2021-05-18

THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES @ 50

 

Celebrating 50 glorious years on the screen, it’s the 1971 Vincent Price classic, The Abominable Dr. Phibes, which was released in the US on May 18, 1971 (its UK release was in April of that year). Dr. Phibes has become one of Price’s most memorable characters, even with the limitation that he couldn’t move his prosthetic face! Somehow, Price managed to emote through the deadpan expression and imbue the character with charm, charisma and pathos.

Directed by Robert Fuest, who also came up with the story idea, the character of Phibes bares a striking resemblance to a certain acquaintance of the director, the notorious founder of The Church of Satan, Anton LaVey. LaVey even claimed as much and, given the character’s name is Dr. Anton Phibes and he’s an organist, researcher, medical doctor, biblical scholar and ex-vaudevillian who has created a clockwork band of robot musicians to play old standards at his whim, it’s hard not to see the similarities. I tend to give credence to this after having read LaVey’s writings and been a fan of the film (and its sequel) for decades.

Feust gained recognition as an extremely inventive set designer working on series like The Avengers and the New Avengers and it’s easy to see his talents on display in both Phibes movies. While the rudimentary plot of revenge does not offer a great deal of depth, the film soars on the strength of evocative set pieces and stylish Art Deco visuals. Each of the death scenes is constructed like a meticulously choreographed macabre ballet and Phibes’ home setting is a wonderful fantasy land of mechanical musicians, an ornately animated theater organ and his high fashion mute muse, Vulnavia, who deftly assists the doctor on his quest to redress the wrongs he perceives were inflicted upon his deceased, but preserved wife, Victoria.

Phibes is the quintessential anti-hero and the revenge story told here is very much the opposite of the norm for such fiction, which commonly function as cautionary tales about the cost of vengeance to those pursuing it. In this case, vengeance is a delicious dish to be savored and enjoyed to the fullest, whether served hot or cold or covered in honey for the locusts to feast upon. Each victim in this symphony of sadism is relished and lingered upon to extract every morsel of sustenance. Whereas mere mortals are diminished by their pursuit of revenge, Phibes is enriched and nourished by it. His adversaries, the London police, are shown as bumbling amateurs and fools who are always 10 steps behind their foe. It’s one of the first film series I ever encountered where the “bad guy” always comes out on top. There’s no comeuppance, no moral price to pay, no defeat at the hands of the “good guys”.

I first encountered these movies in the mid 1970s when local TV stations would often have a weekend midnight horror movie. Friday or Saturday nights were the time to tune into the creep shows after mom and dad were in bed and us kids were allowed to stay up late and lose ourselves in these strange scenes. Phibes was an immediate favorite because it looked so beautiful and the story was unlike anything I’d seen in any other horror movie. My appreciation for these films has only grown over the years as I’ve seen them again and again. It’s that combination of artistic style and flair setting the stage for Vincent Price’s nuanced performance that make these films so timeless and transcendent. There’s a sort of “Zen” to them that is rare and leaves one with a wonderful sense of clarity.

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