This
essay originally appeared in the book, Strange Blood: 71 Essays on Offbeat and Underrated Vampire Movies.
VAULT OF HORROR (1973)
Starring
Daniel Massey, Terry-Thomas, Curd Jurgens, Michael Craig, Tom Baker,
Anna Massey, Glynis Johns, Dawn Addams. Directed by Roy Ward Baker.
(83 min)
Essay
by D.M. ANDERSONđź’€
Ever
since being blown away by Reservoir Dogs back in 1992, I've
been a huge Quentin Tarantino fan. While he's not the world's most
prolific director, I've loved nearly every film he's made, my
favorite being Pulp Fiction. In my humble opinion, it is the
second greatest film of all time, right behind Jaws (nothing
will ever top that one, folks).
I
think most fans would concur that one constant in Tarantino's entire
body of work would have to be his penchant for engaging in thievery.
Without getting into specifics, he's made a career out of paying
homage to - and borrowing liberally from - his favorite films,
directors and genres, repackaging them with hip dialogue, cool
characters and obscure pop culture references. In the process, he's
made a series of films that manage to appeal to cinephiles who
normally wouldn't be caught dead watching an exploitation film. It's
almost impossible to view any Tarantino film without experiencing a
sense of deja vu. But in his defense, he's almost always given credit
where it's due and worn his influences proudly.
That
being said, I felt similar deja vu halfway through From Dusk 'Tll
Dawn. Though directed by Robert
Rodriguez, the story and screenplay is pure Tarantino, particularly
the first half, with George Clooney and Quentin himself playing the
Gecko brothers, two brutal bank robbers who take a family hostage on
their way to the Mexican border. They're supposed to meet their
contact at a remote strip club - the Titty Twister - at dawn. But in
the most abrupt narrative shift in movie history, the place turns out
to be a haven for vampires.
Sitting
in the theater with my wife, I remember thinking this turn of events
seemed awfully familiar. Not to take anything away from the movie
itself; From Dusk 'Till Dawn
is the best Tarantino film he didn't actually direct...smart, funny,
sexy, bloody as hell and brimming with his inimitable brand of
quotable dialogue. Still, I was sure I'd seen something very much
like this before, a fuzzy childhood memory of a guy who wanders into
a restaurant without realizing he's the main course. I remembered
being scared enough to fire-up my trusty ol' night-light before going
to bed, but for the life of me, I couldn't recall what movie it was,
if indeed it was a movie at all.
Hammertime. |
Fast-forward
a few years, when I was looking to expand my DVD collection by
digging through a Wal-Mart budget bin. Even today, you can
occasionally find some great stuff there, and on this particular
trip, I came across an old childhood favorite, 1972's Tales
from the Crypt, packaged as a
double-feature with Vault of Horror,
which I'd never heard of.
Tales
from the Crypt is a British film
from Amicus Productions. Founded by American producers Milton
Subotsky and Max Rosenberg, the studio was Hammer Films' main rival
during the 60s and 70s, churning out dozens of similarly-styled
horror films (and keeping directors like Freddie Francis & Roy
Ward Baker gainfully employed). Though they dabbled in several sci-fi
and horror subgenres, Amicus' specialty was anthology films
consisting of thematically-similar shorter pieces linked by a framing
story and featuring a variety of well-known British actors.
The
stories in both Tales from the Crypt
and Vault of Horror
are pulled, of course, from William M. Gaines' legendary - and
controversial - horror comics of the 1950. Most of them are
supernatural tales of revenge and karmic retribution, with unsavory
main characters who generally get exactly what's coming to them:
violent and ironic demise. As such, both movies serve up generous
amounts of black humor to go along with the horror
.
Aesthetically,
these two films are undoubtedly products of their time, but the
stories still hold up pretty well. Watching Tales from the
Crypt all these years later,
what once disturbed me was now a fond, fun trip down memory lane. And
as it turned out, so was Vault of Horror.
I
had seen this movie
before.
With
the same anthology format and source material, Vault of
Horror is generally considered a
sequel to Tales from the Crypt (in
some regions, it was even released as Tales from the Crypt
II or Further Tales
from the Crypt). The linking
story has five strangers who enter an elevator, which descends and
lets them off in what appears to be a gentlemen's club. As the doors
close behind them, one man notices there's no outside button to
retrieve the elevator. The only ones in the room, they settle around
a table and eventually take turns sharing their recurring nightmares
with the others. These dreams comprise the stories, which of course
are not dreams at all, but the unpleasant ways each man met his
untimely - though mostly deserved - demise.
The
first and shortest story, "Midnight Mess," is also the most
effective. Harold (Daniel Massey) is a greedy heir to a family
fortune that he doesn't want to share with his estranged sister,
Donna (Anna Massey, Daniel's real-life sibling). After killing the
detective he hired to locate her, Harold heads to the village where
she's living in order to kill her, too. It's a small, eerily quiet
town, the streets nearly devoid of human activity. When Harold
arrives and stops by a nearby restaurant, the waiter informs him they
are closed, even though it's still early evening.
Harold
arrives at Donna's door. After she reluctantly lets him in, Harold
slams her against a wall and drives a dagger into her heart.
Nefarious mission apparently accomplished, he quickly leaves. It's
dark now, and the restaurant that wouldn't serve him earlier is now
open and filled with customers. He ventures back over, where he is
promptly seated. Without being offered a menu, the waiter brings the
first course, a 'soup' which Harold finds repulsive. When the waiter
asks how he would like his main course - roasted blood clots - Harold
realizes the stuff in his bowl isn't soup. The other patrons all turn
to stare at him. Harold nervously stands, and in the entire film's
most chilling scene, notices that his is the only reflection in the
dining room's wall-sized mirror. The restaurant is filled with
vampires, one of which is Donna, who appears to be the ringleader. The segment ends with everyone helping themselves to his blood by
tapping his jugular with a wine dispenser.
Bob Ross...the acid years. |
Watching
the segment with more jaded eyes, I enjoyed the delicious black humor
that was lost on me as a kid, too terrified at the idea of an
ravenous vampire horde to concern myself with the inherent
ridiculousness of the climax. I was also able to scratch an itch that
had been tormenting me for a long time: So that's
where I'd seen From Dusk 'Till Dawn's
story before.
There
are significant differences between the two films. The initial undead
assault in From Dusk 'till Dawn
comes out of the blue, changing the entire tone on a dime and
essentially turning it into two movies: the hip Tarantino crime
story, followed by Robert Rodriguez' over-the-top action and
bloodletting (the film might even be seen as a precursor to the their
next collaboration, Grindhouse).
The "Midnight Mess" segment in Vault of
Horror applies some ominous
foreshadowing that something's not quite right with the setting,
building a bit of anticipatory dread. But ironically, it's the Gecko
Brothers who are armed and ready, while Harold is the one who's
ill-prepared and caught completely off-guard.
But
the basic story is the same: Main characters who commit despicable
acts, and just when they think they've gotten away scot-free, they
stumble into an outwardly benevolent place that appears to be
safe...at least until it's feeding time.
The
remaining segments in Vault of Horror
aren't nearly as clever or amusing, and the movie as-a-whole pales in
comparison to Amicus' Tales from the Crypt.
"Midnight Mess" makes it worth checking out, though,
offering an amusingly twisted take on classic vampire conventions.
And considering Quentin Tarantino's ongoing reverence for cinema of
the 70s, perhaps it once provided a bit of inspiration.
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