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The Doctor and the Devils

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Doctor and the Devils
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFreddie Francis
Written byRonald Harwood
Based onA screenplay written
by Dylan Thomas
Produced byJonathan Sanger
Starring
Cinematography
Edited byLawrence Méry-Clark
Music byJohn Morris
Production
company
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
4 October 1985
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office$147,070[1]

The Doctor and The Devils is a 1985 British gothic horror film directed by Freddie Francis and starring Timothy Dalton, Jonathan Pryce and Stephen Rea.[2] The script was adapted by Sir Ronald Harwood from an unproduced screenplay by Dylan Thomas. It was produced by Mel Brooks, through his production company Brooksfilms.

It is based upon the true story of Burke and Hare, who in 1828 Edinburgh, Scotland, murdered at least 16 people and sold their bodies for anatomical dissection.

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  • The Doctor and the Devils (1985) - Official Trailer (HD)
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  • The Doctor And The Devils (1/2) Dr. Rock Wants Fresh Corpses (1985) HD
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  • The Doctor and the Devils (2/2) A Fresh Delivery (1985) HD

Transcription

Plot

Dr. Thomas Rock is a respected 19th-century anatomist lecturing at a prominent medical school. He is deeply passionate about improving medical knowledge, a pursuit for which he believes "the ends justify the means." Unfortunately, due to the laws of the time very few cadavers are legally available to the medical profession, necessitating the use of body snatchers or "Resurrection men" by the medical establishment to procure additional specimens. Dr. Rock's young assistant Dr. Murray is given the task of buying the bodies, for which he is authorized to pay a small fortune, particularly for fresher corpses.

When alcoholic miscreants Fallon and Broom overhear details of the arrangement, they begin to murder the locals and sell their bodies. Gradually, Dr. Murray becomes more suspicious of the string of fresh bodies turning up at the medical school, but Dr. Rock dismisses his concerns. Meanwhile, Murray has begun to fall for beautiful local prostitute Jennie Bailey, who soon becomes the target of Fallon and Broom's murderous enterprise. When Jennie's friend Alice turns up dead in Dr. Rock's dissection room, Murray realizes what is happening and heroically rescues Jennie from a murderous Fallon. Both killers are soon arrested, but Broom agrees to turn state's evidence against his former partner, and is set free, unrepentant. Fallon is executed by hanging. Dr. Rock, for his part in the killings, is the subject of widespread public outrage, but ultimately not punished or censured by his colleagues.

The film ends with Rock pondering his responsibility for the horrors and concluding, "oh my God – I knew what I was doing."

Cast

Production

Brooksfilms founder and executive producer Mel Brooks, a lifelong horror fan, acquired the rights to Dylan Thomas's unproduced screenplay The Doctor and the Devils (first published in 1953) in the hopes of adapting it into a horror film. He hired director and former cinematographer Freddie Francis, who during the 1960s and 70s had directed a series of horror films for famed British horror productions companies Hammer and Amicus. Brooks' original intention was to simply use the title of the Thomas screenplay, but Francis pushed for a closer adherence to the original script. A compromise was arranged with playwright and screenwriter Ronald Harwood adapting Thomas's more cerebral work into something more genre-friendly.[3] Despite the adaptation, much of Thomas's original dialogue remains.[4]

Francis recalled, "this was one we had for a long time. A doctor friend of mine owned it, and he got the rights, he got the rights off Nick Ray. I suspect that Nick Ray owed him money, and he spent a lot of time trying to set it up. We eventually set it up with Mel Brooks. Mel Brook's thought he owed me a favour after Elephant Man and so he set it up and off we went. It wasn't a bad little film."[5]

Reception

The film struggled to find an audience, and was not well received by critics.[3]

Roger Ebert gave the film one-and-a-half stars out of four, writing, "It is impossible to discover, on the evidence of "The Doctor and the Devils," why anybody connected with this movie thought it should be made. It is unredeemed, dreary, boring, gloomy dreck unilluminated by even the slightest fugitive moment of inspiration or ambition," though he praised star Twiggy as the film's "only ray of sunshine."[6]

Vincent Canby of the New York Times was more positive, writing the film boasts a "first-rate English cast," and adding that "Mr. Harwood's screenplay, which retains a lot of the original Thomas dialogue, is much more fun to see than the Thomas screenplay is to read."[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Doctor and the Devils (1985)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  2. ^ "The Doctor and the Devils". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 9 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b Smith, Richard Harland. "The Doctor and the Devils". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  4. ^ a b Canby, Vincent (4 October 1985). "Film: Body Snatching In 'Doctor And The Devils'". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  5. ^ "Interview with Freddie Francis". British Entertainment History Project. 1993–1994.
  6. ^ Ebert, Roger (11 November 1985). "The Doctor and the Devils". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2 June 2015.

External links

This page was last edited on 9 March 2024, at 23:45
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