Prey (1977 film)

Prey

UK double feature quad poster
Directed by Norman J. Warren
Produced by Terence Marcel
David Wimbury
Screenplay by Max Cuff
Story by Quinn Donoghue
Starring Barry Stokes
Glory Annen
Sally Faulkner
Music by Ivor Slaney
Cinematography Derek V. Browne
Edited by Alan Jones
Production
company
Tymar Film Productions
Distributed by Supreme
Release dates
1977
Running time
85 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Prey (known as Alien Prey in some markets)[1][2] is a 1977 British independent science fiction horror film produced by Terry Marcel and directed by Norman J. Warren. The plot involves a carnivorous alien (Barry Stokes) landing on Earth and befriending a lesbian couple (Glory Annen and Sally Faulkner) as part of his mission to evaluate humans as a source of food. It was filmed in less than two weeks on a budget of less than £60,000 in various locations near Shepperton Studios in Surrey. It had only a limited distribution on release.

Reaction to the film has been mixed: verdicts range from "odd", "bizarre" or "eccentric" to "ambitious" and "experimental", while the film's "claustrophobic" atmosphere has drawn both praise and criticism. Prey has also attracted critical commentary for its presentation of conflicting male and female sexuality, with some critics noting similarities to the plot of D. H. Lawrence's 1922 novella The Fox.[3][4] It has been compared to a vampire or zombie film[5] and has also been cited as an example of the exploitation (or sexploitation) genre.[2][6] Plans for a sequel, to be titled Human Prey, were abandoned.

Plot

At night, a carnivorous, shape-shifting alien named Kator lands in the woods of rural England. The vanguard of an invasion force, his mission is to evaluate the suitability of humans as a source of food for his species. Stumbling across Anderson and Sandy, a couple having a tryst in their parked car, he kills both and assumes the appearance of Anderson. The next morning, he encounters Jessica-Ann and Josephine, a lesbian couple who live in a nearby manor house. While Jessica owns the property, having inherited it from her Canadian parents, the dominant of the pair is Jo, who is unusually possessive of Jessica and deeply suspicious of men. Simon, Jessica's boyfriend, has mysteriously disappeared. The women are vegetarians and live in seclusion with only some chickens and a pet parrot, Wally, for company.

Calling himself Anders, and feigning an injured leg, Kator is taken in by Jessica and Jo. His arrival immediately causes friction between the two. Bored of her monotonous existence, Jessica welcomes the stranger's arrival. Jo, however, openly resents his presence and suggests that the socially-awkward Anders is an escapee from a psychiatric hospital (which she is herself).[1] Later, Kator returns to the spot where he killed Anderson and Sandy and, following a brief chase, kills and partly devours two policemen who are examining the couple's abandoned car. At the house, Jessica finds bloodstained clothes and a knife in a spare bedroom; recognising the clothes as Simon's, she realises that he was murdered by Jo.

The next morning, Jo is furious to discover that the chickens have been killed by what she assumes to be a fox. She hunts the animal with a rifle and leg traps, aided by Jessica and Kator. When these efforts fail, Kator tracks and kills the fox on his own and presents it to Jessica and Jo as a trophy. The trio celebrate with a champagne party for which Jo dresses Kator in drag. A subsequent game of hide-and-seek brings out more of the hunter in Kator. Later, Jo is disturbed to find the fox carcass stripped bare and deduces that the animal was not caught in a trap as she and Jessica thought. Jessica angrily rejects her warnings about Anders, interpreting Jo's fear as jealousy and revealing that she knows the truth about Simon.

The next morning, Jo takes her knife and stalks Kator as he hunts swans on a nearby river. Her attempt to eliminate him is thwarted when he starts to drown, alerting Jessica with his screams. Jessica and Jo rescue Kator and take him back to the house. While the two women clean themselves up, Kator kills and consumes Wally. Jessica tells Jo that she is no longer willing to be controlled and is leaving with Anders. Outraged, Jo knocks Jessica unconscious and runs into the woods to dig a grave for her. On waking, Jessica seduces Kator. As they start to have sex, Kator's predatory instincts are stirred and he regresses into his natural form: he tears open Jessica's throat, killing her. Having returned to the house, Jo attempts to flee but falls into the open grave and meets a similarly violent end.

Some time later, Kator leaves the house and calls his mother ship on an alien transceiver. Hungrily watching a pair of young girls walking by the river, he advises his superiors to dispatch more of his kind to Earth.

Cast

Production

They told me an outline of the story – 'it's about an alien that comes to Earth in search of a food source and encounters a lesbian couple, and discovers humans are high in protein and easy prey'. Then they said, 'you have got to start in three weeks' time and it has to be finished in ten days. Also, we don't have a script at the moment'. And we all still said yes!

