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Thursday, March 10, 2022

HANDS OF THE RIPPER

Bryan, Porter and Rees
HANDS OF THE RIPPER (1971). Director: Peter Sasdy. 

Dr. Pritchard (Eric Porter), who has just begun studying the teachings of Freud, decides to take in a 17-year-old orphan named Anna (Angharad Rees) after her guardian, a medium (Dora Bryan of No Trace), is horribly murdered. Pritchard, who may have ulterior motives for taking in the pretty young thing, makes Anna part of his household, despite the fact that she apparently slaughtered her guardian. Incredibly, Pritchard keeps Anna around as the bloody slayings continue. He later learns that Anna is the daughter of Jack the Ripper! 

Daughter of the Ripper: Angharad Rees
Hands of the Ripper is an exciting, well-acted Hammer horror film with handsome appointments and some very gruesome murder sequences. Rees is perfect casting as the angelic-looking gal who can become quite savage and sadistic at the drop of a hat, and Porter makes an effective shrink with less common sense than most. Marjorie Rhodes is fine as the housekeeper Mrs. Bryant, and there are also excellent performances from Dora Bryan, Margaret Rawlings as another medium, Lynda Baron as the prostitute Long Liz, and especially Derek Godfrey as Dysart, someone who wanted to deflower Anna for cash but is blackmailed by Pritchard into finding out the girl's origins. Keith Bell is Pritchard's son, Michael, and Jane Merrow [The Horror at 37,000 Feet] is his lovely blind fiancee, Laura. There's an excellent climax in the whispering gallery of St. Paul's Cathedral -- or rather a replica of it. Some of the gore was cut in the U.S. to give it an R rating, but this is the uncut version. 

Verdict: Quite classy Hammer horror film. ***. 
 

2 comments:

  1. Need to see this one. I am sure Hammer's trademark bright red bloody technicolor is well used here!
    -C

    ReplyDelete
  2. You can say that again! Good picture!

    ReplyDelete