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As we've noted before in these (virtual) pages, the vampire in cinema has taken many forms and many guises. Some have been pretty outré. Case in point is the following otherwise standard Universal-International fright film of the Fifties, wherein the bloodsucker packs a six-gun and wears chaps instead of a tux. In fact, the whole haunted proceedings take place not in Europe but, instead, in the Old West. That's because...
By DON MANKOWSKI One day in 1968, when we were still kids, my brother and I went to see this science fiction picture that had just hit the local theaters, and we knew that we were late for the showing. When we got there, it seemed as if somehow we hadnt missed the start of the movie. There was this travelogue or documentary playing. Looked like anthropology or zoology, something about a community of apes, probably a National Geographic or a Mutual of Omaha production. No dialogue and not much going on, so it had to be something educational. Certainly not the film wed turned out to see, which was something about space exploration and the future. Whatever this was, it certainly wasnt--whats the title of the movie exactly?--"Space Something 2000." We were expecting Jane Goodall or Marlin Perkins to walk into the scene and tell us what was going on with these silly apes. But then, something very odd appeared. Good grief, what the heck is that thing?
Okay, by now youve figured out that we had missed the opening of the indicated movie, which was 2001: A Space Odyssey. We hadnt read the book and werent aware that the film began at a point several million years in the past. We didnt know that the human actors in impeccable ape costumes would be so very convincing. I shut up and watched the film, and found it a memorable experience, although most early audiences for it left screenings scratching their heads. Ever been so fooled by the opening scenes? It reminded me of an earlier time. When my parents took us to the local drive-in to see a bill of horror movies, the last of which was to be Curse Of The Undead. I must have been at the concession hut during the opening titles, or else I had blinked and missed them, because this was clearly a western unspooling on the huge screen in glorious black-and-white. Now, westerns were, in my young viewpoint, a legitimate art form, though never my favorite, and certainly not when you were expecting a horror film. I groused softly for several minutes before I caught on to the fact that the film was something quite unexpected" a horror-western and a most interesting chapter in the history of vampire cinema!
At dawn, Dr. John Carter and his daughter Dolores ride into a western town in a horse-drawn wagon. Nearly every home has at least one wreath hanging on a door or window. Death has been a frequent visitor to these parts. Inside, a young woman, Cora, lies ill, attended by her family and Dan Young, the local minister. The doctor enters the room and examines the patient at once. Doc Carter is baffled. So many deaths! Hed only just witnessed another. Its unheard of, "an epidemic affecting only young girls. If I were superstitious, Id say it was more like a curse." His medicine has been ineffective compared to Dans prayers. "Im almost tempted to throw away my black bag," he confesses to the preacher, "and come over to your side." "Youve always been on my side," replies Dan, offering reassurance. Fortunately, Cora is resting comfortably, so the guardians can take a break. A sudden, terrifying shriek from her room has the party hastening back. There, a shade flaps noisily before an open window. Cora lies sprawled across her bed...dead. As the doctor and Dolores sadly depart, Dan notes two small wounds on Coras throat. When Doc Carter arrives home, his son Tim awaits, quite agitated. "Look what Buffer done to me! That dirty, stinkin son of a snake! Im gonna kill im, Paw." Buffer is a bully who owns the neighboring ranch. It appears that hes blocked up a stream upon which the Carter ranch depends. Tim went to break the dam so that they could get water. For his trouble, he was beaten up and fired at as he fled he shows a bullet hole in his hat. Tim believes that Buffer wants to "dry us up and buy our ranch." This assertion gets Dolores militant as well, so Doc Carter urges calm and says hell see the sheriff about the matter. "A lot a man like Buffer cares about the law," pouts Tim. "Thats not the point," answers Doc. "The law cares about us."
Bill, the sheriff, promises some action, but admits that there isnt much that he can do absent a clear violation of the law. Even so, hes undermanned. Unnoticed, a mysterious cowboy clad entirely in black is watching the proceedings. The bald, stout, sawed-off Buffer is all bluster, cowardly when not backed up by his four hired hands. Confronted at the saloon, he ridicules the sheriff, but gently enough so as not to provoke him to action. Though Sheriff Bill puts up a tough front, he is basically begging for the avoidance of violence. Yet, just now and then its Buffer who tries to make the peace and the sheriff who provokes but only for an instant. "You block my duties," says the lawman, "I got two choices, arrest you or shoot you. Either one would suit me fine. Draw your gun or shut your mouth." Buffer claims that hes been misunderstood and wronged, and besides, they cant prove anything, and it all ends in a whiney, wimpy standoff. "Bill, I like you," cackles Buffer. "Lets drink to the Law." "Never mind drinkin to it, just respect it" is the response.
