[Film Review] Blood Feast (1963)
In Blood Feast sinister caterer Fuad Ramses stalks and slaughters women for an ancient Egyptian feast in the honour of the goddess Ishtar. Taking a body part from each victim, Ramses must complete his task in time for his latest client Dorothy Fairmont’s surprise birthday party for daughter Suzanne.
Police detective Pete Thornton is desperate to solve the case, alongside flirting with Suzanne at the weekly lecture series on Ancient Egyptian culture he attends. After a ridiculously bumbling delay, Pete eventually connects the dots, and the race is on to stop Ramses before he completes his grisly rite.
Blood Feast (1963) is the first of Herschell Gordon Lewis and David Friedman’s ‘blood trilogy’, followed by Two Thousand Maniacs (1964) and Color Me Blood Red (1965) and sets the tone for Lewis’ Godfather of Gore reputation. It has all the classic hallmarks of the early horror movie, clunky drums to build tension, sinister funhouse music soundtrack, subtle nudity and gloopy gore supplied by a grinning maniac.
Reception of Blood Feast has been mixed since its release, with Stephen King calling it the worst film he’s ever seen, but this criticism seems unfair. Blood Feast, as well as Lewis’ later work, is supposed to be tongue in cheek, campy and fun. As Friedman himself stated, the aim was never to make high art, or to take themselves seriously, and so to view Blood Feast through a lens of serious filmmaking is to doom it to failure.
However, that is not to say that there is nothing beneath the gore and violence. There is a wry sense of humour to the film, set in the pastel suburbia of 1960’s Florida and a subversive challenging of the ways in which people turn a blind eye to the daily reality of violence. When Suzanne and Dorothy discuss the serial killer who is randomly and brutally killing young women, Dorothy states, “this dinner party will take our minds off all this terrible killing” and later, upon discovering that they were to be served a cannibalistic feast of murdered women she gaily suggests that they will just have to have hamburgers for dinner. This commitment to maintaining the status quo is accompanied by a thinly veiled hysteria that some may put down to bad acting. It’s true that the performances are never in danger of winning awards, but rather than making it difficult to watch, it only adds to the fun.
It has been suggested that Lewis’ style, in both screenwriting and cinematography, are heavily influenced by his previous history as a director of pornography. It is an interesting point, and it is easy to find evidence for this perspective. The scenes of gore and bloodshed are brightly, almost forensically lit, allowing the viewer to fully see the violent desecration of women’s bodies. The splattery gore is lurid and over the top. The male gaze is in full effect, in one scene the camera slowly pans across a woman’s bloody corpse, taking an uncomfortably long time to shift away. Elements of this film have not aged well, from the focus on Ancient Egyptians as murderous, cannibalistic cult followers, and the portrayal of Fuad Ramses as a limping, grey haired, heavily accented weirdo. But, if taken in its context, much of the film holds up, from its relentless pacing (it is only 67 minutes long) to the incredible effects on display. Clever camerawork, bags of presumably animal offal, buckets of cartoonishly red fake blood and hysterically over the top performances. Blood Feast is a horror landmark and deserves its place in the canon. Enjoy it for its campy fun, deliciously excessive gore and pitch-black humour.
RELATED ARTICLES
When V/H/S first hit our screens in 2012, nobody could have foreseen that 11 years later we’d be on our sixth instalment (excluding the two spinoffs) of the series.
When someone is in a toxic relationship, it can affect more than just their heart and mind. Their bodies can weaken or change due to the continued stress and unhappiness that comes from the toxicity.
If you can’t count on your best friend to check your teeth and hands and stand vigil with you all night to make sure you don’t wolf out, who can you count on? And so begins our story on anything but an ordinary night in 1993…
The best thing about urban legends is the delicious thrill of the forbidden. Don’t say “Bloody Mary” in the mirror three times in a dark room unless you’re brave enough to summon her. Don’t flash your headlights at a car unless you want to have them drive you to your death.
A Wounded Fawn (Travis Stevens, 2022) celebrates both art history and female rage in this surreal take on the slasher genre.
Perpetrator opens with a girl walking alone in the dark. Her hair is long and loose just begging to be yanked back and her bright clothes—a blood red coat, in fact—is a literal matador’s cape for anything that lies beyond the beam of her phone screen.
Filmed on location in Scotland, Ryan Hendrick's new thriller Mercy Falls (2023) uses soaring views of the Scottish Highlands to show that the natural world can either provide shelter or be used as a demented playground for people to hurt each other.
EXPLORE
Now it’s time for Soho’s main 2023 event, which is presented over two weekends: a live film festival at the Whirled Cinema in Brixton, London, and an online festival a week later. Both have very rich and varied programmes (with no overlap this year), with something for every horror fan.
In the six years since its release the Nintendo Switch has amassed an extensive catalogue of games, with everything from puzzle platformer games to cute farming sims to, uh, whatever Waifu Uncovered is.
A Quiet Place (2018) opens 89 days after a race of extremely sound-sensitive creatures show up on Earth, perhaps from an exterritorial source. If you make any noise, even the slightest sound, you’re likely to be pounced upon by these extremely strong and staggeringly fast creatures and suffer a brutal death.
If you like cults, sacrificial parties, and lesbian undertones then Mona Awad’s Bunny is the book for you. Samantha, a student at a prestigious art university, feels isolated from her cliquey classmates, ‘the bunnies’.
The slasher sub genre has always been huge in the world of horror, but after the ‘70s and ‘80s introduced classic characters like Freddy Krueger, Michael Myers, Leatherface, and Jason, it’s not harsh to say that the ‘90s was slightly lacking in the icon department.
Mother is God in the eyes of a child, and it seems God has abandoned the town of Silent Hill. Silent Hill is not a place you want to visit.
Being able to see into the future or back into the past is a superpower that a lot of us would like to have. And while it may seem cool, in horror movies it usually involves characters being sucked into terrifying situations as they try to save themselves or other people with the information they’ve gleaned in their visions.
Both the original Pet Sematary (1989) and its 2019 remake are stories about the way death and grief can affect people in different ways. And while the films centre on Louis Creed and his increasingly terrible decision-making process, there’s no doubt that the story wouldn’t pack the same punch or make the same sense without his wife, Rachel.
If you know me at all, you know that I love, as many people do, the work of Nic Cage. Live by the Cage, die by the Cage. So, when the opportunity to review this came up, I jumped at it.