Monday, January 15, 2018

Berserk: A Schlock Classic Film Review


BERSERK ! (1967): Film review by Dan West

    They certainly don't make 'em like this anymore, and, depending on the viewer, this just might be a good thing.  Berserk! (1967), starring Academy Award winner turned Pepsi Cola pitch woman, Joan Crawford, is, for lack of a better term, completely Berserk! Part murder mystery, part horror film, part Joan Crawford melodrama, part fetishistic historical record of traditional circus acts, the film is a schizophrenic mishmash of horror and camp that is a head-scratching delight for those who might be up for that sort of deadpan lunacy.
   The festivities begin when Gaspar the Great's highwire tightrope act is literally cut short, resulting in an impromptu lynching before a shocked circus audience and a fantastic opening credit sequence in which the swaying corpse wipes across the screen to reveal the film's apt title. Now that's the way to start a goddamn movie!

As it turns out, a gruesome hanging death is apparently good for circus business. The public's morbid curiosity proves insatiable, resulting in booming ticket sales. Joan Crawford, as Monica Rivers, the owner and ringmaster of The Great Rivers Circus, is a shrewd businesswoman who knows the monetary value of exploiting the death of her former tightrope performer to achieve maximum ticket sales. Is she responsible for the death? Is Joan/Monica that cutthroat? Soon a ridiculously jaunty Scotland Yard detective comes a sniffin' around asking that very same question, but not before we are introduced to Gaspar the Great's ambitious and cocky replacement, Frank Hawkins aka: The Magnificent Hawkins.  Cougar Joan/Monica quickly develops a lusty eye for this new daredevil beefcake who fancies performing his tightrope act in a black hood, while hovering above a board of deadly bayonet blades below. Sexy! It's a tightrope turn-on and Joan wants to bone!

    These macabre developments do not sit well with circus manager, Dorando (played by British character actor, and horror film regular, Michael Gough,) but that's okay, as he is quickly dispatched with a Herschell Gordon Lewis-style-spike- through-the-head-death. This particular kill scene unfortunately promises similar over-the-top antics, which, sadly for the audience, fail to materialize on camera. The main beef that most horror fans might have with this movie is that several potential gory punches are pulled, resulting in off-camera mayhem that ultimately leaves its audience feeling somewhat cheated.  Gruesome though the deaths are, a bit more of the good old spewing hemoglobin would have certainly been welcome. While there may be a lack of blood splatter at times, there is certainly no lack of Joan Crawford smoking cigarettes, wearing horribly garish, monochromatic outfits and attempting to look half her age/sexy. Ultimately, the dark, strategically-placed lighting that attempts to shroud Ms. Crawford in flattering, soft focus only seems to exemplify her attempts to appear 30 years younger.

    But, to Crawford's credit she NEVER sells the movie short and never once gives the impression that this film's subject matter is somehow beneath a star of her (former) stature. Crawford could always sell these pictures ... through sheer tenacity, ego, or just plain old-fashioned professionalism, she never betrayed these later films as the atrocities that some critics might have made them out to be. Perhaps that is why these last, more exploitative films in her movie cannon remain so enjoyable, if only for being oddities staining the career of a once great starlet and Hollywood legend.  I mean come on: Straight Jacket, Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, Berserk!, Trog ... I LOVE these films. I'm as much a fan of Mildred Pierce as any film buff, but if I had to choose between a viewing of Mildred Pierce, or Straight Jacket ... well, call me crazy, but I would have to be put in a Straight Jacket for that kind of cinematic judgment call.

   The fact that this film was shot with the cooperation of an actual working circus will not be lost on any viewer. No fewer than five full-length circus acts are trotted out as filler that seem to stretch the movie's 1 hour and 36 minute running time to something more akin to 3 hours and forty minutes, (spoiler alert: the best act is Phyllis Allen and Her Intelligent Poodles!)
   There is a lot to like here for any fan of oddball cinema. The eyesore ensembles worn by Joan Crawford are reason enough to watch this film. John Waters himself would envy these garishly grotesque gowns: the sparkling vomit/mint green evening dress with matching gloves and handbag that look as if they were stolen from a fashion forward refugee from the city of Oz, the Jack-o-lantern orange monstrosity that could sizzle the irises of a color-blind viewer wearing arc welder's goggles. And what the fuck is up with that insane Little Red Riding Hood cape? 

    The production values are high, offering crisp and colorful cinematography, great art direction and a strong cast of notable British Character actors.
    Though the film is crafted as a who done it? it actually plays out as more of a what the fuck is it? There is one particular scene in which the abnormally dapper, Eric Idle-esque police inspector is conducting an interview with Bruno, a dwarf dressed in a British Bobby's uniform, that resembles something straight out of a Monty Python sketch.

    The most WTF, David Lynch style moment in this film, however, is reserved for the sudden and somewhat bizarre musical number performed, quite out of the blue, by the cast of sideshow performers: Human skeleton, bearded lady, strong man, dwarf. It is a delightful, if truly puzzling moment in a movie chock full of them. Berserk! is not a great movie by any stretch of the imagination, but by bad horror film standards, this is a movie that is both horrendous and spectacular at the same time.   For fans of Crawford's late career schlock escapades like Straight Jacket and Trog, Berserk! is an absolute must see!