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Atom Age Vampire

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Atom Age Vampire
Theatrical release poster
Seddok, l'erede di Satana
Directed byAnton Giulio Majano[1]
Screenplay by
Story byPiero Monviso[1]
Produced byElio Ippolito Mellino
Starring
CinematographyAldo Giordani[1]
Edited byGabriele Varriale[1]
Music byArmando Trovajoli[1]
Production
company
Lion's Films[1]
Distributed byFilm Selezione (Italy)
Release date
  • August 16, 1960(1960-08-16)(Italy)
Running time
105 minutes[1]
87 minutes (US)
72 minutes (DVD)
CountryItaly[1]
Box office90 million

Atom Age Vampire(Italian:Seddok, l'erede di Satana) is a 1960 Italianhorror filmdirected byAnton Giulio Majano.Shot inblack-and-white,the film was produced by Elio Ippolito Mellino and starsAlberto Lupo,Susanne Loret,andSergio Fantoniset in France. Despite there being no vampires in the film, it was released in the US asAtom Age Vampirein 1963 in an 87-minute version.[2]It was further shortened for English language DVD release.

Plot

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When a stripper (Susanne Loret) becomes disfigured in a car accident, a scientist (Dr. Levin, played by Alberto Lupo) develops a treatment to restore her beauty by injecting her with a special serum. While performing the procedure, however, he falls in love with her. As the treatment begins to fail, he determines to save her appearance, regardless of how many women he must kill for her sake.

Despite the implication of its American title, the film does not feature an actual vampire. The titular Seddok is the brilliant but deranged scientist Dr. Levin, mutated by a chemical formula created using radiation. Dr. Levin studied the effects of radiation on living tissue in post-HiroshimaJapan and made an imperfect andteratogenicserum, "Derma 25", which he later refined into the miraculous healing agent "Derma 28", which he uses to treat the heroine. When his supply of Derma 28 runs out, he realizes he must kill to obtain more, and injects himself with Derma 25 to become monstrous and remorseless, so that he may seek these victims without hesitation.

Because many of the murders take place near the docks where shiploads of Japanese refugees are arriving, and leave behind the victims' bodies with holes in the neck where Dr. Levin has extracted the glands, the refugees claim that a vampire (whom they call "Seddok", though this is not a Japanese name) is responsible for the attacks. During a meeting with police, a restored-to-humanity Dr. Levin speculates that the Hiroshima survivors' tales of a mutated killer are due to psychological strain from the radiation damage to their bodies. However, he also wonders aloud whether the "vampire" these witnesses describe might be a disturbed man wishing to be normal again.

Cast

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Production

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Several reference books state the film was produced byMario Bava,which is incorrect.[3]The producer isElio Ippolito Mellinounder the alias of Mario Fava.[3]The script for the film recallsGeorges Franju'sEyes Without a Face,which had been released in Italy several months beforeAtom Age Vampire.[1][4]The film was shot at Pisorno Studio inTirrenia.[1]

Release

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Atom Age Vampirewas released in Italy on August 16, 1960, where it was distributed by Film Selezione.[1]The Italian box office ofAtom Age Vampirewas described as "modest" by Robert Curti, author ofItalian Gothic Horror Films, 1957-1969where it grossed 90 millionItalian lira.[5]When it was released abroad, the film had been truncated to 87 minutes long.[5]Manypublic domaincopies of the film are cut to 69 minutes long.[5]The film was released in the United States through Manson Distributing on May 29, 1963.[1]

The film has been released on DVD in the United States byAlpha Video,Sinister Cinema, and AFA Entertainment.[1]

Reception

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In Italy, a contemporary review inLa Stampagave a brief plot and stated neither the directing nor the actors (specifying Alberto Lupo, Susanne Loret, Sergio Fantoni and Ivo Garrani) make it any less absurd or clumsy.[6]TheMonthly Film Bulletindeclared the film as "a standard, unimaginative treatment of the familiar" monster "theme" and that the film was "sluggish, banal, and of interest only to the most determined fan of the genre."[7]

From retrospective reviews,Phil Hardy's bookScience Fictionsimply referred to the film as a "routine Italian offering".[8]In his analysis of the film, Louis Paul described it as "an exploitative yet enjoyably trashy movie".[4]

Aftermath and influence

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Following the release of the film, Anton Giulio Majano directed only one more film for theaters before moving on to work in television:The Corsican Brothers.[5]

In 2009, animatorScott Batemancreated a new version of the film by using its English soundtrack and pairing it with new animation.[3]

In 2011, British artist Adam Roberts madeRemake,a scene-for-scene reshoot of the original film using the dubbed English soundtrack, but minus the presence of any of the characters.[3]The shots in this version generally follow the framing and focus but without a cast. The image of this version was intended to evoke a poor image quality copy of the film one would find on YouTube or a poor quality VHS.[3]

See also

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References

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Footnotes

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  1. ^abcdefghijklmnoCurti 2015,p. 34.
  2. ^.pp. 101-102 Senn, BrianA Year of Fear: A Day-by-day Guide to 366 Horror FilmsMcFarland 30 July 2007
  3. ^abcdeCurti 2015,p. 37.
  4. ^abPaul 2005,p. 16.
  5. ^abcdCurti 2015,p. 36.
  6. ^"Sullo schermo".La Stampa(in Italian). 29 November 1960. p. 4.Retrieved26 August2015.La vicenda, da un soggetto di Pietro Monviso, si commenta da se: e né la regia di Anton Giulio Majano né la dilettantesca recitazione degli interpret. (Alberto Lupo, Susanne Loret, Sergio Fantoni e Ivo Garrani) fanno qualcosa per renderia meno assurda e goffa.
  7. ^"Seddok, L'Erede Di Satana Seddok,Italy, 1960 ".Monthly Film Bulletin.Vol. 30, no. 348.British Film Institute.January 1963. p. 9.
  8. ^Hardy 1984,p. 203.

Sources

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