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Synopsis

One of the lesser known horror thrillers to have emerged from Hammer Studios, The Gorgon (1964) is considered by some aficionados to be one of Hammer’s most artistic and atmospheric films and even director Terence Fisher admitted it was a personal favorite. Screenwriter John Gilling adapted a story inspired by Greek mythology by J. Llewellyn Devine and created the first female monster for the studio’s signature horror line. Set in the Central European village of Vandorf in 1910, the story focuses on a series of unsolved murders in which the victims have turned to stone. When Professor Heitz decides to learn the truth, he pays with his life but in his dying moments he manages to dispatch an urgent letter to his son Paul, who comes to investigate his father’s death. Paul soon becomes attracted to Carla, the assistant to the local hospital director Dr. Namaroff, who has a secret agenda of his own. When Karl Meister (Christopher Lee), Paul’s professor and his late father’s friend, arrives on the scene, he uncovers evidence that points to a curse associated with the deserted Castle Borski, a place with an evil history. It all builds to a climax in which the murderer is unmasked under a full moon and the resulting consequences approach Greek tragedy. —TCM

Director

Original

Terence Fisher

Terence Fisher was born in Maida Vale, England, in 1904. Raised by his grandmother in a strict Christian Scientist environment. Fisher left school while still in his teens to join the Merchant Marine. By his own account, he soon discovered that a life at sea was not for him, so he left the service and tried his hand at various jobs landside. It was during this time that he discovered the cinema. Entering the film industry as “the oldest clapper boy in the business,” he eventually worked his way up to film editor. Almost as a lark, he applied to Rank to become a film editor. Unexpectedly, he was accepted. In 1947, at the age of 43, he made his directorial debut with a supernatural comedy called Colonel Bogey — a foreshadwing of things to come.

For the next few years, he vacillated between A-film assignments (Noel Coward’s The Astonished Heart, So Long at the Fair with Jean Simmons and Dirk Bogarde, and The Girl in the Painting with Herbert Lom… read more

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ΞRIC B∆D TASTΞ

8Jan12

a great, fantastic & spooky movie - such a dangerous beauty..! i haven't realized Lee in this movie, great disguising & also great make-up of the petrified victims..!

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Fuzzbucket

1Oct11

Really good Hammer film. Got this in a two dvd set titled Hammer Films -Icons of Horror Collection. Worth the cost. The old Universal and Hammer Horror films are some of my favorites.

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kubrickhouse

9Oct10

I just got gorgonized...and I loved it! Thanks TCM!

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Oliver

12Mar10

Probably the most dreamlike Hammer picture. Weird masterpiece!

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