"La vallée" was filmed in Papua New Guinea.
For an insight into the mind behind the film, see the interview with Director Barbet Schroeder on this site dedicated to "La vallée."
"The Valley ... fuses fiction and documentary with improvised dialogue. Made with just a crew of just 13, this road movie by land rover, horseback and on foot, set to Pink Floyd’s shimmering psychedelia, is very much of the period – and one in which the director gets to unleash his thoughts about ‘finding one-self’ in a post-hippy era."
Full review

The entire cast and crew of La vallée: Michael is on the far right.
Photo is from this site.
According to Gerry Cullen, who became friends with Michael Gothard while working as an extra on "Arthur of the Britons" in 1972:
"Michael had finished working on that when I first met him ... He talked about the film quite a bit to me as to how he felt very good about that film.
It was years later before I had had a chance to see it and once I did I could see why, I think the storyline and the character he played fit his view of life, a sense of risks and adventure, willing to do what it takes to find out what it is all about. It’s just my thought but I think that was what kept him feeling most alive.
It was a time of discovery for people willing to travel to really delve into a culture and take risks. I think "La Vallee" expresses that for Michael, and he liked that film very much."
Harold Chapman also spoke to Michael about ‘La vallée.’ He says: "In a recent film [released in July 1972 in France] which I was a bit puzzled over, and wanted him to explain, he was more or less playing himself, a man of VERY few words. He was leading a small band of hippies on a trek in a tropical landscape situation in search of something or other which I couldn't quite understand.
Mike explained this as, 'we were asking questions, seeking answers, and only found more questions'. Which I thought summed up the movie to me."
Michael’s former girlfriend N.B., who first met him in 1984, says:
'He didn’t like watching himself. I never got him to show me any movie he had worked in. From what he told me, I think he liked the film “Up the Junction” and “Arthur of the Britons.” And the French one, “La vallée.”
He wasn’t very good at learning new languages. He was o.k. with a bit of French (since he had lived in Paris for a year), but he rarely said anything in French and if so, he had a hard time to get the pronunciation right.'
IMDB entry
For an insight into the mind behind the film, see the interview with Director Barbet Schroeder on this site dedicated to "La vallée."
"The Valley ... fuses fiction and documentary with improvised dialogue. Made with just a crew of just 13, this road movie by land rover, horseback and on foot, set to Pink Floyd’s shimmering psychedelia, is very much of the period – and one in which the director gets to unleash his thoughts about ‘finding one-self’ in a post-hippy era."
Full review

