Berserk! Explained

Berserk!
Director:Jim O'Connolly
Producer:Herman Cohen
Starring:Joan Crawford
Ty Hardin
Diana Dors
Michael Gough
Judy Geeson
Cinematography:Desmond Dickinson
Editing:Raymond Poulton
Music:John Scott
Distributor:Columbia Pictures
Runtime:96 min.
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Gross:$3,195,000[1]

Berserk! is a 1967 British horror-thriller film directed by Jim O'Connolly and starring Joan Crawford, Ty Hardin, Diana Dors and Judy Geeson. The screenplay was written by Herman Cohen and Aben Kandel.

Berserk! marks Crawford's penultimate feature-film appearance.

Plot

Monica and Albert own a travelling circus that tours England. Monica is ringmistress. Albert is business manager. During one performance, tightrope walker Gaspar the Great dies when his rope breaks. Police believe someone tampered with it, but they can't say who. Later, Monica predicts Gaspar's death will yield great publicity and bigger audiences. Albert is shocked by her insensitivity. He asks her to buy out his share of the circus, but she is unable. Instead, she replaces Gaspar with daring, handsome tightrope artist Frank Hawkins. He is renowned for performing his act over a carpet of sharp bayonets without a net. Monica is impressed.

Shortly afterwards, Albert is found murdered. The troupe suspect Monica. Hawkins, who witnessed her leaving Albert's trailer just before his body was discovered, attempts blackmail. He demands a share of the circus for his silence. She agrees. In time, after a successful tour of performances, Monica's daughter Angela suddenly shows up. She has recently been expelled from school. Monica hires Angela to perform in a knife-throwing act. Matilda, another circus performer, unsuccessfully attempts to seduce Hawkins and Monica becomes jealous. Later, Matilda is killed when a magician's trick involving the sawing of a woman in half goes wrong.

A few evenings later, during Hawkins' high-wire performance, Angela is spotted throwing a knife, striking him in the back. He falls from his tightrope onto the bayonets and is killed. Angela confesses and reveals her motive, that it was all Monica's fault because she had ignored her and was absent throughout her childhood. The circus murders were attempts to eliminate the people who consumed Monica's time and attention. She then tries to kill her mother but is stopped. While trying to escape capture, she is electrocuted by a live wire outside the circus tent during a rainstorm. Monica sobs inconsolably over her daughter's body.

Cast

Production

It was the first of a new deal that Herman Cohen had signed with Columbia Pictures. In August 1966, Joan Crawford signed to star, with filming to begin in October in London.[2] Cohen stated that the script was written with Crawford in mind.[3]

Crawford described her role in the film as "mistress of the ceremonies, lock stock and barrel. She's colorful, she's exciting, she's the most definite dame I've ever played. She knows what she wants and she gets it."[3]

Cohen wanted to cast Crawford's daughter Christina Crawford as Angela, but Joan vetoed the idea,[4] and Judy Geeson played the role instead.[5] Diana Dors played a key support role.[6]

Crawford claimed that the filmmakers wanted to title the film Circus of Blood or Circus of Fear, but she insisted on Berserk! "and I got my way in the end."[7] The title was changed in April 1967.[8]

Release

Box office

Box office receipts for Berserk! were considerable.[9] In North America, the film grossed more than $1,100,000 and ranked #85 on Varietys list of top money makers of 1968.[10] Box office receipts overseas nearly doubled that amount at $2,095,000.[11] This made Berserk! the most successful film that Herman Cohen had produced.[9]

Critical reception

Howard Thompson wrote a mostly negative review in The New York Times, comparing it unfavorably to Circus of Horrors, but also commented, "It's also hard to make a hopeless movie with a circus background and sawdust aroma. This is the one solid thing the picture has going for it—the intriguing workaday routine of circus folk and some good, spangly ring acts, all handsomely conveyed in excellent color photography. And under the reasonable direction of Jim O'Connolly, the film does project a kind of defiant suspense that dares you not to sit there, see who gets it next and, finally, why." Thompson stated that Crawford "... is professional as usual and certainly the shapeliest ringmaster ever to handle a ring microphone."[12]

Lawrence Quirk wrote in Hollywood Screen Parade that "[Crawford] is all over the picture, radiant, forceful, authoritative, a genuine movie star whose appeal never diminishes."[13]

Home media

Berserk! was released as a manufacture-on-demand Region 1 DVD on 6 September 2011, available online through the Warner Archive Collection and ClassicFlix in the U.S. only.

Mill Creek Entertainment released the film along with Strait-Jacket (1964) as a double-feature Blu-ray on 2 October 2018.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Big Rental Films of 1968", Variety, 8 January 1969 p. 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.
  2. 'Bonnie and Clyde' to RollMartin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 18 Aug. 1966: A10.
  3. 'Her Crawfordship' Conquers EnglandMarks, Sally K. Los Angeles Times 9 Jan. 1967: D21.
  4. John Hamilton, The British Independent Horror Film 1951–70 Hemlock Books 2013 p. 181-185
  5. MOVIE CALL SHEET: 'Charlie' Next Film for LizaMartin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 21 Oct. 1966: C16.
  6. Stephen. Vagg. Filmink. A Tale of Two Blondes: Diana Dors and Belinda Lee. September 7, 2020.
  7. Joan Crawford Can Still Cry on CueOakes, Philip. Los Angeles Times 2 Sept. 1969: E14.
  8. Italian Film for Virna LisiMartin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 10 April 1967: C29.
  9. Web site: Herman Cohen » Attack of the Monster Movie Makers: Part 6 of 6. 3 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303212822/http://www.hermancohen.com/interview-attack6.html. 3 March 2016. dead.
  10. "The Top Box-Office Hits of 1968", Variety Weekly, 8 January 1969.
  11. Herman Cohen Production Papers for Berserk!
  12. News: Movie Review - Berserk - Circus Chiller - NYTimes.com. The New York Times . 11 January 1968 . 3 March 2016 . Thompson . Howard .
  13. Quirk, Lawrence J.. The Films of Joan Crawford. The Citadel Press, 1968.
  14. https://www.millcreekent.com/strait-jacket-and-berserk-double-feature-blu-ray.html Strait-Jacket and Berserk!: Double Feature Blu-Ray