Thursday, February 2, 2017

The Big Buzz






This is my entry in the O Canada! Blogathon sponsored by Speakeasy and Silver Screenings



The Great White North (better known to us here south of the border as Canada) is a vast expanse of land, and as you would expect, plenty of space in which to film movies.  I'm not quite sure any of The Fly series was actually filmed in Canada.  Maybe some of the exterior scenes... I do know that the credits for The Curse of the Fly credit it as being filmed in England.  Be that as it may, the films take place in Montreal and its surrounding areas.

Montreal is located in the province of Quebec, a region of Canada that is unique in the fact that it's official language is French.  (Note to nitpickers:  Yes New Brunswick has French as an official language, but it shares that with English. Quebec on the other hand only has French as it's official language)  Therefore it should come as no surprise that nearly all the characters in the Fly movies have French names.

A few notes about the story on which the first The Fly was based:  It was written by George Langelaan and published in June 1957 issue of Playboy magazine.  It received honors as the Best Fiction Award from Playboy  for that year as well as the 1958 edition of the annual Greatest SF and Fantasy.









The Fly (1958)
The Return of the Fly(1959) 
The Curse of the Fly(1965)

Warning!  This whole post contains numerous spoilers!


The Delambre family suffers from a curse, the curse that affects all practitioners of strange science in the Hollywood film world.  Of course, usually that's only limited to one generation, but since Hollywood has an affinity for milking a topic for all its worth, this extended to three generations in the world of The Fly.  I am referring to the curse of being victimized by one's own sense of purpose, which often, especially in science fiction films, translates to having your (mostly) altruistic intentions cause horrible unexpected events to occur in the process.

The movies take place in Montreal, where Andre Delambre (Al Hedison; later in life billed as "David" Hedison) and his brother, François (Vincent Price) own a metal works.  Andre is a working scientist who is secretly working on a project, which turns out to be a device that can transport solid objects from one place to another.  Sort of a predecessor to the transporters used in the Star Trek world, but thius one has drastic consequences (since, as I said before, in sci-fi, often  altruistic intentions do not work out as planned).

At the beginning of the movie, Andre's wife, Helene (Patricia Owens), has just killed Andre by using the hydraulic press at the plant to squash him.  The story plays out in flashbacks, as well as in the present, as Helene tells the story to the police and François.  While Helene acts oddly, including frantically looking at every fly that comes into the room, she tells of how her husband worked on his invention.  A couple of mishaps, including a plate that reappears with the printed letters transposed and the family cat who disappears at one end but doesn't reappear at the other end,  cause him to return to his work trying to perfect it.

Finally he thinks he has succeeded and uses the machine to transport himself.  But a fly which inadvertently got in the machine with him causes him to reappear with the head of the fly.



As he gradually goes insane from the effects of the transformation, he and Helene frantically try to find the fly that has his head.  Unfortunately, they are unsuccessful, and Andre destroys his lab and has Helene kill him.  In the end, François and the police inspector (Herbert Marshall) finally find the fly and kill it shortly before it is about to be eaten by a spider.  ("Help me!  Help me!"  Sound familiar?)



Flash forward about 10 or 15 years.  In The Return of the Fly, Andre's son, Phillipe (Brett Halsey) tries to recreate his father's work.  His uncle (played again  by Price) warns him against the actions and refuses to give him any help.  But Phillipe is determined to succeed.  With the help of an associate, Alan Hines (David Frankham), he continues to work, and when he really needs the money manages to blackmail uncle  François by threatening to sell his half of the plant if his uncle doesn't help.

When he finally succeeds in doing the work, Alan, who turns out to be a spy named Ronald Holmes, tries to sell the secrets to another source.  He eventually is confronted by Phillipe, and the spy knocks Phillipe out and uses the transporter, with a fly included, to transform Phillipe into a human/fly mutation.  Phillipe escapes and finds the secret source and kills him, then returns and finds Holmes and kills him, too.  With the help of a police inspector, Phillipe and the fly are re-transported and successfully become normal again (a happy ending for a change).





In The Curse of the Fly, another generation of the Delambre family is working on the teleportation project.  Martin Delambre (George Baker) has been working with his father, Henri (Brian Donlevy) on the project.  (A note here:  Henri is supposed to be the son of the first Delambre, Andre, but they changed his name from Phillipe in between the second and third movies for some reason.)

