The Awakening (1980 film)
The Awakening | |
---|---|
Directed by | Mike Newell |
Written by | |
Story by |
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Based on | The Jewel of Seven Stars by Bram Stoker |
Produced by | Robert H. Solo |
Starring | Charlton Heston Susannah York Jill Townsend Stephanie Zimbalist |
Cinematography | Jack Cardiff |
Edited by | Terry Rawlings |
Music by | Claude Bolling |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia-EMI-Warner Distributors[1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | AUS$5.3 million[2] |
Box office | US$8 million[3] |
The Awakening is a 1980 British horror film directed by Mike Newell in his directorial debut and starring Charlton Heston, Susannah York, and Stephanie Zimbalist. It is the third film version of Bram Stoker's 1903 novel The Jewel of Seven Stars, following the 1970 television adaptation as The Curse of the Mummy for the TV series Mystery and Imagination, and the 1971 theatrical film by Hammer, Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (in which Ahmed Osman also appeared). It was released by Warner Bros.
Another adaptation of Stoker's novel was released directly to video in 1997 under the title Bram Stoker's The Mummy.
Plot
[edit]The film opens on an Egyptian archaeological dig in 1961.[4] Three of the main characters are introduced: Matthew Corbeck, his wife Anne and Jane Turner. Matthew and Jane are discussing their efforts to uncover the tomb of an ancient Egyptian queen. Anne is distressed by the relationship between her husband and his assistant. It is later proved that her distress is justified.
Matthew and Jane discover a long-hidden tomb that bears an inscription: "Do Not Approach the Nameless One Lest Your Soul Be Withered."[5] They continue on to venture into the burial chamber of Queen Kara. As Matthew prepares to breach the entrance, Anne begins a painful premature labour. Matthew and Jane return to the camp and find Anne lying on the floor in a trance-like state. Matthew takes her to hospital and leaves her there so that he can return to the dig. Anne's pregnancy ends in stillbirth. As Matthew and Jane open the mummy's sarcophagus, the stillborn infant is restored to life.[6][7] Matthew neglects his wife and daughter Margaret, and Anne takes the baby and leaves him.
Eighteen years later, Matthew is a professor at a British university and married to Jane. He learns that traces of bacteria have been found on Kara's mummy that threaten to destroy it and tries to have the mummy brought back to England to preserve it. One of the Egyptian specialists opposing Matthew is killed in a freak accident, allowing him to transport the mummy to England. Margaret, now eighteen (the age of Queen Kara when she died), goes to England to meet her father against her mother Anne's wishes. Matthew and Jane tell Margaret about Kara, the violent murders she committed and the myth that she could reincarnate herself.
Matthew's obsession with Kara grows and Margaret exhibits personality changes. People who resist Matthew and Margaret mysteriously and violently die. Margaret begins to notice the changes in herself and believes she is the one responsible for the deaths. While visiting Kara's tomb in Egypt, she and her father discover the Canopic jars that contain Kara's organs. Matthew secretly brings the jars back to England, eager to attempt a ritual to resurrect the ancient queen. He believes that Kara's spirit possessed his daughter at the moment of her birth, and that she intends to resurrect herself through the girl's body. He proposes that the only way to save Margaret, who has fallen into a coma, is to perform the ritual over Kara's mummy in the British Museum. He realises too late that Kara tricked him, and that the ritual enabled her to completely take over Margaret's body. The reincarnated Kara kills Matthew, her future intentions unknown.[6]
Cast
[edit]- Charlton Heston as Matthew Corbeck: Corbeck is a fictional British archaeologist and the main character in the film. Corbeck is obsessive about his work[7] which leads to the end of his marriage with Anne.[5] Heston has been criticised for his inability to produce a convincing English accent.[6][7]
- Susannah York as Jane Turner: Corbeck's trained assistant. According to Anne, Jane "worships" Corbeck[5] and has been referred to by critics as "kittenish".[7] Later we find out that Jane and Corbeck get married after Matthew and Anne divorce. In the latter part of the film, Jane becomes concerned with Corbeck's obsession with Kara and the reincarnation ritual. She dies as the result of an accident which takes place as she tries to destroy the organs.