Theres a maddening air of futility about this film! Everywhere there are ambiguities that refuse resolution. Now, the screenplay is about as subtle as a mule kick: the characters dont show shades of gray so much as messy splotches of dark within the light and vice-versa. Well be noting more of this. It could be blamed upon inconsistent characterization, but based upon other off-kilter aspects of the film, Ill give the benefit of doubt and suggest that its deliberate, an attempt to create a nightmarish, illogical version of the Old West. The man in black rides through the night in apparent slow motion. Dan is trying to reason with Tim when Doc Carters wagon rolls up to his home. However, no one is driving; Carter drops from the perch. Dan inspects him. Hes a preacher, not a doctor, but knows that the patriarch is dead. Tim cries out, drops to his knees and weeps. Once he is able to speak, its clear whom he holds to blame. "Buffer!" He shrieks. "Ill kill him!" Dan notes the same peculiar neck wounds, then warns the boy against hasty action and promises justice as "Timmy" weeps on his sisters shoulder. Doc Carter is laid to rest in the family mausoleum, with Dan offering depressingly generic prayers. The man in black (whose name we will learn eventually as Drake Robey) watches the services, and enters the vault when the others have left. The mystery man slowly opens the coffin, looks into it and presumably climbs into it.
Our next look at the troubled family finds Dan, Dolores, and Tim relaxing at home by the fireplace, as if striving for normalcy. That is, until Tim is summoned by a ranch hand. A fence has been pulled down and cattle have disappeared. Tim at once suspects Buffer of sabotage and encroachment. He chooses to slip away without letting his sister or Dan know, heading for the saloon on a grim mission. Tim sits at the bar, consuming one shot of whiskey after another. When the bartender suggests that the lad is in danger of passing out, or possibly drowning, Tim smashes some glassware, brandishes his gun and demands more liquor. The sheriff enters and tries to calm him with a bit of ribald frontier wisdom. "A bartender is like a free gal. Shes bait for whoevers got a free buck, right?" Bill urges Tim not to do any harm to himself or his fathers good name. "Paws dead," pouts Tim. "Thats his good name: dead. Somebodys gonna pay for it." Ive gone out of my way to quote some of the extremely plummy dialogue in this screenplay, because I feel that it has to be "heard" to appreciate this very odd film. The script is dense with outrageous clichés and even more bizarre new turns-on-a-phrase. These must have sounded good to the screenwriter for a fleeting moment, but in execution, they never quite fit. It comes close to being a parody of a western script, though its played completely straight. Theres not the slightest attempt at humor in the film as produced. Buffer arrives, and we all know that hes going to goad the kid into a gunfight. Well, not entirely: he gives Tim a path out many times, both at the sheriffs prompting and some common sense of his own. "Dont you move," Tim orders the sheriff at gunpoint. "This gun dont care who it shoots...why dont you two stop this manure-spreadin? For all I know youre workin for him too."
Have I yet mentioned that the film features genteel vulgarities that tend to take one right out of the Old West, even the Hollywood version thereof? Heck, it might even cause you to miss the next darn cliché. "Im gonna give you a better chance than you gave my Paw," bellows Tim, awkwardly waving his pistol about. Buffer, directed by the sheriff, really does turn and try to walk out with just his grimace. Naturally, Tim wont let him go quietly. "Go on, walk out you yellow-belly," he calls. Bill warns. Buffer walks. Tim shouts. "Youre so scared you stink out loud." An extremely mixed metaphor perhaps, but the boy is drunk. Again, Bill warns. Buffer walks. Tim shouts. "Thats right you gutless hunk o coward." And again. "You no-good son of a saloon gal!" Uh-oh! That last is just too much. Mustve hit home and stung deeply. Buffer wheels about. Tim fires first, but badly, and is fatally hit by the villains return shot.