The entire cast and crew of La vallée: Michael is on the far right.
Photo is from this site.
According to Gerry Cullen, who became friends with Michael Gothard while working as an extra on "Arthur of the Britons" in 1972:
"Michael had finished working on that when I first met him ... He talked about the film quite a bit to me as to how he felt very good about that film.
It was years later before I had had a chance to see it and once I did I could see why, I think the storyline and the character he played fit his view of life, a sense of risks and adventure, willing to do what it takes to find out what it is all about. It’s just my thought but I think that was what kept him feeling most alive.
It was a time of discovery for people willing to travel to really delve into a culture and take risks. I think "La Vallee" expresses that for Michael, and he liked that film very much."
Harold Chapman also spoke to Michael about ‘La vallée.’ He says: "In a recent film [released in July 1972 in France] which I was a bit puzzled over, and wanted him to explain, he was more or less playing himself, a man of VERY few words. He was leading a small band of hippies on a trek in a tropical landscape situation in search of something or other which I couldn't quite understand.
Mike explained this as, 'we were asking questions, seeking answers, and only found more questions'. Which I thought summed up the movie to me."
Michael’s former girlfriend N.B., who first met him in 1984, says:
'He didn’t like watching himself. I never got him to show me any movie he had worked in. From what he told me, I think he liked the film “Up the Junction” and “Arthur of the Britons.” And the French one, “La vallée.”
He wasn’t very good at learning new languages. He was o.k. with a bit of French (since he had lived in Paris for a year), but he rarely said anything in French and if so, he had a hard time to get the pronunciation right.'
IMDB entry
"I didn’t like him at all."
Curtis Harrington
Louis M. Heyward
The set of ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’ was clearly an unhappy one. Executive producer, Louis M. Heyward, who - having been impressed with him on ‘Scream and Scream Again’ - had cast Michael Gothard in the role of Albie, said:
“Curtis Harrington was great to work with but Shelley was difficult. There were problems between her and co-star Michael Gothard. She also kept insisting that I get a 'Sir' for supporting role. I got Ralph Richardson but she had meant Laurence Olivier.”
Judy Cornwell's problems with Shelley Winters
Judy Cornwell, who played the maid, Clarine, gives a more detailed account of Shelley Winters’ ‘difficult’ behaviour, both before shooting began, and on set:
"Richard [Eastham, Cornwell’s personal manager] told me that ‘Wuthering Heights’ had now opened in America and I had wonderful, rave reviews for my performance. Unfortunately for me, Shelley Winters too had seen the reviews, and she had overall script approval in her contract for the next film.
Before the shooting in Shepperton began, my part was almost deleted from the script. The best scenes were changed to become hers, and any of my scenes that were not essential to the story line were cut.
When I was sent the final draft of the script I was horrified and talked over the situation with Richard … He wanted to know whether I would rather pull out of the film, but I decided not to do so. I liked the producers of the film and this would be my fourth for American International Pictures. The heads of the company sent me Christmas cards. There were not to know that a certain actress would invoke her script approval clause.
I knew that Michael Bryant had worked with Shelley Winters on a film for television, so I phoned him to see what it was like to work with her.
'Tricky,' he replied. 'She makes mistakes when you are giving your best performance, so you have to do it again. This goes on until you drop your performance, then she comes up, and that is the take they use.'
My heart sank.
…
The first day of filming for ‘The Gingerbread House’ [as ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’ was originally titled] arrived and I met Curtis Harrington, an experienced and charming Hollywood director. We talked through the scene and then Miss Winters arrived. I was introduced to her as the girl who gave the great performance in ‘Wuthering Heights.’
She gazed at me with small beady eyes and said, 'I know. She's a scene stealer.'
Curtis laughed as if she had made a joke; I knew she had not.
When we began preparations for the scene, as Michael [Bryant] had warned me, she fluffed and made mistakes. I kept steady … not panicking, just keeping up my performance and not dropping it for one second.
Suddenly there was a wail from Shelley who said she had a headache and she stormed off the set, so we broke for an early lunch …
After lunch we returned to the scene again and this time she wanted me in a different position from before. Curtis tried to accommodate her. Every position that would work for the camera was unacceptable to her.
I heard a couple of yawns from the crew. They did not like one of their own British actresses being put through the wringer by this Yank.
Curtis began to lose his cool. 'Would you like me to put her under the table?' he said.
I took several deep breaths and stayed calm.
We began the scene again and suddenly she came up with a performance. So did I, and there was a shout of 'Take and Print.' I think she thought I was going to be thrown by the sudden change but I was not. I was tired at the end of the day, but the first scene was in the can, and my next scheduled scene did not involve her.
[Presumably this was her scene with Albie (Michael Gothard) and Mr Harrison (Hugh Griffith) in the kitchen: Judy seems to have had no problems with either of them]
The next time we had to work together she started again. I had had enough by now, so I let her have it with both barrels and told her that I had worked with some pretty big names, people with huge talent, and that none of them had behaved as badly as she had. I said life was too short for such games and could she please stop pissing about.
Instead of wailing and storming off the set, which by now was frigid with silence and tension, she smiled, her face relaxed, and she said, 'My God, you remind me of me when I was young.' … from then on she was nauseatingly nice to me, and I had no more trouble from her."
Curtis Harrington's friendship with Shelley Winters
Harrington seems to have been very tolerant of Winters’ unreasonable behaviour – he must have known what to expect, as he’d already worked with her on ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’
In fact, in an interview for ‘Terror Trap’ in April 2005, he admitted: “A lot of movie stars particularly can be quite difficult. I mean, Shelley Winters is one of them. So I've learned to handle all that fairly well by being diplomatic and sympathetic and all those things. When I hear of directors who are very brutal with their actors, I think that approach is all wrong. I mean, actors need a lot of TLC to do well."
As we shall later see, this ‘TLC’ was something he denied Michael Gothard; but then, Harrington and Winters were friends.
Another friend of Harrington’s, David Del Valle, says:
“Curtis did [‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’] because Shelley asked for him personally, the perks were of course a trip to the UK and the joy of working with Sir Ralph Richardson whom he adored …
… I got to know Shelley Winters who acted for Curtis on two occasions. Curtis would organize parties around her and we would all find ourselves sitting on the floor around this ornate loveseat in his living room as Miss Winters held court from her throne, she loved to be the center of attention at all times …
Shelley bonded big time with Curtis on the set of ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’…”
In the ‘Terror Trap’ interview, Harrington answered questions about both ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’ (in which Winters starred with Debbie Reynolds) and ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’
TT: Did Debbie [Reynolds] and Shelley get along?
CH: Just barely.
TT: Interesting.
CH: It was rather inevitable that they would have a conflict occasionally. Shelley imagined a rivalry with Debbie.
TT: Why is that?
CH: Well, Debbie still had a very youthful figure and by this time Shelley was already dumpy and heavy. It was that sort of thing, a kind of female jealousy.
…
TT: You'd get Ralph Richardson for your next project, as well as Shelley Winters part deux. Tell us about ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’
CH: Yes, we made that right after ‘What's the Matter with Helen?’ She and I both flew to London together to make it at the Shepperton Studio.
TT: Who approached whom?
CH: It was an AIP production. They had already contracted her to do a film for them. And they decided this was the one they wanted to do with her. Because I had just worked with her and she liked working with me, they hired me to direct it.
…
TT: How was the second round with Shelley on this one?
