Hercules In The Haunted World (1961, directed by Mario Bava)


Returning home from his latest adventure, Hercules (Reg Park) and his sidekick, Theseus (George Ardisson), are shocked to find their home city has fallen victim to a plague that puts its victims in a trance-like state.  The woman that Hercules loves, Deianira (Leonara Ruffo), is one of the victims and, since she was also the city’s queen, the sinister Lico (Christopher Lee) is ruling in her place.

Hercules consults with the oracle, Medea (Gaia Germani).  Medea says that the plague can only be lifted by the Stone of Forgetfulness, which can only be found in the land of the dead, Hades.  Hercules and Theseus set out for Hades but before they can enter the realm of the dead, they have to perform a quest to defeat a rock monster and retrieve a magic apple from a giant tree.  Nothing is simple in ancient Greece.

The best of all the Hercules films, Hercules in the Haunted World may not have had Steve Reeves in the lead role but it did have Mario Bava behind the camera.  Bava shows what a clever director can achieve just through creative lighting, colorful mists, and detailed set design.  The film has all of the mythological monsters and toga-clad action that you expect from a Hercules film but it also has atmosphere, bleeding plants made from the souls of the dead, zombies, and Christopher Lee.  Lee may not be playing a vampire here but he still finds an excuse to drink blood in an attempt to achieve immortality.

Reg Park was a Brit who was inspired to become a bodybuilder after watching Steve Reeves in a competition.  When Reeves left the role of Hercules, Park was cast in his place.  Park only made a total of five peplum films and he was even worse at expressing emotion than Steve Reeves.  Park did have the physique necessary to play Hercules and that was really all that was needed.  Though Park tired of acting, he would still go on to mentor another bodybuilder who was inspired by Steve Reeves and would play Hercules in a film, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Horror On The Lens: Hercules In The Haunted World (dir by Mario Bava)


Herculesinthehauntedworld

In many ways, 2014 was the year of Hercules.  Or, at the very least, it could have been the year of Hercules.  Neither one of the two Hercules film released this year exactly managed to set the American box office on fire.  Of the two, The Legend of Hercules was memorable largely for being forgettable while the Dwayne Johnson-starring Hercules was far better than any film directed by Brett Ratner has any right to be.

Neither one of them, however, can really hold a candle to the 1961 film, Hercules In The Haunted World.  In this Italian film, Hercules (Reg Park) discovers that his lover Princess Deianira has gone insane so he goes to Hades in order to get the Stone of Forgetfulness, so he can use it to cure her.  The story’s really not that important.  What is important is that this visually stunning film was the first color film to be directed by Mario Bava and that the film’s villain is played by Christopher Lee.

Enjoy!