Henri and Martin, along with Martin's brother, Albert (Michael Graham), have had some success in transporting people, although they have had a few mishaps, such as two assistants named Samuels and Dale, and Marin's wife, Judith, all of whom are kept in stables on the Delambre farm.   (Who the "successes" are remains a mystery since it seems everyone who has been through the transporter in the film has had some sort of bad side effect or another from the process.

Patricia Stanley (Carole Gray), an escapee from a mental institution, whom Martin finds on the road in her underwear, also figures into the story.  Both Martin and Patricia hold on to secrets that they don't reveal to one another (Martin his strange experiments, and his still alive first wife, and Patricia her past and the fact that she is an escapee from the funny farm), making for a pretty iffy start since Martin marries Patricia early in the movie...



Things get a little rocky when Patricia discovers the first wife, horribly disfigured from the experiment gone awry, and martin finding out that Patricia was in the institution.  Martin, for his part, uses that info to try to convince Pat she was just dreaming when she saw Judith (Mary Manson).  But when the whole world comes crashing around them, Martin and Henri act just like the typical mad scientists by trying to hide their mistakes forever.



Altruistic intentions aside, the Delambre family does seem to be cursed (thus the rather aptly named title of the third installment).  The third movie ends its credits with "Is this the end?", indicating that the studio though they might have a franchise that could go further, but the third movie was such a failure at the box office that that ended that dream.

Well folks, I'm still depending on the old Plymouth to transport me from place to place, at least until the next Delambre finally gets the damn invention right.  Drive safely

Quiggy




14 comments:

  1. I've killed many a fly in my day, but since the day I first saw 1958s The Fly, these murders have not rested easily on my conscience.

    Very interesting how the follow-ups relied on the memory of the first film. I've always liked that it was set in Montreal.

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    1. If they aren't in my own house I just leave them alone, just like spiders. My house is my own turf, however. And since i don't have a wacko scientist tinkering in the basement (or even a basement for that matter) I figure they are intruders, and will swat them just like I woulds a burglar... :-)

      Thanks for reading. These are a little creepy, especially the first one , with that ending and all.

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  2. I've yet to watch the curse of the fly. Now I feel I must watch all three. And, perhaps, be nicer to flies while I'm at it... in case science experiments gone wrong and stuff...

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    1. Curse is not up to snuff with the other two and it shows, but I must admit it's better than some of the cheaper low-budget stuff i've watched. Thanks for reading.

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  3. Fabulous overview of these films. I've not seen any of these (just the Jeff Goldblum version), but it sounds like they'd make for terrific marathon viewing one snowy weekend.

    I really enjoyed your take on these films. Thanks so much for joining us and bringing these films with you! :)

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    1. At least watch the first one. It's a classic , one of the best horror/sci-fi films out there.

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  4. I've watched the entire franchise, and the first film really surprised me - I was on the edge of my seat near the end. Too bad the third was a flop, I'd like to see more of the poor Delambres and the flyes!
    Thanks for the kind comment!

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    1. Someone should remake The Fly (not like David Cronenberg's attempt, but a true remake.) I think I read somewhere someone was attempting to remake Cronenberg's version. Thanks for reading.

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  5. Seen and enjoyed all of these, but the first is such a classic, always creeps me out. Love the Canadian connections and thank you for writing about them!

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    1. I'm glad I finally got to do it. I had to bow out last year due to problems getting a copy of the first one, on which I counted my library having a copy. They replaced the "lost" copy in the interim, so I got to finally follow through with my review. thanks for reading.

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  6. Like a lot of people, I've seen the first 'Fly' film, but not its follow-ups; I loved the first, so I'm a little leery about trying the second and third. But I like that there's continuity between all three, so I guess if it's a slow night, why not give 'em a go?

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    1. The second one is almost as good as the first. The third one is just for obsessive completists like myself.... Thanks for reading.

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  7. I have never heard of or seen the 3rd installment dang you now I have to go hunting for it.

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    1. Be thankful the third one was a bomb... Otherwise you might have had a couple more to look for...:-D Thanks for reading.

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