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Michael Reeves

 
Writer: Michael Reeves
  • Born: Oct 17, 1943 in Sutton, Surrey, England
  • Died: Feb 11, 1969 in Chelsea, London, England
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: '60s
  • Major Genres: Horror, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Witchfinder General, The Sorcerers, Tell Me Lies
  • First Major Screen Credit: Il Castello dei Morti Vivi (1964)

Biography

Michael Reeves is one of the great, tragically lost figures in the history of cinema -- a prodigious talent undone by personal demons and also, perhaps, the times in which he lived. Variously described by the people who knew and worked with him as a potential rival to Steven Spielberg, an Orson Welles in the making, Reeves only completed three full-length movies in his career.

Born in 1943 to the poor side of a wealthy British name, Reeves was raised by his mother. He grew up spellbound by cinema, and was especially drawn to American movies of all genres: westerns, thrillers, horror, and science fiction. As early as age eight, he declared his dream to become a film director. Reeves made his first fully plotted movie -- a 20-minute thriller called Carrie, about a disabled girl being stalked -- when he was 15. He learned to mimick the movements of the camera as he'd seen in Hollywood movies using his mother's tea-trolley; from watching movies closely, he also knew where to place his camera in order to get the kinds of shots he wanted. Reeves wrote, produced, directed, and starred in Carrie, playing the hero. While planning the production for this film, he was introduced to another teenager, aspiring actor (and future film star) Ian Ogilvy, who portrayed the villain and became Reeves' his lifelong friend. The movie wasn't a significant piece, except as a first credit to Ogilvy's name and as a sample of Reeves' potential. The same year he made Carrie, Reeves' personal situation changed radically when his mother suddenly came into the family's money, and he found himself free to pursue any goal he chose. He ran off to Hollywood in 1961 at age 17, in search of his favorite filmmaker, Don Siegel. So the story goes -- he got Siegel's address, rang his bell one morning, and introduced himself to the bewildered director as having come all the way from England to meet him. Siegel then hired Reeves as a gopher and junior production assistant, at first, and it was while working for the veteran director that he began honing his own skills and instincts as a filmmaker.

Reeves became an assistant director and was hired to work on The Long Ships (1963), an adventure film starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier, on which he spent a month doing pre-production and another month on production. The movie's producer, Paul Maslansky, was so impressed with Reeves that he got him a job directing the second unit material on Castle of the Living Dead (1963). Reeves didn't last long on the set of that movie, however, leaving the production sooner than anticipated because of a new opportunity: he had been given the funding, the cast, and the opportunity to make Revenge of the Blood Beast (1966) (U.S. title, The She-Beast), starring Ian Ogilvy and John Karlsen. The sheer audacity of this 19-year-old convinced Maslansky to follow Reeves into the movie as its producer. Maslansky was also responsible for getting Barbara Steele into the film. Shot in Italy and Yugoslavia, Revenge of the Blood Beast offered a strange mix of horror, gore, and comedy that managed to put it onto the horror circuit. Suddenly, Reeves not only had his first directorial credit, but the beginning of a cult following, similar to what Roger Corman began achieving at the other end of the '60s with his Edgar Allen Poe adaptations. Revenge of the Blood Beast was enough of a success to get Reeves a better budget his next time out with The Sorcerers (1967), a mix of swinging London ambience and science fiction horror. The Sorcerers was a cyber horror analogue to Antonioni's Blow-Up, and anticipated aspects of Douglas Trumbull's ill-fated Brainstorm, among others. It benefited heavily from the presence of Boris Karloff as one of the leads (along with Ogilvy and Catherine Lacey) and from its visceral connection to its setting, the London clubs, where many of its key scenes took place. This connection could only have been achieved by a filmmaker of Reeves' youth. Indeed, parts of The Sorcerers play like a classic rock & roll movie of the era. For Reeves, The Sorcerers also marked his first collaboration with producer Tony Tenser, who was thrilled with the 22-year-old's ability to put together good material in a hurry, on or under budget. The movie was a hit, and it paved the way for what would prove to be Reeves' crowning achievement, Witchfinder General (1968) (U.S. title, The Conqueror Worm). The film involved a set of galleys during the vicious conflagration that swept the U.K. during the English civil war in the 17th century, when the Roundheads deposed and executed King Charles I. Even with Reeves helming the movie, it was too expensive for Tenser's Tigon Productions to film alone, so Tenser reached out to American International Pictures in the United States, who liked the potential of the story and were able to provide the services of the international star, Vincent Price. Reeves and director Roger Corman were able to convince Price, who had been overacting for years, to shed his most pronounced mannerisms and give the most understated performance of his career thus far. Reeves shot Witchfinder General on location under very spartan conditions. He ended up creating a very eerie and unsettling movie, marked by extreme violence. It was his intention to make a movie that would leave audiences spellbound and stunned, in a manner similar to the effect achieved by Sam Peckinpah in The Wild Bunch and Stanley Kubrick in A Clockwork Orange. There was a complexity behind Reeves' movie that few commercial movies ever even attempted to achieve. Witchfinder General was a hit, albeit a controversial one in England where it was heavily scrutinized ahead of its release and was attacked by many mainstream critics, who found even the cut version very disturbing.

