THE
ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU (1977)
Starring
Burt Lancaster, Michael York, Barbara Carrera, Nigel Davenport.
Directed by Don Taylor. (99 min).
Essay
by D.M. ANDERSONđź’€
You'll
have to indulge me while I give The
Island of Dr. Moreau
a bit more praise than it might actually warrant.
When
I was a kid, my parents used to drop me off at the Southgate Quad
nearly every Saturday afternoon. I went alone most of the time, which
was actually preferable. For me, going to the movies wasn't really a
social activity. Never too picky over what was playing, I simply
loved the experience. Those afternoons in the dark, just me, my
popcorn and the wonders on the screen, are some of my favorite
childhood memories.
One
of those memories is of 1977's The Island of Dr. Moreau.
Back
then, legendary purveyors of drive-in fodder,
American-International Pictures (AIP), took a few fleeting stabs at
escaping its B movie origins in favor of mainstream respectability.
They opened their wallets a bit wider than usual for such films as
The Amityville Horror, Meteor and
Force 10 from Navarone. With The Island of
Dr. Moreau, AIP
continued cashing-in on H.G. Wells' name, albeit on a much bigger
budget than the studio's other campy crapfests, Food
of the Gods and
Empire of the Ants, released around the same
time.
But
I didn't know any of this in 1977. All I really knew was it had that
British dude from Logan's
Run
(Michael
York), the old guy from Airport
(Burt
Lancaster) and the beautiful Barbara Carrera as Maria, who I'd never
seen before but...mee-ow!
Though the film is rated PG, my 13-year-old self found her brief
seduction scene rather...uh, stirring.
The 7:00 show at the Southgate. |
Elsewhere,
Dr. Moreau (Lancaster) is a brilliant-yet-bonkers scientist who has
retreated to a remote island to continue his controversial work,
which consists of using a serum to slowly convert animals into
thinking and speaking human beings. Also populating the island are
the results of his experiments in various stages of human
development. Moreau treats them cruelly, much to the chagrin of
Braddock (York), who's marooned on the island and forced to endure
the doctor's increasingly maniacal behavior (made more tolerable, to
be sure, by Maria's company at night). Moreau ultimately tries to
turn Braddock into an animal and document his decent into savagery.
I
hadn't watched The Island of Dr. Moreau
since
that summer afternoon at the Southgate. Back then, I found it
entertaining, though nothing remarkable from any kid-friendly horror
fare I enjoyed on other weekends. Still, I recently found it on disc - cheap - and fired it up with
nostalgic giddiness...alone in the dark just like 40 years ago, this
time from the comfort of my Dave Cave rather than the Southgate's
sticky floors and cheesy orange curtains.
Four
decades later, the film holds up pretty well. Though trying to run
with the Hollywood big boys ultimately exacerbated AIP's downfall,
it's hard to argue with the results here, which reflect a
considerable amount of creative ambition. The
Island of Dr. Moreau
is
arguably the most handsomely-produced movie of the studio's
"mainstream" era, directed with workmanlike proficiency by
Don Taylor (who'd also
make
Omen
II
better than it had a right to be). And even though films like The
Howling
would
come along a few years later to make Dr.
Moreau's
make-up
designs seem quaint, they serve their purpose effectively enough.
Charlie Rich is The Wolverine. |
The
overall performances are quite good as well. York is solid, though
for me he'll always be that Logan's Run
dude,
while Carrera was a reminder of my good taste in boyhood crushes.
Perhaps because of his more beloved legendary roles, we tend to
forget Burt Lancaster was quite adept at playing characters who are
just a little south of sanity (Seven Days in May
and
the woefully underappreciated Twilight's Last
Gleaming immediately
come to mind). He's at his unhinged best as the film's titular
character.
The
Island of Dr. Moreau is
a wonderful blast from my past. A definite childhood artifact, the
film isn't what anyone would ever call a classic, so its appeal will
probably be limited to similarly nostalgic fans. Still, age
notwithstanding, it's remains the best of AIP’s adaptations of
Wells' novel, and immeasurably more enjoyable than the dumpster fire
remake with Marlon Brando.
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