Thursday, December 24, 2015

Movie review – “Spine Tingler: The William Castle Story” (2007) ****


Enormously enjoyable documentary about the life and films of one of America’s most fondly remembered producer-directors – to a section of the public anyway. You can tell which section when you see the several directors who talk with glowing affection about Castle – Joe Dante, John Landis, John Waters. All with a common thread: males who were about ten when Castle was in his heyday. Because that was the target market for Castle’s films: baby boomers, male, who loved the gimmicks. As Waters (who has written about Castle often and well, and was inspired to use gimmicks in his own career) points out, after seeing 13 Ghosts all people talked about at school the next day was seeing the skeleton – no one talked if the film was any good.

William Castle’s story is a prime example of the maxim that everyone has their moment. He lost his parents at an early age, and became obsessed with theatre after seeing Bela Lugosi on stage as Dracula. He went to work in the theatre as a stage manager and actor, and eventually went out to Hollywood and got a job at Columbia. He became a journeyman director, doing all sorts of films (one quite highly regarded - When Strangers Marry – even if it surprisingly isn’t discussed much here.) He got the rights to a book he really liked only to see Orson Welles pinch it and turn it into Lady from Shanghai - although Castle got to work on it.
 
Castle's moment came in the late 50s when he mortgaged his house to fund his own production, Macabre. From all accounts an unremarkable film, Castle's fear that it would flop motivated him to ballyhoo the crap out of it and it was a big hit. It unleashed a popular series of horror films, all better remembered for their gimmicks rather than their quality.

Castle promoted himself as much as his movies, even appearing in them at the beginning in introductions. Few directors were as well known to the public (one that was, Hitchcock, was inspired by Castle to use a gimmick to promote Psycho). Still, a great showman, nice guy, shrewd businessman, talented producer, workmanlike director - and he left a real legacy. The sort of theatricality and showmanship in something like The Tingler (which puts the audience in the film) is missed today.

Eventually the tide ran out around the mid 60s and Castle's films lost their lustre at the box office. He had a massive late career windfall when he bought the rights to Rosemary's Baby in galleys but Paramount wanted Roman Polanski to direct, so he was forced to produce. (A good move - Castle was never much of a director, strictly functional in his control of the medium - the two most famous films he was associated with, Rosemary and Shanghai, were from other directors.

I have a theory he went to his grave thinking "if only I'd directed Rosemary's Baby people would have taken me seriously" but he wouldn't have done ten percent good a job; he was too interested in pennies.) He fell seriously ill during the late 60s and so couldn't cash in on the success of Rosemary's Baby. None of his follow ups did as well (he even directed a film starring Marcel Marceau which flopped badly) but he lived long enough to see his legend grow. He probably smoked too many cigars for his own good - he was only 63 when he died but looked twenty years over.

This is everything a documentary on Castle should be - warm, funny, with great photographs and talking heads (Castle's daughter is very likeable - she has his nose - and Roger Corman even pops up). John Waters is the best value - part of me wished he'd narrated the whole thing. In film extracts, Castle is a little stiff in his introductions for someone so publicised - I think Hitchcock had more natural charisma, as well as being the better director.

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