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It!

It! (1966)

November. 15,1967
|
5.6
| Horror

After a warehouse fire, museum director Grove and assistant Pimm find everything destroyed, only one statue withstood the fire mysteriously undamaged. Suddenly Grove is lying dead on the ground, killed by the statue? Pimm finds out that the cursed statue has been created by Rabbi Loew in 16th century and will withstand every human attempt to destroy it. Pimm decides to use it to his own advantage.

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FeistyUpper
1967/11/15

If you don't like this, we can't be friends.

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Chirphymium
1967/11/16

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

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Senteur
1967/11/17

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Jenna Walter
1967/11/18

The film may be flawed, but its message is not.

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Paul Andrews
1967/11/19

It! is set during the 60's in London where a large fire has destroyed a warehouse, museum curator Harold Clark (Ernest Clark) is called to see if he can salvage anything so he & his assistant Arthur Pimm (Roddy McDowall) take a look through the burnt out ruins. Amazingly the only think worth saving is a seemingly perfectly preserved sixteenth century Czech carving of a large man, Grove mysteriously dies in the ruins & the statue is taken back to the museum where it is put on display. Then an electrician also dies near the statue as it suddenly falls on top of him, Pimm is sure that the statue has something to do with the death's & when American expert Jim Perkins (Paul Maxwell) says he thinks it's an authentic Golem his suspicions are confirmed. Pimm discovers the secret behind bringing the Golem to life in order to do his bidding but the power soon goes to Pimm's head...This American British co-production was written, produced & directed by Herbert J. Leder & is a rather odd little film that I imagine many won't have even heard of let alone seen. I am not quite sure what the makers of It! were thinking but the overall message seems to be that absolute power corrupts although in the case of Pimm who just happens to stumble on an infinitely powerful Golem he's more than a bit mad to start with as he steals jewels from his museum to give to his dead mummified mother whom he keeps at home. Yeah, there's a definite Norman Bates from Psycho (196) vibe going on here even to the extent Pimm steals his mothers corpse back at the end. The story starts off alright with this living Golem thing but then is looses it's way as Pimm who finds a way to control the Golem uses it's infinite power to try & impress a bit of skirt, yeah sure the blonde chick is sort of cute but she's just a bird & if I had infinite power in my grasp I can think of better ways to use it other than to try & get inside some girls panties. At almost 100 minutes it's a bit too long with a laughable ending in which this slow lumbering Golem manages to keep the entire British army out of a fenced castle where Pimm is holded up, can't they just go round the back or something? So while It! has a message & is watchable for what it is it's a little bit too odd to appeal to the masses & a really prolonged silly climax spoils a fairly decent build-up.It! does look very much like a Hammer horror production from the period with lavish sets, costumes & nice colour photography & the Golem itself does look quite imposing & creepy at times to start with but once it comes alive & starts walking around it looks a lot sillier. There's no real violence or gore & little actual horror either as the film focuses on it's moral message about the corrupting influence of power. There's a poor sequence trying to show the destruction of Hammersmith bridge & the dropping of a nuclear warhead which date the film badly & are also sloppily edited. At one point Pimm is given a 3 pound a week rise which at first I thought was rather low but then realised that I have never even had a pay-rise that much even more than forty years after this was made.Filmed in the UK this has nice enough production values although it's maybe not quite as good as the best hammer films from the period. The late veteran actor Roddy McDowall gives an suitably unbalanced performance while Jill Hayworth ably provides the glamour.It! is a strange film that is hard to categorise & as such maybe it's worth a watch if your after something a bit different but the ridiculous climax & an overall lack of something stops It! from being a forgotten gem, more of a misplaced piece of costume jewellery.

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AngryChair
1967/11/20

Disturbed museum curator is haunted by a hideous hulking stone statue, but when he discovers the power to control the indestructible thing he seeks out harsh vengeance.Well-made British horror film is an engaging and unique treat for those that enjoy clever and untraditional genre films. The story is solidly engulfing and nicely paced, pulling the viewer into the mystery of the Golem statue and its deranged master. The late great Roddy McDowall does a splendid performance, as usual, as our lead who's on the verge of madness. The supporting cast isn't half bad either, though they admittedly pale compared to McDowell. The other big star of this film is the Golem statue itself. The makeup work on the imposing statue is quite good and the image of that statue is something that's stayed with me for over 10 years.All around, a solid genre film that's definitely worth tracking down for both fans of British horror and fans of McDowell.*** out of ****

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Steve Nyland (Squonkamatic)
1967/11/21