"You cheap !" are the boys last words. Im rather sorry he didnt last one word longer, but it probably wouldve been "polecat" or something equally inspired. Whatever, Tim Carters is probably the worst attempt at revenge ever to disgrace a western flick. Mourning her little sister, er, brother, Dolores sets about tacking up posters. "GUN WANTED: $100 for the death of a murderer." Just as fast as Dolores nails one, Sheriff Bill tears it down, promising to go on doing so if she does it again. She actually does, and he actually does a couple of times. Really. The man in black watches the exchanges in the distance. Buffer looks over a poster, and takes the opportunity to needle, feigning ignorance of her target. "Some day when you hear a big noise," weeps the doubly bereaved woman, "and you feel something hot rippin through your belly, then youll know exactly who that posters for!" The mysterious cowboy picks up one of the controversial posters and carries it into the saloon. Over a whiskey and a cigar, he studies it carefully. Buffer approaches him, nervously trying to laugh the matter off. "This posters me. Thought I was worth more than a hundred." The stranger is undeterred. He calmly states that if he takes the job, hell finish it - nothing personal. Buffers clearly in a panic and one of his sycophants tries to take action. The henchman fires at the interloper. Drake whirls and shoots the gun out of his attackers hand.
"Youre lucky I was shooting for nothing," he tells the man. "If money was on my gun Id have drilled a deep, bloody hole right between your eyes." Drakes response was so slow that you practically had time to refill your popcorn without missing anything. "For a man who was late with his draw you sure came out on top," stammers Buffer. "Thats the idea," offers Drake, brandishing his gun backhanded, (saying in effect "kiss my butt"). Supremely confident, the man in black fires off a parting cliche ("Only time will tell which one of us speaks the truth,") and departs. Drake Robey is an impressive figure in his spiffy black duds with Spanish-style hat. He wears a cocky expression between long sideburns, rather like a homicidal Elvis. Hed scare away Yul Brynners similar Westworld gunslinger, Ill bet. "He was so close a blind man couldnt miss," moans the shooter after Buffer orders him to collect his pay and get lost. "Then youre blind, cause a dead man aint never walked outta this saloon!" rages Buffer. Wrong again. Dan and Dolores clearly have some tender feelings towards one another, very proper ones that they rarely act upon. Again, this fits in nicely with the films ambivalent structure. The recent events will strain the relationship. Dan suggests that the hiring of a killer amounts to a deal with the Devil. "Youre a big man with words, but talkings not going to bring Tim and Pa back," she complains. "If the Devil can stop some of this pain in me then Ill pray to him." Knock-knock. Speak of the Devil: Drake Robey has arrived in response to Dolores advertising campaign. She introduces the stranger to Reverend Young. Drake reluctantly shakes the mans hand. A bit of jewelry on the ministers lapel buttonhole casts a harsh gleam into the gunslingers eyes. "Thats an unusual button you wear, Preacher. Never seen one like it."
"It was given to me when I was ordained," explains Dan, of the tiny bit of religious wood sculpture set in silver metal. "Im told the cross was carved from a thorn found at the site of the crucifixion." Dan expresses his revulsion at the idea of a hired killer. Drake suggests that he get his nose out of the Good Book and see life as it is. Dolores has been seriously wronged. "If governments were involved wed call it war. Why dont you think of me as a professional soldier come to help Miz Carter?" Dan finds this comparison odious. Robey states that before he takes on a job, he investigates thoroughly. "Moneys not enough. I must carry my clients anger in me. It helps me to justify my actions." Dolores hires Drake, even lets him stay at the villa over Dans strenuous objections. The bewildered clergyman is left pondering his cruciform lapel button and its effect on the stranger. Its an impressive scene, in a cockeyed way. Despite a wicked smirk throughout, Drake Robey seems a lot more persuasive than the righteous Dan. Drake steps from his new quarters out into the night, and inexplicably materializes in Dolores bedroom! He bends over the sleeping woman in the classic Dracula pose, and after some caressing, applies the bite. Drake Robey, the black-clad gunfighter is a vampire. It is he who has drained the lives of the young women of the neighboring town.
