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Night of the Demon (1957)
It’s Coming for You!

 

Zombos Says: Excellent

So…this guy, Hal Chester, messed up the screenplay quite a bit. It was so good, the screenplay, that it couldn’t be
completely destroyed, only half destroyed. It’s still considered a good movie. I think the job Jacques Tourneur did with what Hal Chester gave him was awfully good. Hal Chester, as far as I’m concerned, if he walked up my driveway right
now, I’d shoot him dead. (Charles Bennett, quoted in Backstory 1: Interviews with Screenwriter’s of Hollywood’s Golden Age)

It’s funny how the same mainstream script-to-screen development journey is undertaken again and again: script gets written, then gets rewritten
by Hollywood-type (sometimes plural) who sticks his or her two cents in while pinching every other penny out of production, usually creating a penny-wise but pound foolish cinematic disappointment.

In the case of one film, Night of the Demon (or the shortened version, Curse of the Demon, for the United States), the script actually survives “improvements” by said Hollywood-type—Hal E. Chesterand the vexing Bureau of British Film Censors, to become an effective supernatural chiller in spite of the Woolworth’s bargain basement special effects involving a beautiful-in concept, godawful in execution, puppet demon, and bad-boy drinking habits of one American actor determined to climb inside an empty bottle of booze head first. Of all the remakes, reworks, and re-imagines circulating Hollywood these days, this little cult gem of supernatural horror really deserves renewed attention.

But did Hal E. Chester or the censors really hurt the film?

Or did they inadvertently help polish it into a tidy, tension-mounting story showing how psychologist and paranormal debunker John Holden steps into it, only to realize what’s sticking to his shoe is real and hairy and cannot be rationally explained away by science?

That the traditionally structured Night of the Demon was produced at all is surprising. Hammer Films, at the same time, was moving away from the don’t show, just hint intentional ambiguity of Jacques Tourneur’s noir terrors in favor of the brighter, bloodier, mush your face in it gasps of Curse of Frankenstein, which was not ambiguous at all. When Night was released in America it was even double-billed with Terrence Fischer’s Revenge
of Frankenstein
, providing audiences with quite the Mutt and Jeff of horror opposites in visual and intellectual involvement, but keeping one similarity:
neither movie was ambiguous.

Contrary to Jacques Tourneur’s preference for implicative events and obfuscating shadows to force uncertainty of what’s really happening and a
did-I-see-what-I-just-saw? feeling, there is no doubt whatsoever a fire demon is coming to horribly mangle one, very skeptical, Dr. John Holden (Dana
Andrews) for daring to expose devil-cult leader—and part-time children’s magician—Karswell (Niall MacGinnis).

Within the opening minutes we race along with Harrington, the doomed predecessor to Holden, as he frantically tries to undo the curse brought
about by the passing of a slip of paper to him, written with Runic symbols, marking him for gruesome death. We are introduced to the power Karswell wields and, in no uncertain terms, the reality of the fire demon summoned by his command. To Harrington’s horror it first appears as twinkling lights, then emerges from an eerie unfolding cloud of smoke among the trees to be seen—by us—as a poorly executed puppet that looks like it’s pedaling on a bicycle toward him (but is actually being pulled on a dolly toward the camera).

Composer Clifton Parker’s otherwise effective scoring is compromised here by a rapidly repeating screech, sounding much like squeaking bicycle wheels going round and round (similar to the sound the giant ants make in Them!), unintentionally reinforcing the demon-on-a-bike impression. But it’s the building tension in Tourneur’s deft direction that surmounts this less than stellar physical effect, while the jarring rough cut close-up of the demon’s ghastly face (added when Tourneur wasn’t looking, I’m sure since he would have none of that), creates the defining monster image that lingers in the mind long afterwards.

Based on M.R. James’s short story, Casting the Runes, screenwriters Charles Bennett, Cy Endfield, and Hal E. Chester (co-producer of The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms), expand the story using the “magic 3 + R” of scriptwriting: nasty powerful villain, naive male and smart female, and add dash of unlikely romance between them. It was Chester who insisted on showing the monster much more than Tourneur intended, in hopes of attracting an
American audience (I know, shame on us for being so demanding, even then).

