vanessa, she and Christian instantly fall in love, and she plants the seeds of doubt on Christian’s career choice by asking him how he’d feel if his mother were charged with witchcraft.
Later, Count Cumberland arrives and though distinguished looking and well-mannered, proves no better than Albino. Albino, in league with an even crueler executioner (Herbert Fux), is aware of Christian’s relationship with Vanessa and gets the latter charged with witchcraft. As it finally dawns on Christian that his teacher’s feet are made of clay and that maybe torturing people left and right isn’t such a good thing after all, he finds himself is condemned by his former teacher. (In this film, people always blurt out the wrong thing at the wrong time, such as a puppeteer’s boast that his marionettes say “the most devilish things!” When will they ever learn?)
Mark of the Devil is a mess of a picture. A relentless cruelty hangs over the film, one without any insight. Horrifying executions are plentiful and arbitrary, when they don’t explicitly feed the sexual aberrations or greed of those supposedly meting out justice. Count Cumberland uses his power to steal property from the likes of Baron Daume (Michael Maien), all in the name of the church, or to violently vent his sexual impotence. Herbert Lom, as he often was, is very good in these scenes, but the character is a woefully limited one.
Udo Kier’s disciple is not believable. Though an interesting homosexual subtext is suggested through his blind devotion to Cumberland, Christian’s sudden moral turnabout is patently absurd. He’s been working in Cumberland’s torture chambers for three years, yet never has questioned the morality of their actions? In the real world, Christian would long ago have been numbed of any humanity; in the film, Christian is simply pathetically naive.
Really though, all of this is merely an excuse for the movie’s plentiful scenes of graphic torture. Some may find such gore-for-its-own sake titillating, and this was clearly the aim of its backers, to sell the film as a gore fest (vomit bags were helpfully provided for its U.S. release). Films like this split horror fans down the middle: some will want to see it for these scenes alone; others will debate suffering through its unsavory sections hoping these will be offset with something actually worthwhile.
But there isn’t, not really, and the picture’s still-gruesome if varied mutilations — the most infamous involves ripping out a woman’s tongue — are, by their nature, highly ironic. On one hand audiences are supposed to react with disgust at the sadism of Albino and his depraved executioner, yet the long, loving close-ups of victim Gaby Fuch’s bloody, naked body on the rack (with blood-spurting fingers crushed in thumbscrews) is unpleasantly voyeuristic.
The picture is alternately well-directed and shoddy, possibly due to the use of two directors: Englishman Michael Armstrong and Austrian Adrian Hoven (who also plays the doomed puppeteer). For instance, the build-up to Cumberland’s introduction is shrewdly done. In the first third everyone talks about him with both fear and respect, and Lom’s face is obscured as his coach finally arrives at his castle. But all of this careful anticipation is blown when the picture abruptly cuts to Cumberland’s first day in court, in which Lom’s face is first seen in a long shot, nearly lost in a crowded courtroom.
The film’s timeless locations evoke the era nicely, while making it look a lot more expensive that it was. The IMDB cites Castle Moosham in Salzburg, while Gaby Fuchs mentions Mauterndorf and Vienna. For such a low budget film, Mark of the Devil has lots of costumed extras, but the bad dubbing generally makes them seem ridiculous, speaking lines like “Oh, I enjoy a good witch-burning once in a while!” in the most cartoonish of voices.
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