In the wake of Witchfinder General, it seemed as though Reeves had the world at his feet; However, it was at this point that his life began to unravel for reasons no one seemed to fully understand. He became increasingly withdrawn from his friends; those who tried to stay close to him got the impression that he was depressed about his career. Reeves dwelled increasingly in this state, possibly suffering from insomnia, and finally one night he took an overdose of sleeping pills while drunk. He died in his sleep during the winter of 1969, and his passing was officially listed as a suicide and called an "accident" by others around him. In the decades since, his enigmatic image and tiny oeuvre have only added to the mystique and mystery surrounding this short-lived filmmaker. Witchfinder General, reissued in both its American and British versions on each side of the Atlantic, still attracts new generations of fans; The Sorcerers and Revenge of the Blood Beast have also begun acquiring respect in the decades since Reeves' death. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Michael Reeves
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Michael Reeves (October 17, 1943 - February 11, 1969) was an English film director and screenwriter. He is best known for the 1968 American International Pictures/Tigon motion picture Witchfinder General (known in the U.S. as The Conqueror Worm).

Contents

History

Early career

Reeves was born in Sutton, (then in Surrey),and grew up in Suffolk, whose landscape made a deep impression on his best known film, Witchfinder General. His father died when he was young, but his mother was a devoted single parent. As a child he began making short films, some of which starred his lifelong friend, the actor Ian Ogilvy. As a boarder at Radley College he obsessively broke bounds to attend the cinema, and was utterly single minded about his ambition to work in film. Upon leaving school he turned up on the doorstep of his favourite director, Don Siegel, who promptly employed him as an assistant. Subsequently he worked in Italy, where he eventually directed La Sorella di Satana (1965; also called Revenge of the Blood Beast and also known in Italy as Il Lago di Satana). The film was made very cheaply, and is remembered for an appearance by horror icon Barbara Steele, of whose time Reeves was given four days. Back in London in 1966, Reeves made The Sorcerers, starring Boris Karloff, an effective 'swinging London' picture with supernatural overtones. Both films also starred Ian Ogilvy.

Witchfinder General

It's for his third and final movie, Witchfinder General, that Reeves is best remembered. He was only 24 years old when he co-wrote and directed it, but it is often called one of the greatest horror films that Britain has produced. Made on a very modest budget in East Anglia and adapted from the novel by Ronald Bassett, Witchfinder General tells the story of Matthew Hopkins, an infamous lawyer-turned-witchhunter who blackmails and murders his way across the countryside. Reeves imbues the film with a powerful sense of the impossibility of behaving morally in a society whose conventions have broken down, and though it is by no means free of the conventions of low-budget horror, it stands as a notably powerful and evocative film.[1]

Reeves wanted actor Donald Pleasence to play the title role, but American International Pictures, the film's co-financiers, insisted on using their resident horror star Vincent Price instead. This caused friction between the veteran actor and the young director. A famous story is told of how Reeves won Price's respect: Reeves was constantly telling Price to tone down his over-acting, and to play the role more seriously. Price eventually cracked, snapping: "Young man, I have made eighty-four films. What have you done?" Reeves replied: "I've made two good ones." Reeves continued to goad Price into delivering a vicious performance, and only upon seeing finished film did the actor realize what the director was up to, at which point Price took steps to bury the hatchet with Reeves. Witchfinder General was released to mixed reviews, one notably savage notice by Alan Bennett appeared in The Listener, but was soon reaccessed and gained generally favourable reviews.

Premature death

Michael Reeves died in London a few months after the film's release. After shooting Witchfinder General he was at work on an adaptation of The Oblong Box but had difficulties getting projects off the ground and was suffering from depression and insomnia, for which he took tablets and received a variety of treatments from medical and psychiatric practitioners. On the morning of February 11 1969, Reeves was found dead in his bedroom, aged 25, in Cadogan Place, Knightsbridge, by his cleaning lady. The coroner's report stated that Reeves's death (from a barbiturate overdose) was accidental, the dosage being too marginal to suggest intention.

Filmography

  • Carrion - c. 1958 director
  • Down - c. 1958 / 9 director
  • Intrusion - 1961 director
  • The Long Ships - 1963 UK / Yugoslavia, assistant director
  • Il Castello Dei Morti Vivi - 1964 Italy, 2nd assistant director
  • La Sorella di Satana / Revenge of the Blood Beast - 1966 UK/Italy/Yugoslavia, director/ producer
  • The Sorcerers - 1967 director / producer / screenplay
  • Witchfinder General - 1968 director / screenplay
  • The Oblong Box - 1969 (original director)

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References

External links


 
 

 

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