While Tourneur wanted to create a psychological thriller similar to his Cat People, Chester wanted no doubt in the audience’s mind of the
terror coming by night. Between the two, the story becomes a supernatural version of 1949’s noir D.O.A; although here it’s dead-man-walking Holden’s
growing realization he’s been marked for death propelling the story forward. By eliminating any doubt the threat is real, we know Holden is in danger:
but will he realize it? Will his growing suspicion that sometimes a monster is just a monster, and not a figment of a superstitious imagination or
autosuggestion, galvanize him to action? In this respect, Chester’s Night is truer to James’ story than Tourneur would have made it.

Karswell is not all that nasty, either.

In James’ story, Karswell is evil through and through, but in Night, Karswell has his softer side (he gives a children’s magic show each Halloween).
He is also secretly fearful. In a revealing speech, unwisely cut from the American version, he chastises his kindly mother for not realizing the
predicament he’s in:

 

Karswell-
You get nothing for nothing. Listen, mother. You believe in the supernatural.
I’ve shown you some of its power and some of its danger.

Mrs. Karswell-

Yes, Julian.

Karswell-

Well, believe this also. You get nothing for nothing. This house, the land, the
way we live. Nothing for nothing. My followers who pay for this do it out of
fear. And I do what I do out of fear also. It’s part of the price.

Mrs. Karswell-

But if it makes you unhappy. Stop it. Give it back.

Karswell-

How can you give back life? I can’t stop it. I can’t give it back. I can’t let
anyone destroy this thing. I must protect myself. Because if it’s not someone
else’s life, it’ll be mine. Do you understand, mother? It’ll be mine.

 

This mum and son chat reveals how much he’s stepped in it, too, but willingly, unlike Holden. Under that calm and commanding veneer lies a man
trapped into doing what he must to keep from being stepped on by something far nastier and even more powerful. And that something is coming closer and closer toward Holden every day. After Karswell surreptitiously passes along the Runic spell, Holden starts feeling cold all the time, keeps hearing an odd and mournful tune playing in his head, and smokes and drinks like a fish while Harrington’s niece, Joanna (Peggy Cummins), berates him for being such a non-believing, smug, chowder-head. She knows how and why her uncle died from reading his journal, and now she’s trying to save Holden from the same fate before it’s too late. Even Mrs. Karswell, against her son’s will, wants to help.

In what some critics consider a weakening sidestep from the mounting tension, she has Joanna bring Holden to a seance she’s arranged. The
incredulous psychologist reluctantly joins the proceedings as the medium, Mr. Meek (Reginald Beckwith), humorously channels his spirit guides until he is taken over by Joanna’s uncle. Harrington’s voice, frantically warning of the coming danger, ending in a shriek of fear as he relives the night of the demon attack “It’s in the trees! It’s coming!” Holden, not impressed by the proceedings, ignores the warning; but uneasiness is beginning to chink his
scientific armor more and more.

Tourneur turns down the light and lengthens the shadows for the revelation of the little slip of paper in Holden’s possession, exactly as Harrington describes it in his journal. Is it the wind from an open window that whips the paper from Holden’s hands and sends it flying toward the fire on the
hearth, only to be stopped from bursting into flame by the ember screen? Or does it have a life of its own and desperately tries to reach the fire, even
after he closes the window?

Joanna insists it’s alive and is trying to seal his fate by burning, but Holden tells her it’s the draft going up the chimney keeping it tight against the screen; but as he says that it suddenly drops motionless to the floor, draft or not. “What made it stop?” asks Joanna. “I don’t know,” says Holden, deep in thought, for once without a rational explanation.

He carefully tucks the paper into his wallet for safekeeping. More strange events unsettle Holden, forcing him to question his senses enough to burgle Karswell’s house to find answers. A terrifying encounter with Grimalkin, the Karswell’s familiar and watch-cat, reinforces Holden’s growing concern that he’s dealing with things outside the scope of his understanding. Ignoring Karswell’s suggestion to avoid the woods, Holden becomes more unraveled when the fire demon puts in a brief appearance. Through the use of diffused light, shadows, and increasingly unexplainable events,
Holden is pushed more and more toward a realization he’s still not fully willing to accept.

