#311
| ||||
| ||||
Thanks for letting me know. I'll keep an eye on their twitter feed.
__________________ |
#312
| ||||
| ||||
Alan Frank was mentioned on the Hammer thread..... I sometimes wonder about him. I'm sure it was The Devils that he actually congratulated the bbfc on taking 'Their trusty scissors' to the film...... Just shows what a hot potato it was in the seventies.
__________________ Teddy, I'm a Scotch drinker - you know that. I just have the occasional brandy when I'm not drinking. |
#313
| |||
| |||
Quote:
Ken Russell had been something of a critical darling up to early 1970, but the one-two punch of Dance of the Seven Veils (on telly) and The Music Lovers (in the cinema) turned a lot of people off, and The Devils was really extreme for the time - at least as far as a biggish-budget major-studio-funded film was concerned. So it became a political football even before it was released, and a lot of the coverage at the time was more about that than it was about the film's actual content. |
#314
| |||
| |||
Quote:
|
#315
| ||||
| ||||
Just about every critic hated Peeping Tom when that was press screened, ruining Michael Powell's career but now that, just like The Devils, is now regarded as one of the greatest British films ever made.
__________________ |
#316
| |||
| |||
Quote:
For instance, the more expensive and truly terrible The Queen's Guards, made the following year, probably did more direct damage to his bankability - but that film really has been buried and forgotten. |
#317
| ||||
| ||||
Yeah,a case of it's too handy just to blame the 'repugnant horror movie' Michael.
__________________ Teddy, I'm a Scotch drinker - you know that. I just have the occasional brandy when I'm not drinking. |
#318
| ||||
| ||||
Quote:
__________________ |
#319
| |||
| |||
Quote:
Much though the critics would prefer otherwise, it's very rare indeed for bad reviews to kill a career - in fact, I'm really struggling to think of an uncontentious example. But an expensive flop is far more threatening, and in Powell's case he had two in a row. In fact, he hadn't had a bona fide hit in ages. But just imagine what might have happened if Peeping Tom had been released a mere six months later, in the wake of Psycho. In fact, if its distributors had any nous, they should have reissued it and cashed in on one of 1960's biggest hits, but they'd long since washed their hands of it, presumably in the hope that The Queen's Guards would pay off. Whoops. |
#320
| |||
| |||
Quote:
|
Like this? Share it using the links below! |
| |