Now the target of an assassin, Buffer appeals to the sheriff and the minister for help. The preacher, has little sympathy, lets Buffer have it with both verbal barrels. "As much as its against my calling, I hate you." This startles the thug, but Dan continues. "I hate you because you and your kind turn everything good into everything evil." "Youre worse than Drake Robey--at least hell kill you fast. If you cant buy what you want you torture slow so you can get the full pleasure of your victims suffering." Having thus vented, Dan sighs. "No matter how we feel about you, if we didnt try to help wed be as bad as you." Dan devises a plan wherein Buffer must not only lay low, but also put up five thousand dollars as security against any further mischief to the Carter ranch. "Since gold is your religion. Thats where were going to hit you," concludes the minister, hoping that this arrangement will satisfy Dolores and that she will send Drake on his bloody way. That night, Dolores experiences troubled sleep, a bloody throat wound in evidence. In the Carter mausoleum, Drake rests in his coffin, immobile. (Photographed to resemble a bloated leech, hes here reminiscent of Max Schreck in his Nosferatu box.)
The next morning, Dolores receives Dan. Though she seems to him to be in a better mood, her maid explains that she wont eat, the fire is turned up, and she wants her shawl. Its all very reminiscent of Mina Harkers behavior in Dracula. Dan reports that Buffer has promised to behave. "We squeezed him until he hollered like a stuck pig." Dolores calmly agrees to release Robey. Dan is glad to hear this, but puzzled by her change in attitude. "I expected to have a real go-at-it with you. Here you sit like all the life is out of you." She refuses his offers to take her to another town to see a doctor. When Robey reports for work, Dan calmly discharges him with the ladys concurrence. The vigilante goes quietly. It would appear that somethings going on. That night, Dan and Dolores examine a box of legal papers in search of Doc Carters will. The papers tell Dan that the Carter ranch was part of a Spanish land grant, sold out by the Family Robles after some tragedy befell them. Dan leaves, taking along the papers for further study. Taking advantage of the preachers absence, Drake approaches Dolores. He exerts a subtle hypnotic influence over her. Referring to her as the only person whos treated him decently, he asks her to rehire him. His story is that his daylight vision is failing him, not a good thing for a gunfighter. He offers to ride the range at night to keep Buffer and his cronies in line, and Dolores agrees. Drake has no problem with moving into a caretaker cottage by the cemetery. "The dead dont bother me, its the living who give me trouble." "Dont you worry about Dan," Dolores reassures him, "once I explain things hell go along." That statement stings especially, because we know its true. The deed box has a false bottom, discovered when the preacher clumsily knocks it on the floor of his study. Within he finds an old diary, dated 1860. In it, Don Miguel Robles relates his familys tragic history, in the form of a plaintive prayer to the Blessed Virgin.
What we all feared was a plague taking our loved ones (writes Don Miguel) was in reality an evil created by the Devil. My eldest son, Drago Robles, was the instrument of the Devil. It transpires that Don Miguel sent Drago to Madrid on business, but refused to allow the sons wife, Isabella, to accompany him. The lonely wife turned to Dragos brother, Roberto for companionship and love, (and probably some more serious stuff off-screen). Drago returned, caught the two of them in an embrace, and at once killed his brother with a dagger. Thus, illicit romance and incest drove the young man to what Don Miguel terms "the unforgivable sin of fratricide." Conscience-stricken, Drago prayed at his brothers burial vault for forgiveness, night and day. When left alone, Drago took his own life with the same knife. In the flashback that accompanies the narration, Don Miguels son, Drago Robles is the very image of Drake Robey. The equally-unforgivable sin of suicide was followed by the mysterious deaths of the youngest daughters of many families across the countryside. Don Miguel ignored the warnings of the priest for too long, and one day a fiend dressed in black attacked his widowed daughter-in-law as she slept. The father responded to the attack, but the truth was more shocking than he could have imagined. And then I saw his face: it was Drago, who six months before had died by his own hand. Isabella dead, blood drained. (Drago Robles actually wears a black cape in this incarnation.) Don Miguel went to the mausoleum and used the dagger (quite a workout for that particular knife) to "pin the heart of the accursed one to his coffin." But it was in vain: he was following an old wives tale (literally), and his priest later informed him that only a wooden stake could destroy the undead son. Indeed, his next examination of the coffin reveals only the dagger.
