It is the first of a two-part adaptation of the 1986 novel of the same name by Stephen King, primarily covering the first chronological half of the book. ![]() Although the film is certainly entertaining fare, particularly for hardened genre fans, one cannot help but notice that several opportunities (especially for black comedy) are sorely missed along the way the Golem's demolition of a bridge, then, is merely a weak matte painting (to say nothing of some very obvious day-for-night shots) and the climactic confrontation between the rampaging statue and the proverbial Army is somewhat risible as they keep shooting at it with bigger and bigger weapons (from bazookas to tanks) to no avail! Even 'It' seems to despair at their ineptitude as the Golem proceeds to drown itself in the nearby Thames soon after! This is all rather lame script-wise since we had previously been told that water cannot harm the 400-year old statue but, perhaps, its suicide is meant to be taken metaphorically since it has been revived for destructive purposes rather than the protective ones it had originally been created for.It (titled onscreen as It Chapter One) is a 2017 American supernatural horror film directed by Andy Muschietti and written by Chase Palmer, Cary Fukunaga, and Gary Dauberman. Unfortunately for McDowall, both Haworth and the statue are also being pursued by visiting American curator Paul Maxwell (unsubtly named Perkins if you catch my drift) who, necessarily, even gets entangled in the ongoing police investigations (one of whom is played by future Euro-Cult regular Ian McCulloch) of the piling murders surrounding the re-emergence of the Golem. When a warehouse fire conveniently highlights the lifelike presence of an indestructible sinister statue, McDowall gradually realizes what he has come in possession of and, inevitably, makes use of his own power over it to further himself in life, both socially and romantically. ![]() Roddy McDowall (delivering a performance that is much better than the material he has to work with) plays an ambitious but disturbed museum curator who occasionally bestows his mummified mother (whom he keeps in her favorite living-room armchair) with precious stones lifted from his workplace, ineffectually lusts after his lovely blonde colleague (former Otto Preminger protégé Jill Haworth) in a startling sequence, he envisages her lounging practically naked on his sofa before turning into his skeletal mother as he approaches her! and is constantly harassed by his superiors. American born writer-producer-director Leder lends his modest London-based film a colorful look reminiscent of Hammer horrors while updating the Hebrew legend of the Golem for the 20th Century. I have been aware since childhood of this British horror movie (via large color stills taken from it found in one of my father's books) but, despite knowing of its recent DVD release in the U.S., only now did I manage to check it out on Cable TV channel TCM UK. The Old Rabbi: If I knew that, I would not reveal it to you. The Old Rabbi: It will obey whoever places a magic scroll beneath its tongue.Īrthur Pimm: Where does one get this magic scroll? But the Golem will go on and on forever, serving or destroying. The Old Rabbi: A bomb is finished when it has exploded. If it is still in existence, if, I say, it is probably the most powerful force on Earth today.Īrthur Pimm: More powerful than the H-bomb? The Old Rabbi: Significance? That statue is the Great Golem, believed to have been destroyed centuries ago. The Old Rabbi: Now, tell me, where did you get this?Īrthur Pimm: I traced if off an old statue that came from Czechoslovakia. He who in the 21st century evokes me, must be of God's hand himself, because on this Earth, the person of man existeth no more. He who in the 20th century shall dare evoke me, beware! For neither by fire nor water, nor force, nor anything by man created, can I be destroyed. He who evokes me in the 19th century, beware! For I cannot by fire or by water or by force be destroyed. He who shall evoke me in the 18th century, beware! For I cannot by fire or by water be destroyed. He who shall evoke me in the 17th century, beware! For I cannot by fire be destroyed. ![]() ![]() The Old Rabbi: He who will find the secret of my life at his feet, him will I serve until beyond time. If I translate it for you, will you agree to tell me the truth? I don't believe that you got it off some stone as you said. The Old Rabbi: This is a most rare thing.
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