CH: Well, she didn't have the rivalry of Debbie Reynolds being on the set this time. Shelley was the solo star, there were no problems at all. She was completely happy through the whole production.
At this point, Shelley Winters’ fraught relationship with Debbie Reynolds was already well-known, but Judy Cornwell’s revelations had yet to be published.
If Cornwell’s detailed and specific accounts of Winters’ ‘neurotic’ behaviour, and deliberate fluffing of her lines – in the presence of multiple witnesses – are true, then Harrington’s anodyne disclaimer, “She was completely happy through the whole production,” is clearly a lie.
Harrington looks like a man trying desperately to protect his friend, Shelley Winters, from criticism, at the expense of the truth.
This might explain why Heyward thought there were problems between Winters and Gothard, when no other record of this has been found. Winters’ attitudes to younger women seem to have been common knowledge at the time the film was made; Harrington may have put the blame on Gothard for the time, and film, Winters wasted in trying to spoil Cornwell’s takes. If Harrington had pointed the finger at Judy Cornwell, the truth – that Shelley Winters’ insecurities were responsible – would have been obvious to anyone in the business.
In another example of his loyalty to Winters, when interviewed by Rusty White, Harrington talks about the script changes, but fails to mention that they had been demanded by Winters, due to her jealousy of the younger actress.
RW: Yes. I noticed Jimmy Sangster [Hammer film director] was listed as one of the screen writers. Did you get to know him?
CH: He wrote the original script, but we did a lot of changes. We had no contact with him at all. The final script, a lot of it uncredited, was written by Gavin Lambent.
Harrington comes off even worse in an interview with Harvey F. Chartrand, first being bitchy about his employers:
“American International Pictures had offered me a contract to do a picture. I was scheduled to direct a new version of ‘Wuthering Heights’, [the film for which Judy Cornwell got good reviews, and Shelley Winters called her a “scene stealer”] which they subsequently made with another director. It was a disaster, of course.
In the meantime, AIP had ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo’ in development … I worked extensively on the script. Originally, it was very poor and we improved it a great deal.”
So Harrington spins the cutting of Judy Cornwell’s lines, to pander to Shelley Winters, as ‘improving the script.’
Curtis Harrington's attack on Michael Gothard
In an interview with DVD Drive-in, Harrington again chooses not to mention either his annoyance with Winters, or the fact that Cornwell faced Winters down over her behaviour. Instead, he reserves most of his criticism for Michael Gothard.
“Michael Gothard was one of the most neurotic actors I’ve ever worked with. I didn’t like him at all. He was assigned to me by the producers. I wouldn’t have cast Michael Gothard. He was an extraordinarily egotistical bad actor who kept flubbing his lines. It was like pulling teeth to get a performance out of him. I never understood why Gothard had any career at all. I guess casting directors thought he was an interesting type.”
It seems almost as if he has transferred any possible criticisms of his friend Shelley Winters to Michael Gothard.
If you transpose "Shelley Winters" in place of "Michael Gothard":
“Shelley Winters was one of the most neurotic actors I’ve ever worked with … She was an extraordinarily egotistical bad actress who kept flubbing her lines. It was like pulling teeth to get a performance out of her” – you get something Judy Cornwell would probably agree with.
The question is, why implicate Michael? An uncharitable view might be that he was not around to defend himself. As he had taken his own life, he was apparently fair game for accusations of ‘neurotic’ behaviour.
We don’t know what, if any, problems there were between Michael and Shelley Winters. If she behaved in the same way with him as she did with Judy Cornwell, that might have been enough to make anyone fluff their lines, which was the result Shelley Winters was looking for anyway.
It is also possible that Michael Gothard, who had a strong sense of justice, may have become uncooperative because he felt aggrieved at Judy Cornwell’s treatment, just as the film crew reportedly did.
Just one man's opinion
Harrington’s accusation that Michael was a “bad actor” and “kept flubbing his lines” is out of line with the experiences of others who worked with him.
In correspondence, Mark Lester, who played Christopher Coombs on 'Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?' said: "I worked with Michael in the 1970's and to my knowledge he was a truly professional actor with a unique charm and presence. It was a pleasure to work with him."
Natasha Pyne, who worked with him on 'The Excavation' said, "Michael and I had a good, mutually supportive working relationship which helped hugely during the rigours of live television."
Mathilda May, who played the naked alien vampire girl in 'Lifeforce', (and was supposedly embarrassed by the film), says of Michael Gothard: "I remember him as a lovely person; a gentleman ..."
Harry Fielder – an old pro in the industry, described Gothard as: “good guy to work with" and added that "Michael was always word perfect.”
Executive Producer Louis M. Heyward said of him: "I felt that Michael Gothard was going to be the biggest thing that ever happened. He had that insane look and that drive, and he was wonderful … He had a lot of class and a lot of style.”
Peter Sasdy, who directed him in two episodes of ‘Arthur of the Britons’, the Hammer film ‘The Sweet Scent of Death’ and an episode of ‘Lytton’s Diary’, wrote:
“As far as Michael Gothard is concerned … I thought of him as a very interesting actor, with strong personality and in the right part he’d always give a good performance.”
Even Patrick Dromgoole, Executive Producer of ‘Arthur of the Britons’, who did not particularly like Gothard, said he was “an artist of high standard” – not the kind you would expect to fluff their lines.
John Glen, who’d worked with him on ‘For Your Eyes Only’ cast him in ‘Columbus’ because he knew he could rely on him to perform, not just his own lines, but those of another cast member, without “flubbing.”
“I was anticipating trouble. When you're a director you have to box a little clever sometimes and I'd cast a very good actor called Michael Gothard as Brando's assistant, the idea being that if Marlon didn't turn up any time I would put Gothard in. And sure enough, on the first day, Marlon was a no-show, so I put Michael in and he took Marlon's lines.'
Glen also described Gothard as a "captivating" actor.
David Wickes, who directed him in "Jack the Ripper" and "Frankenstein", had this to say:
"Michael had a screen presence unlike that of any other actor with whom I have worked. He could frighten an audience with a glance. His soft, husky voice was electrifying and he knew how to use it to maximum effect.
Each time I welcomed Michael to the set, I knew that we were about to get something special in the can. There are very few actors in that category."
Even Harrington’s friend, David Del Valle, appears to find Harrington’s inability to get along with Gothard puzzling.
“Curtis absolutely hated Michael Gothard whom AIP forced upon him after the actor’s favorable reviews in Gordon Hessler’s ‘Scream And Scream Again.’ Gothard had also scored with a tour de force in Ken Russell’s ‘The Devils’, yet Curtis found him unpleasant and difficult in a modest but key role of the sinister chauffeur.
They squared off over Michael’s long hair which he refused to cut until Curtis threatened to fire him …”
Studio in-fighting?
Whether Louis M. Heyward would have put up with Michael Gothard being fired is open to question, and perhaps that is part of the problem.
Del Valle continues: “I always wondered why Curtis was never offered any of those Poe films American International was making at that time in England. Perhaps the lack of success with the aforementioned films [“What’s the Matter with Helen”, and “Whoever Slew Auntie Roo”] sealed his fate with that company.”
Even Harrington’s friends can’t help but portray him as bitter and disappointed man.
“… the whole experience would have buried a lesser director, yet Curtis continued to work even without that all important block buster that would admit him to that exalted realm of the Hollywood player.”
It is easy to see how having not had the blockbuster he wanted from AIP, and not being given any more work by them, he might have taken out his frustrations on the actor the Executive Producer, Louis M. Heyward, had chosen to cast, with the added bonus of deflecting criticisms of Shelley Winters.
In the end, perhaps Michael Gothard’s good name was just collateral damage in the behind-the-scenes wrangles between the major players.
It seems very unjust that the opinion of Curtis Harrington – who didn’t even like Michael Gothard – is the one that has so often been allowed to stand unchallenged, as the last word on Michael’s life and work.
