The Gorgon 1964
- By Pete Worrall
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- 15 Jun, 2018
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May contain spoilers

I have to admit to missing this one first, second, third and how many other times so it was nice to find this one Netflix. 1964 chills once again with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee and directed by stalwart Terence Fisher, how could it go wrong? It didn’t, well, not entirely.
In the early 20th century, a Gorgon takes human form and terrorizes a small European village by turning its citizens to stone. Medusa had 2 sisters, Euryale and Medera, one of which was living in an old castle, or at least that is the fear of the locals.
What was interesting about The Gorgon was how you thought Professor Jules Heitz was going to be the protagonist of the film, but after a third of the way through he gets his comeuppance leading to his son (Paul Heitz) to arrive and investigate the circumstances of his father’s death. Paul turns out to be the protagonist and it was odd only having him turn up after such a long time, about 25 minutes, the death of his father obviously being the film’s inciting incident. 25 minutes is fine in a 2 hour movie, but with only 80 minutes to play with, it came across as unconventional…a nice move, in my opinion.
Alas, because Paul only have about 45 minutes of screen time, his love affair with Carla Hoffman, assistant to Cushing’s Dr Namaroff, was underwritten and unconvincing. The film was only 80 minutes in length and it felt like there was 30 minutes of story telling left on the cutting room floor as the narrative was very clunky with people turning up for no other reason than when the plot needed them to. Christopher Lee added some gravitas as a professor to help Paul with his Gorgon issues and it was good fun to see Patrick Troughton as the face of the grumpy police force.
Even for 1964 it felt low budget. The Acting seemed rushed and a little hammy and the overall editing was disjointed and clunky. However, the story was fairly solid with a few twists and turns and the atmosphere was pretty good and I did come away thinking how un-formulaic it all was. It wasn’t particularly scary or creepy, but its aura of menace held my attention all the way through to the, arguably, rushed ending.