Looking quite familiar is the face in an 1850 portrait of Drago Robles found by Dan in the lining of the old book. (Apparently, Drago has returned after the passage of a generation or two, and the current events take place circa 1885, though it could be as late as 1910 or thereabout.) Meanwhile, Drake Robey visits the sleeping Dolores. He kisses her and speaks of his love for her, but departs without having fed upon her blood. This suggests a true emotional attachment unusual for a movie vampire of the time, further fuel for the films ambivalent fire. Its as if Drake needs for Dolores to come to him instead of the other way around, so he withdraws to the courtyard and summons her there in a sleepwalk. However, the sheriff interrupts the tryst. He escorts Dolores back home, but insists that she discharge Robey. As the sheriff rides a lonely vigil, he is attacked in the harsh chiaroscuro moonlight by Drake, who drains him of his life. In this world, the victims of the vampire do not rise again. Vampirism is acquired only by evil behavior in life. Once again, Preacher Dan must plead for calm after Bills body is discovered, but that act is wearing thin. Dan unwisely takes a stroll in the night air as he broods, and he is forced to run from an unseen but tangibly felt presence. Its Drake. The pursuer however is halted when the moonlit shadow of the churchs cross chances to fall upon him, giving Dan time to retreat within. The vampire, however, boldly enters the study. Of the portrait, he remarks, "Remarkable likeness, isnt it: too bad you found it." Drake is determined that Dolores should not see Dans evidence. He tells Dan how the sheriff intervened, and why he died.
"Most religious fanatics arent [afraid of dying]," states Drake, "but how they struggle when that last moment arrives." "Now that I know what Im up against, Im no longer afraid. Having faith strengthens the weaknesses of man," offers Dan. "What I am is not my own choice," rages the vampire. "You should pity me, not judge me in my torment." This peculiar plea for compassionate understanding is probably unique for a screen vampire. "All I ever wanted of life was to live and love." "How can you speak of love when all you do is kill?" "I kill to survive!" "Why dont you call that force by its right name: your force is the Devil!" Drake paints himself as a victim of cruel fate. Dan pronounces him beyond Gods mercy, but does offer to pray for him. Its an inept, but vigorous philosophical clash of ideas about life and death, mortality and morality. You judge who gets the better lines. Alas, it ends in a physical scuffle over the chest and its treasures. Drake chokes the minister, but runs off when the housekeepers burst into the room. Dan retains the diary, though the map and the portrait are gone with Robey.
Although shown the diary the next morning, Dolores refuses to believe Dans bizarre story without the other evidence. Dan takes her to the old mausoleum, removes the coffin of Drago Robles from its niche and opens it. Only the silver dagger is within, exactly as described by Don Miguel Robles in the diary. Dan knows that Drago/Drake is resting somewhere within, but when he eyes the coffins of Dolores father and brother, the woman snaps, ordering him out. He departs, promising to return with a court order permitting him to open those other coffins. Dolores faints from the stress, and indeed, the vampire rises from one of the contested coffins. Talk about being proven wrong! After his usual caresses, Drake feeds upon Dolores blood, and then carries her home. Does Drake plan to keep Dolores alive forever, or to drain her and move on eventually? Can she join indeed him in un-death? Can he become human again? These questions will remain.
Later, Drake calls upon Dolores. She remembers only going to the mausoleum and waking up back in her bed. Drake shows her the old map of the original boundary lines. The disputed stream is in fact, hers. Drake plays helpful to win her over, asks for money to build new fences once hes given Buffer the bums rush. At the saloon, Drake breaks up Buffers poker game, shows him the map, and declares that the man has been sitting on five hundred acres of Miz Dolores land all along, including the damned stream sorry, the dammed stream. Naturally, Buffer bellows. He feels that the gunman and the preacher are conspiring to take his land. "I never thought Id live to see the day when a preacher and a hired gun would get married!" "Never fails," taunts Robey, "the bigger the crook the louder he hollers for the law to protect him." Dan advises Buffer not to tangle with Drake. Again, the man behaves reasonably, but is ultimately forced into a duel. Drake demands that Buffer call the turn, then begins his walk. Buffer calls, shoots first but is killed. Dying, he swears he hit the man first. We believe him.