References:
“Science Fiction Stars and Horror Heroes: Interviews with Actors, Directors, Producers, and Writers of the 1940s through 1960s”, by Tom Weaver, Michael Brunas and John Brunas. (1991)
Interview with Louis M. Heyward by Gary A. Smith, in “Uneasy Dreams: The Golden Age of British Horror Films, 1956-1976.” (2006)
“For My Eyes Only: My Life with James Bond” by John Glen (2001)
“Hollywood Hellraisers: The Wild Lives and Fast Times of Brando, Hopper, Beatty, and Nicholson”, by Robert Sellers (2010).
Judy Cornwell’s autobiography, "Adventures of a Jelly Baby: A Memoir” (November 2005).
Rusty White’s Film World Obituaries
Vinnie Rattolle’s Cult Oddities
David Del Valle: Dreaming Dreams no Mortal Ever Dared to Dreamed Before
DVD Drive-In
Terror Trap
Correspondence with Peter Sasdy and Patrick Dromgoole.
Thanks to Tzaratango for finding many of these references.
( Read more... )
Curtis Harrington
Louis M. Heyward
The set of ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’ was clearly an unhappy one. Executive producer, Louis M. Heyward, who - having been impressed with him on ‘Scream and Scream Again’ - had cast Michael Gothard in the role of Albie, said:
“Curtis Harrington was great to work with but Shelley was difficult. There were problems between her and co-star Michael Gothard. She also kept insisting that I get a 'Sir' for supporting role. I got Ralph Richardson but she had meant Laurence Olivier.”
Judy Cornwell's problems with Shelley Winters
Judy Cornwell, who played the maid, Clarine, gives a more detailed account of Shelley Winters’ ‘difficult’ behaviour, both before shooting began, and on set:
"Richard [Eastham, Cornwell’s personal manager] told me that ‘Wuthering Heights’ had now opened in America and I had wonderful, rave reviews for my performance. Unfortunately for me, Shelley Winters too had seen the reviews, and she had overall script approval in her contract for the next film.
Before the shooting in Shepperton began, my part was almost deleted from the script. The best scenes were changed to become hers, and any of my scenes that were not essential to the story line were cut.
When I was sent the final draft of the script I was horrified and talked over the situation with Richard … He wanted to know whether I would rather pull out of the film, but I decided not to do so. I liked the producers of the film and this would be my fourth for American International Pictures. The heads of the company sent me Christmas cards. There were not to know that a certain actress would invoke her script approval clause.
I knew that Michael Bryant had worked with Shelley Winters on a film for television, so I phoned him to see what it was like to work with her.
'Tricky,' he replied. 'She makes mistakes when you are giving your best performance, so you have to do it again. This goes on until you drop your performance, then she comes up, and that is the take they use.'
My heart sank.
…
The first day of filming for ‘The Gingerbread House’ [as ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’ was originally titled] arrived and I met Curtis Harrington, an experienced and charming Hollywood director. We talked through the scene and then Miss Winters arrived. I was introduced to her as the girl who gave the great performance in ‘Wuthering Heights.’
She gazed at me with small beady eyes and said, 'I know. She's a scene stealer.'
Curtis laughed as if she had made a joke; I knew she had not.
When we began preparations for the scene, as Michael [Bryant] had warned me, she fluffed and made mistakes. I kept steady … not panicking, just keeping up my performance and not dropping it for one second.
Suddenly there was a wail from Shelley who said she had a headache and she stormed off the set, so we broke for an early lunch …
After lunch we returned to the scene again and this time she wanted me in a different position from before. Curtis tried to accommodate her. Every position that would work for the camera was unacceptable to her.
I heard a couple of yawns from the crew. They did not like one of their own British actresses being put through the wringer by this Yank.
Curtis began to lose his cool. 'Would you like me to put her under the table?' he said.
I took several deep breaths and stayed calm.
We began the scene again and suddenly she came up with a performance. So did I, and there was a shout of 'Take and Print.' I think she thought I was going to be thrown by the sudden change but I was not. I was tired at the end of the day, but the first scene was in the can, and my next scheduled scene did not involve her.
[Presumably this was her scene with Albie (Michael Gothard) and Mr Harrison (Hugh Griffith) in the kitchen: Judy seems to have had no problems with either of them]
The next time we had to work together she started again. I had had enough by now, so I let her have it with both barrels and told her that I had worked with some pretty big names, people with huge talent, and that none of them had behaved as badly as she had. I said life was too short for such games and could she please stop pissing about.
Instead of wailing and storming off the set, which by now was frigid with silence and tension, she smiled, her face relaxed, and she said, 'My God, you remind me of me when I was young.' … from then on she was nauseatingly nice to me, and I had no more trouble from her."
Curtis Harrington's friendship with Shelley Winters
Harrington seems to have been very tolerant of Winters’ unreasonable behaviour – he must have known what to expect, as he’d already worked with her on ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’
In fact, in an interview for ‘Terror Trap’ in April 2005, he admitted: “A lot of movie stars particularly can be quite difficult. I mean, Shelley Winters is one of them. So I've learned to handle all that fairly well by being diplomatic and sympathetic and all those things. When I hear of directors who are very brutal with their actors, I think that approach is all wrong. I mean, actors need a lot of TLC to do well."
As we shall later see, this ‘TLC’ was something he denied Michael Gothard; but then, Harrington and Winters were friends.
Another friend of Harrington’s, David Del Valle, says:
“Curtis did [‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’] because Shelley asked for him personally, the perks were of course a trip to the UK and the joy of working with Sir Ralph Richardson whom he adored …
… I got to know Shelley Winters who acted for Curtis on two occasions. Curtis would organize parties around her and we would all find ourselves sitting on the floor around this ornate loveseat in his living room as Miss Winters held court from her throne, she loved to be the center of attention at all times …
Shelley bonded big time with Curtis on the set of ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’…”
In the ‘Terror Trap’ interview, Harrington answered questions about both ‘What’s the Matter with Helen?’ (in which Winters starred with Debbie Reynolds) and ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’
TT: Did Debbie [Reynolds] and Shelley get along?
CH: Just barely.
TT: Interesting.
CH: It was rather inevitable that they would have a conflict occasionally. Shelley imagined a rivalry with Debbie.
TT: Why is that?
CH: Well, Debbie still had a very youthful figure and by this time Shelley was already dumpy and heavy. It was that sort of thing, a kind of female jealousy.
…
TT: You'd get Ralph Richardson for your next project, as well as Shelley Winters part deux. Tell us about ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?’
CH: Yes, we made that right after ‘What's the Matter with Helen?’ She and I both flew to London together to make it at the Shepperton Studio.
TT: Who approached whom?
CH: It was an AIP production. They had already contracted her to do a film for them. And they decided this was the one they wanted to do with her. Because I had just worked with her and she liked working with me, they hired me to direct it.
…
TT: How was the second round with Shelley on this one?
CH: Well, she didn't have the rivalry of Debbie Reynolds being on the set this time. Shelley was the solo star, there were no problems at all. She was completely happy through the whole production.
At this point, Shelley Winters’ fraught relationship with Debbie Reynolds was already well-known, but Judy Cornwell’s revelations had yet to be published.
If Cornwell’s detailed and specific accounts of Winters’ ‘neurotic’ behaviour, and deliberate fluffing of her lines – in the presence of multiple witnesses – are true, then Harrington’s anodyne disclaimer, “She was completely happy through the whole production,” is clearly a lie.
Harrington looks like a man trying desperately to protect his friend, Shelley Winters, from criticism, at the expense of the truth.
This might explain why Heyward thought there were problems between Winters and Gothard, when no other record of this has been found. Winters’ attitudes to younger women seem to have been common knowledge at the time the film was made; Harrington may have put the blame on Gothard for the time, and film, Winters wasted in trying to spoil Cornwell’s takes. If Harrington had pointed the finger at Judy Cornwell, the truth – that Shelley Winters’ insecurities were responsible – would have been obvious to anyone in the business.
