31 Days of Hell: The Blood on Satan's Claw (1971) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Severin Films

As the resurgence of the folk horror subgenre continues to spread like wildfire thanks to the likes of A24 pictures like Midsommar, The Witch and most recently Lamb followed by a recent announcement by Severin Films of a forthcoming folk horror boxed set, it was only a matter of time before frequent British television director Piers Haggard’s 1971 medieval pagan horror epic The Blood on Satan’s Claw would receive renewed attention. 
 
Recently given a new 4K restoration in both the UK and the US, the film was intended as an allegory for the then-recent Manson Family murders and despite being preplanned as three pictures before being condensed into one and underperforming at the box office, the film has since gone on to be regarded as being at the forefront of the birth of the folk horror subgenre in film alongside Witchfinder General and The Wicker Man.


In a small English countryside during the XVIII Century, a farmhand stumbles upon a skull with one eye and fur on its head in the middle of a field but upon returning with the local judge it is nowhere to be found.  Not long after the judge’s son Peter (Simon Williams) brings home a young woman named Rosalind (Tamara Ustinov) as his fiancĂ©e only to have her abruptly go insane and be institutionalized. 
 
All of this leads to the local children who seemingly have succumb to the occult under the demonic guidance of Angel Blake (Linda Hayden), a lusty femme fatale with as strong of a thirst for carnality as she has for blood.  As more and more people start turning up with patches of fur on their bodies and a local girl is raped and ritualistically murdered by the cult, the judge concludes it is in fact the work of the Devil himself and that he must vanquish him in any capacity he can.
 
While an ensemble piece with many characters and cross-cutting plot threads of the grip of evil slowly seeping through the remote countryside, The Blood on Satan’s Claw basically boils down to a war between good and evil with the God-fearing judge (Patrick Wymark) and local Reverend Fallowfield (Anthony Ainley) engaged by the evil seductive nymphette Angel Blake, played with gusto by Linda Hayden who might be one of the most bloodthirsty femme fatales in cinema history.


Take for instance a scene where Hayden tries to seduce the Reverend Fallowfield in his own classroom, disrobing and strutting around the set fully nude without making a misstep, in near full demonic control of the Reverend.  Later still she is seen licking the blood off of a blade after repeatedly stabbing her victim in the back during a sacrificial rite but not before telling a witch being pursued by an angry mob for her to ‘let the dogs eat you’.  A true personification of physical evil in the flesh preying on man’s weaknesses while representing a nebulous greater, more implacable adversary destined to bring Hell back on Earth.
 
An earthy period mixture of folk horror with the uncanny and graphically gruesome in between moments of unfettered carnality, writer-director Piers Haggard’s brief dabbling in the horror genre is an ornate handsomely photographed shocker lensed brilliantly by Phase IV and Sorcerer cinematographer Dick Bush.  Equally powerful is the film’s haunted original score by Australian composer Marc Wilkinson which fluctuates between electronica and orchestral compositions. 
 
Originally filmed under the title Satan’s Skin before being re-released with the finished title The Blood on Satan’s Claw, the film seen now is regarded as one of Great Britain’s finest folk horror films and one that helped cement the genre as an important and contemporary subgenre of horror.  With such archaic settings as the ruined Saint James Church on full display as well as shooting in Oxfordshire to take full advantage of the English countryside, the world of the film from top to bottom feels enmeshed in the superstitious and otherworldly. 


Seen now, the film hasn’t lost any of its power to shock or horrify and clearly informed what would or would not evolve into the folk-horror subgenre.  Moreover, the film has since been reassessed as a Lovecraftian progenitor in terms of its premise and the conviction the characters have to the superstitions as cold hard indisputable fact.  An essential component of folk-horror and an ornate, classy endeavor unafraid to take chances or affront the viewer when necessary, The Blood on Satan’s Claw rightfully earns its moniker as one of the greatest British horror films of all time.

--Andrew Kotwicki