(1962) Directed by Peter Graham Scott; Written by John Elder
(aka: Anthony Hinds); Additional dialogue by: Barbara S. Carpenter; Based on
the novel Doctor Syn – A Tale of Romney
Marsh by Arthur Russell Thorndike; Starring: Peter Cushing, Yvonne Romain,
Patrick Allen, Oliver Reed and Michael Ripper; Available on DVD.
Rating: ****
“I was amazed by what Peter Cushing brought to his
character. He enjoyed working with me and I enjoyed working with him. He would
come along with an idea in the morning, but wouldn’t tell me until we were
about to shoot the scene. We always used to try his ideas, because usually they
were very good…” – Peter Graham Scott (from Hammer
Films – The Unsung Heroes, by Wayne Kinsey)
Thanks to Fritzi Kramer from Movies Silently for hosting and
organizing the Swashathon,
featuring more posts about swashbuckling than you can wag a sword at. It’s an
honor to be included among such an esteemed bunch of bloggers.
Hammer Films are forever associated with horror, but this
perception overlooks the company’s many contributions in numerous genres
(Comedy, drama, suspense, you name it). It’s this skewed mindset that likely prompted
the folks at Universal International to release Captain Clegg under the American title, Night Creatures, but whoa there! Hold your ghostly horses, because
this isn’t that type of movie. While the titular “night creatures” make a brief
appearance, the film displays its true colors, or should I say, “colours” (This
is a Hammer movie, after all.) as a rollicking good adventure. I suspect American
audiences expecting a tale of the supernatural felt Hammer and Universal did a
bait and switch, but once you realize what the movie isn’t, it’s easier to
accept what it is. Let’s move on, shall we?
Captain Clegg was
based on Arthur Russell Thorndike’s 1915 novel Doctor Syn – A Tale of Romney Marsh, and was filmed once before, in
1937, as Doctor Syn, with George Arliss in the title role. Due to a legal tug-o-war
with Disney over the source material, it was decided that Hammer could produce
their version, but couldn’t use the name Dr. Syn (Disney’s version would
eventually be filmed in 1963 as Dr. Syn,
Alias the Scarecrow, starring Patrick McGoohan). Thus, Dr. Syn became Dr.
Blyss for the Hammer’s movie.
Set in the remote British island community of Dymchurch (actually
shot in Denham, England), circa 1792, the peaceful burg weathers the invasion
of the King’s revenue men, led by Captain Collier (Patrick Allen). As a means
of subsisting amidst the high taxation, the villagers have devised a liquor
smuggling ring, which has managed to slip, to date, under the noses of the
Royal Navy. Collier arrives on Dymchurch’s shores, to investigate the suspected
illegal activity, as well as rumors about phantoms lurking around nearby Romney
Marsh. Collier meets his match in Dr. Blyss (played with gusto by Peter Cushing),
the town’s affable leader and spokesperson, who may be more than he seems. Blyss,
in fact, is inextricably linked to the dreaded pirate Captain Clegg, whom
Captain Collier pursued (albeit unsuccessfully) for years, and is dead and
buried in the village square – or is he?
If a role could have been custom-made for Peter Cushing,
this would have been it. Mr. Cushing reportedly relished the part of Dr. Blyss,
and it shows. In every scene he commands our attention, not by chewing the
scenery, but through his charismatic performance. We’re introduced to Blyss as
he conducts a sermon in the village chapel, providing due reverence to the
ceremony, but with gentle barbs at the congregation. In another scene, we see
his sly sense of humor as he sends Captain Collier off on a wild goose chase,
using the fabled marsh phantoms as a ruse. Cushing imbues his nuanced performance
with equal measures of seriousness and playfulness. Blyss is a man who’s
reformed from his checkered past, and lives in the selfless service of his
community, which also happens to include a booze smuggling operation.
Although Cushing practically steals the show from everyone
else, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the stellar supporting cast. Michael
Ripper, who’s normally relegated to smaller parts, gets a beefier role this
time around as Blyss’ right hand man, coffin maker and co-conspirator Jeremiah
Mipps. Even when his character is short on dialogue, his eyes and expressions
speak volumes. Martin Benson is also good as the capricious innkeeper Mr. Rash,
instrumental in Blyss’ smuggling operation, but not above selling out to
Collier in order to save his own skin. Oliver Reed* does a nice job as Harry
Cobtree, another Blyss co-conspirator. Yvonne Romain (who co-starred with Reed
in 1961’s Curse of the Werewolf) proves
she’s more than just Hammer glamour as the plucky barmaid Imogene, holding her
own against Mr. Rash’s lecherous advances.
* Fun fact: According to director Peter Graham Scott, Reed injured
his arm in a car crash during production, which necessitated him to wear a
cast, and shoot a fight scene with his bad arm hidden. Surprisingly, he
insisted on shooting another scene, in which his character was required to fall
off a horse, sans stunt double (ibid).
Captain Clegg was thrust upon an unsuspecting American
public as another horror movie (it’s even included in the 4-DVD set, The Hammer Horror Series), with a
misleading alternate title that promised, but only partially delivered on
showing us “night creatures.” But even if the marsh phantoms are a cheat, they’re
pretty cool to look at. The main attraction, however, is Cushing, in top form,
playing one of his finest roles. It was so hard for Cushing to let go of Blyss
(or Syn, if you prefer), that he wrote two screenplays, chronicling the further
adventures of Captain Clegg, but the scripts remained unproduced (source: The Hammer Story, by Marcus Hearn and
Alan Barnes). Alas, Cushing never reprised the role, but at least we can enjoy
one of Hammer’s finest swashbucklers. Who knew a movie about tax evasion could
be so much fun?
I saw the Disney version when I was very young and it scared the heck out of me, but then Patrick McGoohan always scared the heck out of me. You make me want to see the Peter Cushing version to compare.
ReplyDeleteIt would be great to compare the two competing versions. Oddly enough, I haven't seen the one with Patrick McGoohan. I need to remedy this.
DeleteThis is one of Cushing's best film roles, and proof that some of Hammer's non-horror stories are more interesting and entertaining than some of their more famous monster movies.
ReplyDeleteAgreed! I love Hammer horror, but it often overshadows the fact that Hammer produced some amazing films in a variety of genres. Thanks for visiting!
DeleteThank you so much for joining in! It's amazing how studios and stars can become so entwined with a particular genre that the marketing departments have to turn swashbucklers into horror. Great info!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks! I was waiting for the opportunity to write about this underappreciated Hammer gem for quite a while. And thank you for hosting another magnificent blogathon!
DeleteThis is a very interesting article. I like the way your wrote it. I have never seen this picture, but you make it sound fascinating. I wrote the following article for the Swashathon: https://wordpress.com/post/pureentertainmentpreservationsociety.wordpress.com/3672. I hope you will read and enjoy my article as much as I enjoyed yours.
ReplyDeleteYours Hopefully,
Tiffany Brannan
Hi there! Thanks for stopping by. I'm glad you enjoyed reading about Captain Clegg - hope you get to see it some day so we can compare notes! Looking forward to reading your article. :)
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