Again with Dolores, Drake explains that he actually turned his back on the fight and meant to walk off, and only prevailed because Buffers shot struck the cigar case in his pocket. Wringing sympathy, he does manage to sound like a man in love. However, when the woman mentions Dans determination to open the Carter family caskets, Drake shows concern. Drake promises not to kill Dan, only to scare him off. The Carters housekeeper Dora, having overheard the last exchanges, goes to Dan to warn him that the stranger has his name on a bullet, or worse. Dan makes a fateful decision, after gazing at the cross atop the church that saved him upon one occasion, and at the smaller version in his stickpin. He ventures out to meet the marauder. In the street, Drake publicly suggests to Dan that he forgo his court order regarding the coffins. The preacher, wearing an incongruent gun belt, refuses. "Preacher, you give me no choice." "I dont intend to," replies Dan, with just enough quaver to be believable, "You mean you want to shoot it out with me?" asks the vampire, unable to suppress his smirk, "You know that you havent got a chance?" Taking a big chance on some awkward last words, Dan replies, "My Bossll decide that." "Very well. Since I have the edge with the gun, Ill give you the advantage - you call the turn." The supremely confident Drake turns and walks.
Only then does the preacher load his chamber. Its a dramatic walk and a long one as the tension builds. Reverend Dan outwits him, shoots him in the back. Nahhh, thats what he should have done, but instead, the duel plays out. The guns report. Dolores, just riding in, screams, "Dan!" (Its somehow comforting to know that her first thought was of him.) Naturally, Dan gets off the first shot. Of course, Drake fires back ¼ but wildly. Hes wounded. Drake agonizes and drops. His writhing body shimmers, fades and disappears. We recall the old diarys statement that wood was required to vanquish the vampire as Dan retrieves his small wooden cross from the deflated black clothes. He took it out of the buttonhole and used it in the gun, thus fashioning his own projectile "stake." Certainly, the carved cross and any blessing applied to the artifact must have increased its potency against the evil one. (Please note that the artifact was not claimed to be an actual piece of Christs cross, as some reviewers explain it. But again, ambiguity: a thorn found at the site of the crucifixion could be commonplace unless it dropped from a famous, makeshift crown.) Arm in arm, Dan and Dolores walk slowly towards the church. Happily ever after? The sinister music never yields to something more conventional.
The cast is serviceable, but indifferent. None of them can be said to rise above the material. Just as well: a single good performance here could have rendered the others ludicrous in comparison! Michael Pate (Drake Robey) played character roles, usually as a villain. He does have some stage experience, and has a very nice turn at the very beginning of Joseph L. Mankiewicz Julius Caesar (1953) as Flavius the ill-fated tribune who is first to speak out against the ascendant dictator. Hes here a memorable anti-hero, suggestive of Paladin. Right up until the end, youre not quite sure that he wont vanquish the real bad guys and ride off until hes needed again. It could almost work. Eric Fleming (Preacher Dan) had just begun a stint on the television series Rawhide. He died young at 41, drowning on a film set. Kathleen Crowley (Dolores) also specialized in westerns. John Hoyt (Doc Carter) has an impressive film and television résumé. Often cast as a kindly doctor, he served time as medical officer aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise before DeForest Kelly got that job on a permanent basis: you can see him in the Star Trek pilot film with Jeffrey Hunter. He was also in the 1953 Julius Caesar.
Bruce Gordon (Buffer) is forever remembered as Frank Nitti, recurring gangster on The Untouchables television series. He plays it pretty much the same here: You aint got nothing on me, coppers! Gordon appeared with Michael Pate in Roger Cormans Tower Of London (1962). Edwin Parker, who plays one of Buffers henchmen was to become posthumously famous when research revealed that he had often doubled for Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney, and other Universal monster stars in scenes involving exertion or dangerous stunts in the classics of the 1940s. Most notably, in Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943), Parker stood in frequently for Bela Lugosi as the Frankenstein Monster, and actually logged more screen time than did Bela. The film features an obtrusively eerie score by Irving Gertz, heavy with strings and "Theremin." Producer Joseph Gershenson was a film musician and probably contributed. As I said, the film thrives on ambiguity. There are undeniable homoerotic themes throughout. Tim, Dolores high voiced, baby faced brother often emotes like a woman, and, not surprisingly, is treated as one. Tims first extended speech goes: "Paw, he had his men hold me down and give me a body-beatin. And then after they had their fun..." Buffer to the sheriff: "Doc Carters boy moves into my land, starts breakin things up. What am I supposed to do, hold him in my arms and kiss im? He threatened me thats what he did. I got a right to muss im up a bit."
