Years before producer Alan Ladd Jr. won the Academy Award
for Best Picture for producing Mel Gibson’s Braveheart and even further
before founding The Ladd Company which produced such genre classics as Chariots
of Fire, Alien and The Empire Strikes Back, he started out
working within the thriller/horror subgenre.
Starting out with future Dead & Buried director Gary Sherman
in his 1972 debut film Death Line (retitled Raw Meat and recut
for North American audiences), the British horror film co-written by Sherman
and Ceri Jones is an exploitation flick centered around a murder spree arising
from within the London subways featuring the talents of Donald Pleasence, a
sneaky cameo by Christopher Lee, A Hard Days Night actor Norman
Rossington and half-brother David Ladd as the film’s hero and How to Get
Ahead in Advertising star Hugh Armstrong as a deformed inbred mutant
wreaking havoc and horror on the subterranean tunnels of England.
Scotland Yard’s Inspector Calhoun (Donald Pleasence doing an
intoxicated skeptical dress rehearsal for Dr. Loomis in Halloween) is on
the hunt for a killer that is prowling the London subways and recently claimed
the life of a prominent politician, a figure a young couple Alex (David Ladd)
and Tricia (Sharon Gurney) bump into and call the police for only to return and
find his body missing. As the
investigation bores on, it becomes apparent the attacker is the descendent of
an entire populace of 19th century tunnel workers who were caved in
and left for dead but survived decades of cannibalizing the flesh of the dead
and in-breeding. Each night in the
tunnel, a mysterious inhuman howling ‘Mind the Doors’ echoes throughout the subway. Just who or what is lurking within the Death
Line looking around for Raw Meat to dine in on and/or a potential
new mate to kidnap and sire with a new generation of inbred offspring.
The Beatles fans will notice Norman
Rossington immediately as Donald Pleasence’s police partner and Christopher Lee’s
unlikely cameo mid-movie (unfortunately just one scene) fosters notions of a
crossover as Lee would appear on the album cover for Paul McCartney’s Band
on the Run. Ken Russell’s Women
in Love actress Sharon Gurney as the hippie scream queen who genuinely
tries to help find the missing politician but winds up disappearing herself is
good and no stranger to horror herself having done Crucible of Horror with
Michael Gough. The one who perhaps gives
the best performance across the board is the monster itself played by Hugh
Armstrong who somehow manages with his disfigurement and inability to speak
more than three words to evoke equal amounts of terror and sympathy.
If you already own the previous Blue
Underground disc or the Network disc, the new 4K UHD represents a substantial
upgrade but also doesn’t necessarily merit Atmos audio rendering but it sounded
nice for what its worth. Mostly though,
curios will want to watch it as a double-bill to Wake in Fright in terms
of trying to gauge which film Donald Pleasence was more intoxicated on.
--Andrew Kotwicki
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