- Jill Townsend as Anne Corbeck: Corbeck's wife, who feels neglected by her husband and ends up leaving him because of this. She tries to convince Margaret to not visit her father by saying "Your father has a wife. He deserted us for her".[5]
- Stephanie Zimbalist as Margaret Corbeck: Matthew Corbeck's daughter is one of Zimbalist's first acting roles. Soon after her character's eighteenth birthday, she starts feeling an unexplainable urge to visit her father. As she becomes possessed by Kara she begins to do uncharacteristic things such as murdering people who get in the way of the ancient Queen.[6] Zimbalist has been critiqued for not being skilled enough to play both the roles of Margaret and Kara with subtlety[4] and her creepiness near the end of the film is created more by her makeup rather than her acting.[7] She is however, praised at being much better at performing the lighter scenes as Margaret.[7]
- Patrick Drury as Paul Whittier: Corbeck's assistant in the latter part of the film and Margaret's love interest.
- Bruce Myers as Dr. Khalid
- Nadim Sawalha as Dr. El Sadek
- Ian McDiarmid as Dr. Richter
- Ahmed Osman as Yussef
- Miriam Margolyes as Dr. Kadira: Anne Corbeck's nurse during the birth of Margaret.
- Michael Mellinger as Hamid
- Leonard Maguire as John Matthews
- Ishia Bennison as Nurse
- Madhav Sharma as Doctor
- Chris Fairbanks as Porter
- Michael Halphie as Doctor
Production
[edit]This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards. (September 2018) |
The film was announced in July 1979.[8] Filming took place in Egypt and England.
Director Mike Newell later said the production of the film was "utterly terrible" although he 'adored' working with Heston. Newell recalled about Heston, "He's a great big [star]. 'He would come to all the rushes. He was at rushes every day." Newell would also remark that he found the final cut of the film to be "miserable in the sense that it got recut by a very, very nice man, Monte Hellman..."[9]
Release
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2018) |
Home media
[edit]The film was released on DVD by Studio Canal on 25 June 2007. It was later released by Warner Bros. Digital Distribution on 14 June 2012.[10]
Reception
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2018) |
TV Guide awarded the film 1/4 stars, commending the film's set design, cinematography, and soundtrack. However they criticized the film as being "predictable, unrelentingly dull, and padded with tedious Egyptian travelog footage".[11] The Terror Trap gave the film 2.5 out of 4 stars, writing, "Subtle and slow paced, this might not appeal to all tastes, but is certainly worth a watch, particularly to see sci fi hero Heston in an uncharacteristically subdued terror performance."[12] Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert gave the film negative reviews on their TV show, with Siskel saying it was one of the worst movies of 1980 and Ebert simply saying with an amused laugh "This movie is ridiculous."
Box office
[edit]The Awakening earned $2,728,520 when it opened in theatres in 1980 and has a lifetime gross of $8,415,112.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "The Awakening (1980)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
- ^ "An occult film for Heston". The Canberra Times. Vol. 54, no. 16, 066. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 19 September 1979. p. 23. Retrieved 20 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ a b The Awakening at Box Office Mojo
- ^ a b Cowie, Susan D. and Tom Johnson. The Mummy in Fact, Fiction and Film. North Carolina: McFarland & Company Inc., 2002. Print.
- ^ a b c d The Awakening. Dr. Mike Newell. Warner Brothers, 1980. VHS.
- ^ a b c d Muir, John Kenneth. Horror Films of the 1980s. North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2007. Print.
- ^ a b c d e f Maslin, Janet. "Film: 'The Awakening.'" The New York Times. 31 October 1980. Web. 8 March 2012.
- ^ The man who came to film The Guardian 18 July 1979: 10.
- ^ "Interview with Mike Newell". DGA.
- ^ "The Awakening (1980) – Mike Newell". AllMovie. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
- ^ "The Awakening – Movie Reviews and Movie Ratings". TV Guide. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
- ^ "The Awakening (1980)". Terror Trap.com. The Terror Trap. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
External links
[edit]- 1980 films
- 1980 horror films
- 1980 fantasy films
- British supernatural horror films
- 1980s English-language films
- Films about archaeology
- Films set in 1961
- Films set in ancient Egypt
- Films shot in Egypt
- Mummy films
- Films directed by Mike Newell
- Films based on works by Bram Stoker
- Orion Pictures films
- Films based on Irish novels
- Warner Bros. films
- EMI Films films
- 1980 directorial debut films
- Films shot in Cambridgeshire
- Films with screenplays by Clive Exton
- Films scored by Claude Bolling
- Resurrection in film
- Films about spirit possession
- 1980s British films
- English-language horror films
- English-language fantasy films