In another example of his loyalty to Winters, when interviewed by Rusty White, Harrington talks about the script changes, but fails to mention that they had been demanded by Winters, due to her jealousy of the younger actress.
RW: Yes. I noticed Jimmy Sangster [Hammer film director] was listed as one of the screen writers. Did you get to know him?
CH: He wrote the original script, but we did a lot of changes. We had no contact with him at all. The final script, a lot of it uncredited, was written by Gavin Lambent.
Harrington comes off even worse in an interview with Harvey F. Chartrand, first being bitchy about his employers:
“American International Pictures had offered me a contract to do a picture. I was scheduled to direct a new version of ‘Wuthering Heights’, [the film for which Judy Cornwell got good reviews, and Shelley Winters called her a “scene stealer”] which they subsequently made with another director. It was a disaster, of course.
In the meantime, AIP had ‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo’ in development … I worked extensively on the script. Originally, it was very poor and we improved it a great deal.”
So Harrington spins the cutting of Judy Cornwell’s lines, to pander to Shelley Winters, as ‘improving the script.’
Curtis Harrington's attack on Michael Gothard
In an interview with DVD Drive-in, Harrington again chooses not to mention either his annoyance with Winters, or the fact that Cornwell faced Winters down over her behaviour. Instead, he reserves most of his criticism for Michael Gothard.
“Michael Gothard was one of the most neurotic actors I’ve ever worked with. I didn’t like him at all. He was assigned to me by the producers. I wouldn’t have cast Michael Gothard. He was an extraordinarily egotistical bad actor who kept flubbing his lines. It was like pulling teeth to get a performance out of him. I never understood why Gothard had any career at all. I guess casting directors thought he was an interesting type.”
It seems almost as if he has transferred any possible criticisms of his friend Shelley Winters to Michael Gothard.
If you transpose "Shelley Winters" in place of "Michael Gothard":
“Shelley Winters was one of the most neurotic actors I’ve ever worked with … She was an extraordinarily egotistical bad actress who kept flubbing her lines. It was like pulling teeth to get a performance out of her” – you get something Judy Cornwell would probably agree with.
The question is, why implicate Michael? An uncharitable view might be that he was not around to defend himself. As he had taken his own life, he was apparently fair game for accusations of ‘neurotic’ behaviour.
We don’t know what, if any, problems there were between Michael and Shelley Winters. If she behaved in the same way with him as she did with Judy Cornwell, that might have been enough to make anyone fluff their lines, which was the result Shelley Winters was looking for anyway.
It is also possible that Michael Gothard, who had a strong sense of justice, may have become uncooperative because he felt aggrieved at Judy Cornwell’s treatment, just as the film crew reportedly did.
Just one man's opinion
Harrington’s accusation that Michael was a “bad actor” and “kept flubbing his lines” is out of line with the experiences of others who worked with him.
In correspondence, Mark Lester, who played Christopher Coombs on 'Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?' said: "I worked with Michael in the 1970's and to my knowledge he was a truly professional actor with a unique charm and presence. It was a pleasure to work with him."
Natasha Pyne, who worked with him on 'The Excavation' said, "Michael and I had a good, mutually supportive working relationship which helped hugely during the rigours of live television."
Mathilda May, who played the naked alien vampire girl in 'Lifeforce', (and was supposedly embarrassed by the film), says of Michael Gothard: "I remember him as a lovely person; a gentleman ..."
Harry Fielder – an old pro in the industry, described Gothard as: “good guy to work with" and added that "Michael was always word perfect.”
Executive Producer Louis M. Heyward said of him: "I felt that Michael Gothard was going to be the biggest thing that ever happened. He had that insane look and that drive, and he was wonderful … He had a lot of class and a lot of style.”
Peter Sasdy, who directed him in two episodes of ‘Arthur of the Britons’, the Hammer film ‘The Sweet Scent of Death’ and an episode of ‘Lytton’s Diary’, wrote:
“As far as Michael Gothard is concerned … I thought of him as a very interesting actor, with strong personality and in the right part he’d always give a good performance.”
Even Patrick Dromgoole, Executive Producer of ‘Arthur of the Britons’, who did not particularly like Gothard, said he was “an artist of high standard” – not the kind you would expect to fluff their lines.
John Glen, who’d worked with him on ‘For Your Eyes Only’ cast him in ‘Columbus’ because he knew he could rely on him to perform, not just his own lines, but those of another cast member, without “flubbing.”
“I was anticipating trouble. When you're a director you have to box a little clever sometimes and I'd cast a very good actor called Michael Gothard as Brando's assistant, the idea being that if Marlon didn't turn up any time I would put Gothard in. And sure enough, on the first day, Marlon was a no-show, so I put Michael in and he took Marlon's lines.'
Glen also described Gothard as a "captivating" actor.
David Wickes, who directed him in "Jack the Ripper" and "Frankenstein", had this to say:
"Michael had a screen presence unlike that of any other actor with whom I have worked. He could frighten an audience with a glance. His soft, husky voice was electrifying and he knew how to use it to maximum effect.
Each time I welcomed Michael to the set, I knew that we were about to get something special in the can. There are very few actors in that category."
Even Harrington’s friend, David Del Valle, appears to find Harrington’s inability to get along with Gothard puzzling.
“Curtis absolutely hated Michael Gothard whom AIP forced upon him after the actor’s favorable reviews in Gordon Hessler’s ‘Scream And Scream Again.’ Gothard had also scored with a tour de force in Ken Russell’s ‘The Devils’, yet Curtis found him unpleasant and difficult in a modest but key role of the sinister chauffeur.
They squared off over Michael’s long hair which he refused to cut until Curtis threatened to fire him …”
Studio in-fighting?
Whether Louis M. Heyward would have put up with Michael Gothard being fired is open to question, and perhaps that is part of the problem.
Del Valle continues: “I always wondered why Curtis was never offered any of those Poe films American International was making at that time in England. Perhaps the lack of success with the aforementioned films [“What’s the Matter with Helen”, and “Whoever Slew Auntie Roo”] sealed his fate with that company.”
Even Harrington’s friends can’t help but portray him as bitter and disappointed man.
“… the whole experience would have buried a lesser director, yet Curtis continued to work even without that all important block buster that would admit him to that exalted realm of the Hollywood player.”
It is easy to see how having not had the blockbuster he wanted from AIP, and not being given any more work by them, he might have taken out his frustrations on the actor the Executive Producer, Louis M. Heyward, had chosen to cast, with the added bonus of deflecting criticisms of Shelley Winters.
In the end, perhaps Michael Gothard’s good name was just collateral damage in the behind-the-scenes wrangles between the major players.
It seems very unjust that the opinion of Curtis Harrington – who didn’t even like Michael Gothard – is the one that has so often been allowed to stand unchallenged, as the last word on Michael’s life and work.
References:
“Science Fiction Stars and Horror Heroes: Interviews with Actors, Directors, Producers, and Writers of the 1940s through 1960s”, by Tom Weaver, Michael Brunas and John Brunas. (1991)
Interview with Louis M. Heyward by Gary A. Smith, in “Uneasy Dreams: The Golden Age of British Horror Films, 1956-1976.” (2006)
“For My Eyes Only: My Life with James Bond” by John Glen (2001)
“Hollywood Hellraisers: The Wild Lives and Fast Times of Brando, Hopper, Beatty, and Nicholson”, by Robert Sellers (2010).
Judy Cornwell’s autobiography, "Adventures of a Jelly Baby: A Memoir” (November 2005).
Rusty White’s Film World Obituaries
Vinnie Rattolle’s Cult Oddities
David Del Valle: Dreaming Dreams no Mortal Ever Dared to Dreamed Before
DVD Drive-In
Terror Trap
Correspondence with Peter Sasdy and Patrick Dromgoole.
Thanks to Tzaratango for finding many of these references.
( Read more... )
Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? - screencaps
Mar. 15th, 1972 11:00 pm