 Norman J. Warren[9]

The story was conceived by producers Terry Marcel and David Wimbury and developed by Quinn Donoghue.[8] At the start of May 1977, Marcel pitched it to Warren, who was fascinated by the idea and quickly agreed to direct the film.[8][10][11] Max Cuff, a journalist in his twenties, was hired to write a full script.[8] Prey was made on a budget of approximately £50,000 in deferred payments and £3,000 cash.[8][12]

Warren agreed to shoot the film in ten days starting on 23 May, giving him just three weeks for pre-production.[5][8][11] He remembers that during this time "everyone was working flat out – there wasn't any sitting around waiting."[9] The cast were supplied by a single talent agency, which also invested in the film: CCA Management, founded by Howard Pays.[8][13] Prey was the film debut of Glory Annen, who had only recently finished drama school.[13] She and Barry Stokes subsequently appeared in another Warren film, Spaced Out (1979). Not all of the cast were professional actors: Sandy Chinney was the girlfriend of the second assistant director, while the two girls who appear in the final scene were played by Marcel's daughters.[8] Due to budget restrictions, some of the cast, including Annen, supplied their own wardrobe.[5][9]

Marcel provided Warren with a filming slot on the wooded backlot of Shepperton Studios, located on the River Ash.[13] Several scenes feature a bridge that had previously appeared in Dr. Terror's House of Horrors (1965).[8] In addition, production designer Hayden Pearce secured the use of the manor house in Littleton Park (the studios' original site) to serve as the location of Jessica and Jo's country house.[9][14][15] Of the filming arrangements, Warren comments: "This really was quite a unique situation because ... here we were in a studio looking at a real house and real rooms as if shooting on location."[13] The crew were permitted to redecorate the rooms as necessary and, to this end, make use of any of the items in the studios' prop store.[9][14] Warren states that this resulted in a "crazy" mixture of decors that "certainly helped create the right atmosphere" for the film.[9][14]

Filming commenced after only half a day's rehearsal and without a finished script.[13] The actors received most of their lines in daily dispatches.[16] According to Warren, "dear old Max Cuff was trying to keep up with us. He was writing like mad."[14] Certain scenes were partly or wholly improvised: one example is a sex scene between the characters of Jessica and Jo, which was added mainly to boost the film's overseas distribution prospects.[8][9][14] Many of the crew had recently come off the production of The Pink Panther Strikes Again,[8][9] on which Marcel had served as assistant director. They completed an average of 35 camera set-ups per day, making use of hand-held shots whenever the filming started to fall behind schedule;[13] in addition, to save time and costs, scenes were filmed in three takes or fewer when possible.[8] Stokes often needed injections to ease the discomfort caused by the contact lenses that he was wearing as part of his alien make-up.[12] Wally was a cockatoo that often refused to perform when needed and squawked loudly off-camera, causing frequent problems with the sound recording.[13] He ultimately escaped from his cage and was never seen again.[8]

The outdoor shooting was helped by the weather, which was sunny and warm throughout.[9] This inspired Warren to direct the film in a "leisurely" manner while maintaining an "underlying sense of tension and uncertainty" to produce a more shocking conclusion.[11] He considers the premise of the film "intimate" and situation-driven,[11] arguing that the light script and small cast gave the characters space to develop naturally as the filming progressed.[9][14] Stuntmen Jerry Crampton and Eddie Stacey filmed their scenes on the backlot in about two hours.[8]

The scene in which Jessica and Joe pull the distressed Kator out of the river was among the first to be shot.[13] Over the years the Ash had been used as a waste dump, causing the water to stagnate to a point where, according to Warren, it looked "more like crude oil".[13] Annen was unable to swim.[14] To reduce the amount of time that Annen, Faulkner and Stokes would need to spend in the river, Warren had the scene filmed in slow-motion on a high-speed camera, thus shortening the length of footage that needed to be shot.[13] Once out of the water, the actors were given precautionary tetanus vaccines.[13] Marcel was highly impressed with the footage and ordered Alan Jones, the film's editor, to leave the scene uncut despite Warren's concerns that it was too long.[13][14] The production wrapped with the filming of Anderson and Sandy's deaths.[12] This scene was shot night-for-night as the final day's filming had overrun and continued into the early hours of the next morning.[12]

To reduce costs, no alien spacecraft is seen at the start of the film; instead, Kator's landing on Earth is indicated by flashing lights and sound effects.[8] As the low budget also precluded the use of an orchestra, composer Ivor Slaney devised a synthesised musical score featuring occasional contributions from traditional instruments (such as a piano) that he recorded himself.[14] Slaney also composed for Warren's next film, Terror (1978). The soundtracks for Prey and Terror were released together on CD in 2009.[17]

Prey took a total of ten weeks to complete.[13] Warren describes the film as certainly his "most hectic production" but also "an amazing experience and a lot of fun".[10][11]

Release

Prey was distributed by Supreme in the United Kingdom,[18] where the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) cleared it for cinema release in November 1977.[19] Unspecified cuts were required for the film to be given an X certificate.[19] In London, Prey was screened alongside the 1973 Western Charley One-Eye as one half of a double feature.[8] The film was re-rated 18 prior to its first home video release in 1986.[19]

