MAJEWSKI, Janusz (Dir.), “Lokis. Rekopis profesora Wittembacha”
(1970), P.P. Film Polski.
Werewolf
films are a dime a dozen; trust the Poles to give us a film about werebears.
There’s
lots to like about this movie, especially from a bibliophilic point of view,
and also for gamers trying to hook their players into scenarios. Let me just
say right from the start that I don’t think that this film is a groundbreaking
document; rather it has a series of really nice touches, grounded in a
Nineteenth Century sensibility, that demonstrate a masterful grasp of the
narrative form. Sadly, what this film doesn’t really do, is deliver any
substantial scares.
Firstly,
let me start by saying that the music for this movie was composed and conducted
by Wojciech Kilar, the man who wrote the music for such films as “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992), “Death and the Maiden” (1994) and “The Ninth Gate” (1999). Anyone who is
aware of his work on those films will understand me when I say that the
soundtrack is superb. It delivers emotional peaks as required and lurks
unobtrusively in the background while the plot unfolds. An excellent feature!
The
story surrounds an academic German priest, Professor Pastor, who journeys into
Poland to a remote stately home to examine a translation of theological
writings into an obscure dialect. His goal is to write a lexicon of the
language in order that missionary work amongst its speakers may be undertaken.
He meets an aged Countess and her companions on the train – Julia and her
companion, Miss Lemon - as he arrives at the nearby town and gains an open invitation
to come and dine at her manor whilst working in the district.
Heading
to the estate, he is ear-bashed by the cart driver about many strange local
legends, including manifestations of the Devil – in the form of a tailless pike,
clad in the “strange clothes” of the Germans – and other horrors. A rainstorm
and a broken wheel sees the priest stranded in a small chapel: in the stormy
night he hears yelling outside and, opening the church door, inadvertently scares
away a drunken peasant by appearing from the dark entryway - damp, tailless and
clad after the German fashion!
Eventually,
he arrives at the demesne of the
young Count Szemiot who, he is told, is suffering from migraines and cannot
come to greet him. Instead, a servant gives him a guided tour and sees him
safely ensconced in his room. From the window, the priest witnesses the arrival
of Szemiot’s mother - who is mad and infirm - along with her private doctor,
Froeber. Her distress is painful for him to watch as she is roughly manhandled
from her carriage. Later, he meets the doctor at dinner, discovering him to be
both indiscreet and in bad temper, longing to be far from what he considers to
be a cultural backwater; during the meal, he is summoned to assist his charge
who has thrown a fit, and he leaves with poor grace.
After
dinner, the priest retires to his room only to see a bearded man hiding in a
tree outside his window, obviously spying upon him. Summoning the servants, he
is disturbed by their unwillingness to understand his concern, or to do
anything about the matter, apart from closing the blinds. As it transpires, the
figure in the tree is the young Count who meets the priest next morning over
breakfast and apologises for alarming his guest.
The
set-up is engrossing and thought-provoking. Filmed in that ‘no-motion’,
soft-focus ‘Seventies style that feels distant and detached, we feel an odd
disconnect with the events; given that much of what we’ve seen so far is
unexplained and peculiar, this heightens our sense that the world is out of
joint.
From
here we are led deeper into the world of the Count Szemiot and his family: he
yearns for the lovely Julia; he expresses weird philosophical points of view
regarding the nature of evil and those who embrace it; he is misanthropic and
detests animals with equal vehemence, and they respond to him in kind. Doctor
Froeber, meanwhile, has descended from careful treatment of the Count’s mother
to a regimen of casual torture, his interest in the case long past vaporised:
in a moment of complete tactlessness he asks the priest if he thinks that
euthanasia is a possible alternative. Left alone in the extensive library, the
doctor reveals to Pastor an old sketchbook left behind by a visiting Italian
artist: it reveals an incident regarding the Szemiot’s mother during a hunt,
where she was dragged away by a bear and mauled. Freed by the shots fired by a
drunken groom, she was discovered shortly thereafter to be pregnant and, upon
the birth of her son the Count, she tried to break the child’s neck soon after
its delivery.
I
especially liked the way this backstory was revealed by means of the
sketchbook. Whereas another director might have conjured a flashback, this
device lent the already strange event an almost mythical quality, like a
fairytale. The unfinished sketches and scribbles make the event hazy and
unreal, hinting at the proceedings without being heavy-handed. After Professor
Pastor sees the pictures, he starts to put two-and-two together – no matter how
much it affronts his rational perspective – and then the doctor informs him
that the book is kept hidden by the family who don’t wish outsiders to know the
details of this accident. Having thus involved the priest in this indiscretion,
Froeber almost titters on his way out of the room.
After
this, we meet a crazy old witch who talks to a snake and tells the Count that
the animals are prepared to name him their king but that the lovely Julia will
never be his; Szemiot falls into a lovelorn depression and parades haphazardly
on the castle battlements, dangerously close to the edge. Pastor, convinced
that Szemiot is simply overthinking things, convinces him to attend a tea party
at the Countess’ townhouse, there to declare his love to Julia and let the
chips fall as they might. There is a metaphoric dance; some lustful stares and
the next thing we know, the two are betrothed. All that remains is a wedding
laden with bizarre local traditions (like slapping the bride’s face before she
enters the church) and we fast-forward to the wedding night, which is heralded
by a bitter fall of snow.
Over
a reluctant nightcap with Froeber, the priest sees something fall from the
window above; large animal tracks are discovered in the snow below, heading
into the woods; a scream comes from the wedding chamber and the bride is
discovered bleeding, mauled by some hideous beast. Of the groom there is no
sign. Weeks of searching find no trace of him, and so Pastor heads home to
Germany. As he boards a train, he sees a row of freshly killed animals lying
next to the tracks waiting to be skinned; among them is a large bear. As the
whistle shrills and the train departs, he – and also we – are left to ponder
the implications.
Like
I said, the shocks are light in this film. We almost know from the start what
to expect here, but it’s the way that it plays out that is of interest.
Although I saw early on where this was going, I was never bored by the
unfolding events: this is a case where the manner of the telling is of greater
importance than the point of the tale. Obviously, there are no actual scenes of
bears rampaging across the countryside, but this only heightens the drama: at
no point are we ever truly sure of what’s going on; the one rationale that we
have is far-fetched at best and we instinctively try to deny that it is real,
despite being inevitably dragged back to it. The early scene with the drunken
peasant outside the chapel underscores this: we know that the peasant isn’t
encountering the Devil; it’s just a few random particulars that fall together
to play upon an old legend. Obviously something similar is going on here with
the werebear...isn’t it?
Actually,
the most disturbing thing about the film was its treatment of the animals that
appear throughout: dogs are whipped, a scruffy gypsy’s bear is made to dance
with a prod and the poor witch’s snake was almost throttled. And those animals
alongside the train tracks at the end, including an otter, several mink, some
wolves and the dead bear? All real; all dead. I guess that’s why filmmakers
went to Eastern Europe to film in the ‘70s – no annoying laws about how to
treat your animal cast.
This
was a tight little story, let down by some overly distracting creative
cinematography, distressed animals and far too much dancing (lo-o-o-ng dance
sequences); I’m giving it three tentacled horrors.
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