Mr Benton (Sir Ralph Richardson) arrives at the home of Mrs Forrest (Shelley Winters). Albie (Michael Gothard) takes his hat and brings him a drink, with brusque efficiency.


( Read more... )
Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? - stills
Mar. 15th, 1972 10:00 pm

Michael Gothard as the Butler, Albie.

Albie and ‘medium’, Mr Benton (Ralph Richardson) perform a séance with Auntie Roo (Shelley Winters), who wants
to communicate with her dead daughter Katherine.


Albie with housemaid Clarine (Judy Cornwell), his girlfriend.

Albie, with two young gate-crashers, Christopher (Mark Lester) and Katy (Chloe Franks).

Albie introduces Christopher and Katy to Auntie Roo.


Albie finds Christopher where he shouldn't be, and gives Christopher and Katy a fright.

Albie ejects Christopher from the house.

Albie confronts Aunty Roo, with a blackmail demand.
Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? - reviews
Mar. 15th, 1972 09:00 pmFrom: Films and Filming, April 1972
...Stuffed with goodness, like Roo's bounteous turkey dinner and her other food wallowings, Whoever can boast a splendid cast, with Shelley Winters going to town, but not to unnecessary extremes in the title role, Michael Gothard as a snappy-cum-sinister manservant, and Ralph Richardson as the perpetrator of phoney seances. What we have come to think of as the Harrington touch is given its best work-out here in a sequence where the two principal kids venture into a room crowded with the relics of Roo's late husband, who was a magician and had lots of frightening boxes of tricks.
From: DVD Savant
… there are a lot of uneven elements in the mix of this nicely-produced melodrama. Ralph Richardson's mountebank is colorful, and Lionel Jeffries and Hugh Griffith are perfectly fine in bits, but none of them are central to the core story.
When menacing butler Michael Gothard disappears from the tale, we expect him to turn up later, even as a corpse, but he doesn't.
Full review
From: Cinema de Merde
… this movie takes place in a more naïve world in which orphanages allow ten of their children to go spend the night with a strange woman in a strange house. This would be Shelley’s annual Christmas party. Christopher and Katy are not invited, but sneak along, are soon discovered [by the butler fellow who likes to terrorize kids for fun], and invited to join the festivities …
The kids are locked up. They escape. Christopher gets free. He’s locked up again …
Somewhere in here the butler demands money from Shelley or he’ll tell the police that she’s kidnapped a girl, which causes Shelley, in a really dumb reaction shot, to glance to her left to demonstrate “nefarious plotting.”
The butler also cruelly tells her that she’s a dupe for their ruse during the séances, and his evil glee is one of the few beacons of dull interest. But he’s soon gone.
Full review
From: Film Fanatic
Meanwhile, other plot elements — such as the presence of Winters’ manipulative butler (Michael Gothard) working in cahoots with a sham medium (Ralph Richardson) to convince Winters her daughter is communicating with her — are poorly resolved.
Full review
From: Fright Xmas
… Mrs. Forrest has held regular séances to try and contact her daughter … but her servants, a butler and maid (nicely played by Michael Gothard and Judy Cornwell) are a nasty pair it transpires …
(Alan-Bertaneisson Jones. Fright Xmas. AuthorHouse, 2010.)
...Stuffed with goodness, like Roo's bounteous turkey dinner and her other food wallowings, Whoever can boast a splendid cast, with Shelley Winters going to town, but not to unnecessary extremes in the title role, Michael Gothard as a snappy-cum-sinister manservant, and Ralph Richardson as the perpetrator of phoney seances. What we have come to think of as the Harrington touch is given its best work-out here in a sequence where the two principal kids venture into a room crowded with the relics of Roo's late husband, who was a magician and had lots of frightening boxes of tricks.
From: DVD Savant
… there are a lot of uneven elements in the mix of this nicely-produced melodrama. Ralph Richardson's mountebank is colorful, and Lionel Jeffries and Hugh Griffith are perfectly fine in bits, but none of them are central to the core story.
When menacing butler Michael Gothard disappears from the tale, we expect him to turn up later, even as a corpse, but he doesn't.
Full review
From: Cinema de Merde
… this movie takes place in a more naïve world in which orphanages allow ten of their children to go spend the night with a strange woman in a strange house. This would be Shelley’s annual Christmas party. Christopher and Katy are not invited, but sneak along, are soon discovered [by the butler fellow who likes to terrorize kids for fun], and invited to join the festivities …
The kids are locked up. They escape. Christopher gets free. He’s locked up again …
Somewhere in here the butler demands money from Shelley or he’ll tell the police that she’s kidnapped a girl, which causes Shelley, in a really dumb reaction shot, to glance to her left to demonstrate “nefarious plotting.”
The butler also cruelly tells her that she’s a dupe for their ruse during the séances, and his evil glee is one of the few beacons of dull interest. But he’s soon gone.
Full review
From: Film Fanatic
Meanwhile, other plot elements — such as the presence of Winters’ manipulative butler (Michael Gothard) working in cahoots with a sham medium (Ralph Richardson) to convince Winters her daughter is communicating with her — are poorly resolved.
Full review
From: Fright Xmas
… Mrs. Forrest has held regular séances to try and contact her daughter … but her servants, a butler and maid (nicely played by Michael Gothard and Judy Cornwell) are a nasty pair it transpires …
(Alan-Bertaneisson Jones. Fright Xmas. AuthorHouse, 2010.)
15 March 1972: Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?
Mar. 15th, 1972 08:00 pm‘Whoever Slew Auntie Roo’ was filmed in Middlesex, and at Shepperton Studios in Surrey.
In this film, Michael plays the role of Albie, butler to Auntie Roo (Shelley Winters), a woman driven mad with grief, who keeps the body of her dead daughter Katherine in a secret room, hidden behind the doors of a closet.
Auntie Roo receives frequent visits from a ‘medium’, Mr Benton (Ralph Richardson). Between Benton, Albie, and the housemaid Clarine (Judy Cornwell), Auntie Roo is being taken for a sucker at every turn.
During Benton’s séances, Clarine speaks through the dumb waiter, pretending to be the spirit of the dead Katherine. Albie and Benton then split the fee Benton charges Auntie Roo.
But Auntie Roo trusts Albie implicitly; she lets him pay the tradesmen for her, and he takes the opportunity to cream an extra income off the top, also abetted by Clarine.
When two young gate-crashers, Christopher and Katy Coombs (Mark Lester and Chloe Franks) appear at the Christmas party Roo gives every year for children from the local orphanage, Albie gets a further opportunity for advancement.
Auntie Roo becomes convinced that Katy is the reincarnation of her daughter, Katherine, and kidnaps Katy. When Albie finds out, he blackmails Auntie Roo, demanding two thousand pounds for his silence.
He and Clarine then quit her employ, leaving her to her fate.
In correspondence with Belsizepark, Mark Lester said of Michael: "I worked with Michael in the 1970's and to my knowledge he was a truly professional actor with a unique charm and presence. It was a pleasure to work with him."
IMDB entry
In this film, Michael plays the role of Albie, butler to Auntie Roo (Shelley Winters), a woman driven mad with grief, who keeps the body of her dead daughter Katherine in a secret room, hidden behind the doors of a closet.
Auntie Roo receives frequent visits from a ‘medium’, Mr Benton (Ralph Richardson). Between Benton, Albie, and the housemaid Clarine (Judy Cornwell), Auntie Roo is being taken for a sucker at every turn.
During Benton’s séances, Clarine speaks through the dumb waiter, pretending to be the spirit of the dead Katherine. Albie and Benton then split the fee Benton charges Auntie Roo.
But Auntie Roo trusts Albie implicitly; she lets him pay the tradesmen for her, and he takes the opportunity to cream an extra income off the top, also abetted by Clarine.
When two young gate-crashers, Christopher and Katy Coombs (Mark Lester and Chloe Franks) appear at the Christmas party Roo gives every year for children from the local orphanage, Albie gets a further opportunity for advancement.
Auntie Roo becomes convinced that Katy is the reincarnation of her daughter, Katherine, and kidnaps Katy. When Albie finds out, he blackmails Auntie Roo, demanding two thousand pounds for his silence.
He and Clarine then quit her employ, leaving her to her fate.
In correspondence with Belsizepark, Mark Lester said of Michael: "I worked with Michael in the 1970's and to my knowledge he was a truly professional actor with a unique charm and presence. It was a pleasure to work with him."
IMDB entry
The Devils: Films and Filming
Jul. 20th, 1971 09:00 amThe July 1971 issue of "Films and Filming" included a four-page picture review of "The Devils."
Here are the two pictures which featured Michael Gothard as Father Barré.
( Read more... )
Here are the two pictures which featured Michael Gothard as Father Barré.
( Read more... )
The Devils: lobby cards
Jul. 15th, 1971 02:30 pm
In this publicity shot, Michael is wearing different glasses to those he wore in the film - see below.
( Read more... )
The Devils: screencaps
Jul. 15th, 1971 12:05 am