As the saloon dialogue by these tough critters is tidied up to an insipid degree, these mild statements speak volumes! When we first see Robey enter a coffin in the Carter family burial vault, the suggestion is planted that its the very same casket in which Doc Carter has just been laid to rest. It would have been pretty tight in there. Well, maybe Robey took over an identical, empty box, but the director certainly took no pains to avoid this suggestion of homonecrophilia. Was Robeys curse visited upon him for the sins of fratricide and suicide, or something truly "unspeakable"? Actually, were told that he confines his attention to women, and only slays men when required for his own safety. Note, however, that Doc Carter refers to "young girls." Not just girls, not young women, but young girls. The diary speaks of "the youngest daughters." (Remember, in the Old West a woman had to start her family by the time she was sixteen, because shed be an old hag of thirty before she knew it. In this context, young girl would imply very young indeed.) Now, Dolores Carter seems to be (shall we say) old enough to vote (were such allowed for women in those days), and Cora, the first victim of whom were aware seems post-adolescent, but the screenplay does plant that disturbing hint that the vampires preferred prey might be children.
The character names could be taken as biblical and mythological references. Drago is the dragon. His casket bears the dates 1826-1859, indicating he died at 33, the same age as did Preacher Dans Redeemer. Dolores suggests "she who sorrows." Daniel, of course, is the naïve fellow in a den of lions. Robey is introduced as the man in black, a mysterious elemental force--but the writers didnt take the easy way out and keep him thus. The vampire gunslinger proves to be a most engaging rogue, dealing out justice to the dastardly bad guys of the piece. We can see why the leading lady has conflicted feelings, what with the sheriff is powerless and the preacher is ineffective much of the time. A most lethal gunfighter, he lets you draw first. You see, it doesnt matter if you shoot him before he shoots you; hot lead doesnt harm him, and he can afford to be slow. Though cliché dialog abounds, the script has some amusingly effective new lines. "You'd be surprised how little influence you have when you're not around," says the vampire to the minister at one point. Can you say that Robey is a Dracula knock-off, when the storys setting probably pre-dates Dracula's invasion of Britain? I wonder if Professor Van Helsings own notebooks referenced the strange case of vampirism years ago in the American territories. In the film, the time of day is rarely clear. There are always long shadows, whether of dawn, dusk or the moon. Like the vampire characters in The Vampire's Ghost and The Vampire, whom I covered earlier, Robey can move about in the daytime, although he does admit that his eyes trouble him in the sun, and hence he prefers to work at night.
The telegraphed twist ending with is very much in the E.C. comics tradition. Tension is prolonged when the draw goes on longer than expected. I was afraid that both participants would be out of even rifle range before Preacher Dan made the call. Its quite a stretch to call this a good film, but it certainly deserves credit for trying something different and above all, something unsettling. Maybe it wasnt the first such cinematic hybrid, not would it be the last, but Id maintain that its still the best horror-Western. The best way to see this film is as I first did, on the tail end of a drive-in all-nighter. Dawn was breaking just as the vampire was vanquished. The three films Ive discussed in this series--The Vampires Ghost (1941), The Vampire (1957) and Curse Of The Undead (1959)--all feature vampires divorced from their standard setting: respectively, theyre contemporary adventure, speculative science fiction and old western. Their vampires break the rules in being ambient in the daylight hours, although all shun the sun for one reason or another. Each had a womans hand in its story (respectively Leigh Brackett, Pat Fielder and Mildred Dein). Each of them rewards an occasional viewing. (In addition to HORROR-WOOD, Don Mankowski has published articles in Cult Movies and Van Helsings Journal. Check his Webpage for details.) Thanks, Don. Agreed, Curse Of The Undead is not great flick and it abounds with about the most hackneyed B-western dialogue and characterizations imaginable, and its plot has holes large enough to drive a six-horse hearse through. But it's certainly a different approach indeed to the filmic vampire formula, one that is strangely sincere (in hard contrast to tripe like Billy The Kid Vs. Dracula). And it does have a dark and bleak mood to it that gives the production a kind of gothic validity. Definitely, it's worth viewing. Article copyright © Don Mankowski. Screen captures courtesy of the exclusive DVD version of this film, available from Creepy Classics Video. |