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The Hands of Orlac (1960 film)

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The Hands of Orlac
British quad poster
Directed byEdmond T. Gréville
Written byEdmond T. Gréville
Donald Taylor
John V. Baines
Screenplay by
  • John Baines
  • Edmond T. Gréville[1]
Based onLes Mains d'Orlac
by Maurice Renard
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyDesmond Dickinson[1]
Edited byOswald Hafenrichter[1]
Music byClaude Bolling[1]
Distributed by
Release dates
  • December 1960 (1960-12) (UK)
  • 12 April 1961 (1961-04-12) (France)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom
  • France[1]

The Hands of Orlac is a 1960 horror film directed by Edmond T. Gréville, starring Mel Ferrer, Christopher Lee and Dany Carrel. It was written by Gréville, John V. Baines with additional dialogue by Donald Taylor.[1] It was based on the novel Les Mains d'Orlac by Maurice Renard, which had previously adapted into silent film and as a Hollywood film production.

Gréville shot the film in both English and French-language versions during production.

Plot

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The renowned pianist Stephen Orlac is injured in an aeroplane crash, and he believes his badly damaged hands have been replaced with those of a strangler.

Cast

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Production

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The Hands of Orlac was based on the science fiction novel Les Mains d'Orlac by French author Maurice Renard which was published in France in 1920.[3] The novel is one of Renard's most popular, and was previously adapted into films The Hands of Orlac (1924) and the Hollywood production Mad Love (1935).[4][5]

The Hands of Orlac was directed by Edmond T. Gréville.[1] Gréville had dual French and British citizenship and directed four British film productions before World War II.[6] Following working on Raoul Walsh's Captain Horatio Hornblower (1951), he began making more commercially-oriented cinema, stating he saw low budget films as "a challenge, that should inspire a director to higher things."[7] The Hands of Orlac was his last British production.[8] Gréville used two film production crews: a French one for the scenes on the French Riviera and a British one for the London backdrops.[8] When filming at the studio, after each scene had been shot in English, a cry of "version française" would be sounded, and the film would be shot again in French.[8]

Release

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The Hands of Orlac was released in the United Kingdom in December 1960 and in France on May 16, 1961.[9][10][11] The English versions running time is ten minutes shorter than the French-language version.[8]

Critical reception

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The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Limping version of Maurice Renard's lurid horror novel, filmed by Robert Wiene in 1924 with Veidt and Krauss, and remade some ten years later by Karl Freund and M-G-M as Peter Lorre's Hollywood début, Colin Clive playing Orlac and Lorre the mad doctor. Updated, shorn of essential suspense and hallucinatory splendour, this shoddy little piece throws away its chances by substituting a moth-eaten magician for the surgeon as its villain, and by casting a chronically stolid actor as Orlac. The dialogue is inept, the mounting and technical credits (the work of an entire French unit for the Riviera scenes, and a British one for the London backdrops) lacklustre. Edmond T. Gréville's direction is banal, featuring as it does that battered old box of tricks – crazed laughter, upside down reflections of embracing couples on piano lids, bizarre masks – which he has been carting around with him for the past 30 years."[12]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h British Film Institute.
  2. ^ Vagg, Stephen (11 November 2024). "Peter Reynolds: Forgotten Cad". Filmink. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  3. ^ Evans 1994, p. 393.
  4. ^ Evans 1994, p. 385.
  5. ^ Filmportal.de.
  6. ^ Porter 2002, p. 115.
  7. ^ Porter 2002, p. 116.
  8. ^ a b c d Porter 2002, p. 118.
  9. ^ Gifford 2017, p. 692-693.
  10. ^ Gifford 2017, p. 694-695.
  11. ^ Bifi.
  12. ^ Monthly Film Bulletin 1962, p. 53.

Sources

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