Here, we see the grand entrance of Professional Witch-hunter Father Barré (Michael Gothard). He arrives at the convent in Loudun, accompanied by Father Mignon (Murray Melvin), and takes a seat between local dignitaries, the Baron de Laubardemont (Dudley Sutton) and Trincant (John Woodvine).


He asks about the health of Sister Jeanne (Vanessa Redgrave), then lays hands on her, and demands that the demon possessing her declare itself. Getting no reply, he asks Sister Jeanne whether she remembers when her thoughts turned to evil; she tells him about her romantic fantasy.


The Baron de Laubardemont warns Father Barré that they could become a laughing stock; Father Barré in turn warns Sister Jeanne of the danger to her immortal soul, should she persist in her corrupt ways.
( Read more... )
July 1971: The Devils
Jul. 15th, 1971 12:00 am"The Devils" was filmed over a period of 4 months in 1970, at Pinewood Studios, England. The subsequent battles with the censors and the film's financiers are well-documented in this British Film Institute article, Raising Hell
Michael Gothard was cast as an exorcist, Father Barré, brought in for political reasons to help discredit a renegade priest, and local leader, Grandier (Oliver Reed), by extracting a confession from Sister Jeanne (Vanessa Redgrave) - a nun obsessed with Grandier - that he has behaved improperly with her.
It is widely thought that Oliver Reed, Vanessa Redgrave and Michael Gothard gave some of the best performances of their respective careers in this film.
This was the first of a number of occasions on which Michael Gothard was cast as a religious fanatic: roles as Felton (a Puritan) in "The Four Musketeers", Volthan (A Druid priest) in "Warrior Queen", and the Inquisitor's spy in "Columbus", were to follow.
John Woodvine, who plays Trincant, had earlier appeared in “The Further Adventures of the Musketeers” as Aramis – a TV series in which Michael played Mordaunt, the son of Lady de Winter.
IMDB entry
Michael Gothard was cast as an exorcist, Father Barré, brought in for political reasons to help discredit a renegade priest, and local leader, Grandier (Oliver Reed), by extracting a confession from Sister Jeanne (Vanessa Redgrave) - a nun obsessed with Grandier - that he has behaved improperly with her.
It is widely thought that Oliver Reed, Vanessa Redgrave and Michael Gothard gave some of the best performances of their respective careers in this film.
This was the first of a number of occasions on which Michael Gothard was cast as a religious fanatic: roles as Felton (a Puritan) in "The Four Musketeers", Volthan (A Druid priest) in "Warrior Queen", and the Inquisitor's spy in "Columbus", were to follow.
John Woodvine, who plays Trincant, had earlier appeared in “The Further Adventures of the Musketeers” as Aramis – a TV series in which Michael played Mordaunt, the son of Lady de Winter.
IMDB entry
The Last Valley: lobby cards
Jan. 28th, 1971 03:00 pm
Hansen (Michael Gothard) with Inge (Madeleine Hinde). They also appeared together in the "Arthur of the Britons" episode, "Daughter of the King."

Hansen has a difference of opinion, and settles it in the usual way.

Hansen leads a group of Catholic mercenaries and villagers, to protest about a shrine being moved.

This still shows the moment when Hansen realises that his supporters have deserted him, and that he is trapped.

The writing on the back of this still indicates that the film was shown at a Gaumont Cinema, in a Spanish-speaking country, where the film was titled "The Sword and the Rose."
The still was acquired from someone living in Buenos Aires, so it seems likely that it was used to advertise the film when it was shown in Argentina.
The Last Valley: Screencaps
Jan. 28th, 1971 12:00 pmThis film is set during the Thirty Years War. It looks at what people will tolerate, what compromises they will make, and what they are prepared to do, to preserve their way of life.
Omar Sharif stars, as Vogel, and Michael Caine as a man known only as “The Captain.” This Captain heads a ruthless troop of mercenaries, of which Hansen, played by Michael Gothard, is a member. During the complex mish-mash of wars that rages throughout Europe, causing devastation to the populace, often with religion as the reason or the excuse, this band of killers offers its services to the highest bidder, or to whichever side is winning.
Near the start of the film, we see the mercenaries looting a poor and muddy village, and terrorising the occupants. Here, Hansen enthusiastically uses a pitchfork to kill a villager, and is about to slaughter an ox with his axe.

