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Dreadfully Good Scares From The Brits

 

Christopher Lee - iconic figure of the horror genreIt's Hammer time as the American Cinematheque celebrates The Golden Age of British Horror, 1955-1975. For two decades, Hammer Film Productions, along with other British purveyors of terror, such as Anglo-Amalgamated, Amicus, Independent Artists and Tigon, unleashed a steady string of scary B-movies, often drawing from the same gothic literary sources that Universal had success with in the 1930s.

 

The three-week series opens with a pair of films directed by Terence Fisher and starring genre stalwart Peter Cushing. "The Revenge of Frankenstein" (1958) and "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed" (1969) both feature Cushing as the infamous doctor whose ghoulish experiments lead to horrific results.

Hammer Horrors keep popping up long after their screen heydayThe other iconic actor associated with British horror is Christopher Lee. Long before he was Saruman in "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy or Count Dooku in the most recent "Star Wars" films, the towering Lee was best known as Dracula. After playing the monster in "The Curse of Frankenstein" in 1957, Lee stepped into the signature bloodsucking role - previously made famous by Bela Lugosi - the following year. "Horror of Dracula," released as simply "Dracula" in Britain and directed by Fisher, made full use of Lee's menacing 6-foot-5 frame, introducing us to a sexier, more physical version of the toothsome Transylvanian.

Peter Cushing - ultimate cool in the face of incredible dangerCushing costars as the intrepid Dr. Van Helsing, matching Lee's bravado in one of the many films in which the duo would square off. Tame by today's standards, the film was gorier than audiences were accustomed to at the time and helped establish Hammer's imprimatur as genre master. Lee also stars in "Taste the Blood of Dracula" (1970).

This story in full appears in the LOS ANGELES TIMES