The turning point comes when Holden interviews a former cult member who, having survived Karswell’s witchcraft by passing the runic-covered
paper to his brother, is left in catatonic shock. While the scientific plausibility of the hypnotic session to awaken him is questionable, Tourneur’s
direction sums Holden’s disquieting supernatural encounters into one riveting moment of desperate action. He learns enough to know he must return the paper to Karswell, but can he do it in time?

The final confrontation between Holden and Karswell, two men frightened and desperate—one anxious to return the paper, the other anxious to
keep it from being returned—moves the film to its smoke-filled, demon demon, who’s going to get the demon? denouement at a brisk pace.

Night of the Demon, while it has its faults (mostly due to budget), rises above them through its story of a rational, scientific man pitted against the
inexplicable, and Tourneur’s noir direction that transitions Holden’s uncertainty to certainty in incremental encounters with an unknown that’s
gunning for him while we pray he wakes to the coming danger before it is too late.

5 thoughts on “Night of the Demon (1957) <br>It’s Coming for You!”

  1. One of my all-time favorite films as you can probably guess (and MRJ is of course my all-time favorite author.) I’ve read countless reviews that state the demon itself is the film’s “weakest link” and to my dying day I will continue to disagree wholeheartedly… and despite all the Hal E. Chester haters and statements from people whose opinion I greatly admire (like Tourneur and Bennett), the demon is without question essential to the film, and more memorable because it is there, there in the trees! When I first saw this film as a child the demon creation terrified me to no end, and did not seem fake even in the least bit. Does the ’33 King Kong look like a puppet? Of course it does, and so what? I’ll always believe it was a very smart move to include the demon in the film (there’s a demon in Casting the Runes so why not the movie too?) As a blossoming monster kid in the late 60’s / early 70’s I would have hated the “psycological / implied” approach originally intended and thus the film would have remained more in the Hitchcock realm of adult horror and not as one of the greatest monster movies of all time (where it deserves to prowl with Kong, Creature from the Black Lagoon, etc…) Also, if they had never inserted the demon into the film, think of all those great monster magazine covers from the 60’s and 70’s we would have missed out on!

  2. Steve, I agree with you about the fire demon. It’s a brilliant concept to depict, I just wish more money and effort was spent on it. You’re right about when seeing it as a kid it looks frightening real. I remember being pretty scared myself. Perhaps because the film was originally going for a rating to allow kids to see it the effects team realized they didn’t need to be perfect. Contrary to what some critics say, I find the close-up of the face quite impressive. It has a nightmarish quality to it and, as you’ve said, has graced many a horror magazine cover and pages. Bottom line, adding the demon is crucial to set the tone for the urgency of Holden’s need to believe. I would not have wanted the film to be nebulous about that.

  3. This is one of those movies that I discovered as a wee lad simply by staying up with my brother on Friday Night to watch the Late Night Scare Show–back in the days of 3 channels + PBS, before DVD or even VHS, days of scouring the TV guide for anything vaguely horror-sounding and taking your chances. Discoveries like that–finding something golden virtually by chance–make my memories of some films all the more special, and I sort of lament the fact that todays horror kiddies will not–cannot–have the same experience.
    Of course, they’ll miss a lot of worthless crap and disappointment that way too, so maybe it evens out.
    As to the movie, though, I totally agree that showing the demon is essential. It trades the tension of uncertainty–maybe it IS all in their heads?–for the tension of certainty–it’s definitely NOT. But you’ve said that a lot better than I could. On the broader point, however, there is this largely unquestioned belief that the best version of a film has to be the one that the director imagined, unencumbered by budget restrictions or studio interference or script tinkering by censors. That sounds great on the surface, but on closer examination it’s the same as saying a novel would always be better without the interference of an agent or copyeditor. Obviously not so–some authors NEED focusing and proofreading, and I posit that some movies need restrictions in order to bring out their best.
    I saw a movie recently by a widely respected and revered horror director that was “unencumbered” by studio interference, and it was so bad it made me wonder if the work he is revered for might have actually benefited from the interference the fanboys decry. I think studio interference CAN hurt movies, certainly, but I don’t think it’s always the case–sometimes quite the opposite.

  4. Geez! This page is great. And it has so much details about the movies production…
    I just remembered this old flick this night and googled with 4 keywords and here I am, and thus have the name I had forgotten over the years.
    And lucky me, DVDs are also available 🙂
    Thank you so much!

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