( Read more... )
Omar Sharif stars, as Vogel, and Michael Caine as a man known only as “The Captain.” This Captain heads a ruthless troop of mercenaries, of which Hansen, played by Michael Gothard, is a member. During the complex mish-mash of wars that rages throughout Europe, causing devastation to the populace, often with religion as the reason or the excuse, this band of killers offers its services to the highest bidder, or to whichever side is winning.
Near the start of the film, we see the mercenaries looting a poor and muddy village, and terrorising the occupants. Here, Hansen enthusiastically uses a pitchfork to kill a villager, and is about to slaughter an ox with his axe.
( Read more... )
The Last Valley: extracts from reviews
Jan. 28th, 1971 12:20 amThis Island Rod
"… the rapacious Hansen (Michael Gothard) is given to stirring up trouble, eventually raising a rival band of brigands to contest the valley …
The evocation of a blasted, cruel, evil epoch isn’t as ineffaceable or provocative as that in Ken Russell’s 'The Devils' from the same year (they both sport cast member Gothard, with his gift for portraying multiple varieties of creep) but shares some imagery and mood, combined with high-riding sweep of narrative."
Full review
Deitmar Zingl in 70 mm News:
“Michael Caine is especially fond of TLV. It's one of his own favorite movies. He uses a slight German accent for his role as Captain Hauptmann, the cool warrior with a wounded soul.
Omar Sharif is the romantic intellectual, some kind of Zhivago lost in Germany. Per Oscarsson is a religious fanatic priest, wonderfully over the top, as most of the religious fanatics, even today. Florinda Bolkan is the independent woman in a male dominated society and pays a high price for her independence.
More wonderful actors are Nigel Davenport, Arthur O‘Connell and the wild and angry Michael Gothard as Hansen. His performance resembles that of Klaus Kinski in "Aguirre, The Wrath of God" although that came two years later.”
Full review
Ian Christie – Daily Express, 7 April 1971
“…in the hands of director James Clavell, it has an epic quality that never loses its fascination.”
Daily Mail, 1971
“A film whose action speaks so much more eloquently than words.”
Financial Times, 1971
“Burst of action, effectively staged.”
Daily Mirror, 1971
“Lusty escapism and action … hefty and exciting high spots … always engrossing.”
The Guardian, 1971
“They don’t make films like James Clavell’s “The Last Valley” any more. … a genuine attempt to summon up a period.”
Sunday Times, 1971
“The violence proceeds naturally from the action and doesn’t undermine its own anti-war theme.”
Sunday Telegraph, 1971
“The film works up a satisfying atmosphere of unquiet calm.”
The People, 1971
“Michael Caine, slickest of contemporary film heroes. A splendid spectacle. A fine cast supports Michael.”
New York Post
“One of the most absorbing film entertainments of the year! A picture that enthralls from start to finish! An historical thriller, realistic in setting, romantically touching and meaningful ...”
Richard Schickel - Life Magazine
“One of the most intelligent movies I’ve seen.”
Vincent Canby - New York Times
“A story of survival set in a magnificent valley like Bertolt Brecht in ‘Mother Courage’, Mr Clavell ses the incredible horrors of the Thirty Years’ War as a metaphor for contemporary horrors … Caine and Sharif are quite good.”
Martha Deane - WOR Radio
“One of the most profound, impressive and important films as seen. I was continually moved by its theme and performances.”
David Goldman - WCBS Radio
“The acting is first rate with Michael Caine doing the best work of his career. An unusual movie-going experience.”
WMCA Radio
“Right in the class of Ben Hur.”
Other reviews
DVD Talk
In Stereo
New York Times
Cane Toad Warrior
rtbot
"… the rapacious Hansen (Michael Gothard) is given to stirring up trouble, eventually raising a rival band of brigands to contest the valley …
The evocation of a blasted, cruel, evil epoch isn’t as ineffaceable or provocative as that in Ken Russell’s 'The Devils' from the same year (they both sport cast member Gothard, with his gift for portraying multiple varieties of creep) but shares some imagery and mood, combined with high-riding sweep of narrative."
Full review
Deitmar Zingl in 70 mm News:
“Michael Caine is especially fond of TLV. It's one of his own favorite movies. He uses a slight German accent for his role as Captain Hauptmann, the cool warrior with a wounded soul.
Omar Sharif is the romantic intellectual, some kind of Zhivago lost in Germany. Per Oscarsson is a religious fanatic priest, wonderfully over the top, as most of the religious fanatics, even today. Florinda Bolkan is the independent woman in a male dominated society and pays a high price for her independence.
More wonderful actors are Nigel Davenport, Arthur O‘Connell and the wild and angry Michael Gothard as Hansen. His performance resembles that of Klaus Kinski in "Aguirre, The Wrath of God" although that came two years later.”
Full review
Ian Christie – Daily Express, 7 April 1971
“…in the hands of director James Clavell, it has an epic quality that never loses its fascination.”
Daily Mail, 1971
“A film whose action speaks so much more eloquently than words.”
Financial Times, 1971
“Burst of action, effectively staged.”
Daily Mirror, 1971
“Lusty escapism and action … hefty and exciting high spots … always engrossing.”
The Guardian, 1971
“They don’t make films like James Clavell’s “The Last Valley” any more. … a genuine attempt to summon up a period.”
Sunday Times, 1971
“The violence proceeds naturally from the action and doesn’t undermine its own anti-war theme.”
Sunday Telegraph, 1971
“The film works up a satisfying atmosphere of unquiet calm.”
The People, 1971
“Michael Caine, slickest of contemporary film heroes. A splendid spectacle. A fine cast supports Michael.”
New York Post
“One of the most absorbing film entertainments of the year! A picture that enthralls from start to finish! An historical thriller, realistic in setting, romantically touching and meaningful ...”
Richard Schickel - Life Magazine
“One of the most intelligent movies I’ve seen.”
Vincent Canby - New York Times
“A story of survival set in a magnificent valley like Bertolt Brecht in ‘Mother Courage’, Mr Clavell ses the incredible horrors of the Thirty Years’ War as a metaphor for contemporary horrors … Caine and Sharif are quite good.”
Martha Deane - WOR Radio
“One of the most profound, impressive and important films as seen. I was continually moved by its theme and performances.”
David Goldman - WCBS Radio
“The acting is first rate with Michael Caine doing the best work of his career. An unusual movie-going experience.”
WMCA Radio
“Right in the class of Ben Hur.”
Other reviews
DVD Talk
In Stereo
New York Times
Cane Toad Warrior
rtbot
This is one of a number of posters, some with different text, but most featuring Michael's character, Hansen, bottom left.

This was one of the publicity "blocks" available for hire by the cinemas.

The press book also included many marketing initiatives, such as a teacher's press pack, a painting competition, merchandise such as jewellery and fashions based on the film, and the opportunity to win a holiday.





This plot synopsis was supplied.


This was one of the publicity "blocks" available for hire by the cinemas.

The press book also included many marketing initiatives, such as a teacher's press pack, a painting competition, merchandise such as jewellery and fashions based on the film, and the opportunity to win a holiday.





This plot synopsis was supplied.