Herbert Leder's IT!, or CURSE OF THE GREAT GOLEM (the name the film really should have had) is one of the most bizarre and eclectic little monster movies ever made. It's a misunderstood or better yet misguided little project that had really good intentions, a decent cast, a respectable mid-line budget, some decent writing, but ultimately falls a little flat. My association with the film and enthusiasm for it is nostalgic: This used to play on our Monster Movie Matinée and Eivom weekend afternoon/evening local film slots. At the age of 11 or so I thought it was one of the coolest movies ever made ... my more mature mindset sees it's flaws but still loves every stupid, stiff, very British minute of it.Roddy McDowall plays a very strange young man named Pimm who works for a respectable British antiquities museum and happens upon a statue slated for display there which may or may not be one of the last of the Golems -- clay juggernauts of destruction made by Hebrew alchemist/artist mystics to protect their people from outside oppression. They are infinitely strong, completely indestructible, and have absolutely no will of their own. The problem is that such power corrupts humans infinitely as well, and once you get started on being the most powerful 24 year old nebbish on the planet it's hard to make yourself -- and It -- stop. Especially when you can't get rid of the damn thing. The film is broken up into three stages: Part one involves a series of strange unexplained deaths in and around the museum that McDowall rather slowly realizes must be the work of the Golem. Part two involves his quest to learn how the thing works and his rapid descent into near madness after he learns the secret. And part three involves his ultimately futile attempts to get rid of the thing as it ruins his life, rampages across the countryside, drives him completely insane, and finally walks off into the ocean after the British Army tries to blow it up with an atom bomb. Presumably it is still wandering around down there somewhere.Along the way we meet various people who touch on Pimm's life, most notably his stuffy museum curator bosses, the pretty daughter of one of them (Jill Haworth), a couple of British police inspectors (one of them cult horror legend Ian McCulloch), and a visiting expert professor on Golemology from America. We also get to meet Pimm's mother, who is dead, and her partially embalmed body is Pym's partner in life. He "borrows" rare jewels from the museum for her to wear, fixes her tea and after dinner toddies while he talks with her about the day's events, and introduces her to others with a kind of blasé offhandedness that suggests we are getting it wrong by reacting with horror to the corpse. The scene where Pimm, the Golem and his mother terrify a museum matron is the best laugh in the movie. All the while the power of the Golem is getting under his skin, leading to the film's finest scene where he asks a Hebrew scholar to translate a script that had been etched into the Golem's side. The subsequent scenes of destruction as the Golem runs rampant pale to the chills sent down the spine by the old man's solemn intonation.Another great scene is when Pimm loses control of a situation and orders the Golem to commit murder for him, and it is at that point that the narrative begins to spiral out of control. We see a few scenes of carnage but for the most part the film is McDowall's, and fortunately even in 1966 he was a good enough actor to more or less carry the project. His Pimm has an odd ambiguity about him that is certainly "evil", yet sympathetic in the way that is very reminiscent of Anthony Perkins' PSYCHO character. We actually feel suspense hoping he will not get caught and perhaps figure out a way to free himself from the curse of the Golem, but alas he torches an elderly librarian, barricades himself in a secluded manor, and pouts like a spoiled brat when Jill Haworth tells him he is about to be blown up with an atom bomb. All this is a good premise, but aside from a single incident when Pym looks at the Golem's arm's to see them bent, looks back up in astonishment at it's face, then back down at the arms to see them straightened, then back again to gawk at the stone face, the film lacks any kind of artfulness, existing more as an act of "craft". At one point Pym even tries to light the thing on fire by spilling fuel oil all over it and the director allowed him to shake the can and snarl "This will finish you ..." like he was Daffy Duck. One other problem the film has it is that it was made at the wrong time: By 1966 London was going "mod" and this film is about as square as they come. Hammer Films was making big waves with their Gothic shockers and a stiff, somewhat talky movie about a giant walking slab of clay didn't have much resonance compared to Christopher Lee in his Dracula cape. IT! was more or less forgotten except as off-hour TV viewing for 11 year old boys who would think it was the coolest thing ever made, perhaps.7/10 nonetheless: Deserves a restoration for DVD where IT! could prove to be a cult hit of some magnitude ... and if anyone ever is of the mind to put one together, give me a call.

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Sleepy-17
1967/11/22

...and the production expenses are laughably low. Tongue-in-cheek to begin with, this unpretentious "shocker" is quite funny in its absurdity. The secondary characters are remarkably earnest, and Jill Haworth is exceedingly gorgeous. Love the nuclear warhead!

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