Critical reception

In a contemporary review, Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin suggested that the film's "pleasantly outrageous" theme "would have been more appealing treated with the sense of humour loudly called for by its most promising notions".[18] However, he also noted the "attractive settings and photography" and the "very creditable performances" of the three leads.[18]

Jeremy Heilman of the Online Film Critics Society[20] praises the film, describing it as a "solid B-movie effort", "slyly humorous" and "disturbing". He argues that – partly by necessity, due to its low budget – Prey is more "character-driven" than most other science-fiction horror films, and praises the sustained tension and "distinctive" dynamics of the plot. His one major criticism is the cinematography and editing, which he considers to be "less than expertly done"; the slow-motion scene at the lake, for example, is prolonged "to the point of unintentional hilarity".[21] Critics Kim Newman and James Marriott view the scene as one of several "incomprehensible stylistic flourishes",[1] while Kevin Lyons of the British Film Institute calls it "excruciating".[22] Lyons is nevertheless complimentary of Prey as whole, judging it a "nicely claustrophobic melodrama" and one of several "overlooked" British science-fiction horror films of the 1970s.[22]

Writing for the Savannah Morning News, Jim Reed of the Psychotronic Film Society of Savannah, Georgia gives a mostly positive assessment: he describes the film as "flawed" yet "ambitious and somewhat mesmerizing", as well as "experimental". Reed concludes that Prey "finds unexpected vantage points for subtle commentary on the themes of sexism, love, adultery, betrayal and racism — all within the context of a gay-alien-zombie-vampire gore-fest".[5] Peter Hutchings considers the film "bizarre" but adds that the "sustained seriousness" of Warren's direction and the "doom-filled atmosphere" save Prey from becoming a "piece of camp nonsense".[23]

Fred Beldin of AllMovie is critical, summing up Prey as a "dismal, unsettling film" with "occasional arthouse pretensions" that is "difficult to watch even for exploitation fans". He notes the film's unrelenting tension and "claustrophia", remarking: "deaths seem like appropriate punctuation at the end of a miserable sentence, giving the film a grim tone of hopelessness that few will derive pleasure from". He criticises Sally Faulkner's performance as being "particularly grating".[2] By contrast, Newman and Marriott praise the "surprisingly good turns" from Stokes, Annen and Faulkner.[1] Writing for Video Watchdog, Newman describes Prey as the "most minimal of Warren's exploitation films, and among the strangest British movies of all time", arguing that it plays like "a reverse spoof; the material could have been absurd and comical, with a succession of very dark jokes, but the treatment (especially the performances) is serious to the point of solemnity."[24]

Interpretation

Critic Steve Chibnall describes Prey as a "dark Darwinian fable" that, while "eccentric and sometimes unintentionally humorous ... offers a serious discourse on the predatory nature of masculinity."[25]

Leon Hunt, writer of British Low Culture: from Safari Suits to Sexploitation, further analyses the conflict of gender roles and sexualities in Prey. He argues that through the character of Josephine, Prey establishes itself as one of a number of 1970s British horror films in which country houses are depicted as places of "dangerous female sexuality – bisexual or lesbian, unstable or jealous, murderous and castrating". In this respect, he considers the film misogynistic. Jo's sexuality is rivalled by Kator's "carnivorous masculinity" – which, as shown during Jessica's death scene, "grows out of the 'natural' sexual play between hunter and prey". Hunt observes that Kator, though a predator, is not invulnerable in this hostile world of femininity: his near-drowning could be seen as a "threatening immersion in the feminine". Also noting that Jessica and Jo, as vegetarians, are effectively herbivores who fall victim to Kator, Hunt describes Prey as a "competing carnivore movie" whose ultimate aim is "gender restoration" at any cost.[26]

According to Heilman, the character of Kator serves as a "blunt metaphor for the threat that male figures pose to lesbian relationships".[21] Both Hunt and critic Ian Cooper compare Prey to D.H. Lawrence's 1922 novella The Fox, a story of metaphorical predation in which the implied lesbian relationship between two women, Banford and March, is disrupted by the unexpected arrival of a soldier called Henry. According to Hunt, plot elements shared by the two works include the "enclosed world" of the women's chicken farm and the way in which their lifestyle of "homoerotic seclusion" comes under threat – both from the fox that slaughters their poultry and the handsome male stranger whose presence ultimately leads one of the women into "heterosexual temptation".[26] Cooper, for whom Prey is a "defiantly odd low-fi sci-fi film", suggests that the film also pastiches José Ramón Larraz's 1974 film Vampyres.[27]

Adam Locks argues that Prey evokes a "mythic English past" through aspects such as characterisation, setting, cinematography and music; these serve to downplay the importance of modern technology and represent a "disavowal of the modern". He describes the film as one conveying a strong sense of isolation, noting that the lesbian characters of Jessica and Jo live as social outcasts and that their remote rural home "suggests a breakaway from the modern industrial world". According to Locks, the slow-motion drowning scene, which is accompanied by a "dark and brooding" combination of synthesiser and piano, symbolises a "deep anxiety over technological and economic expansion since the 1960s" and constitutes a "hysterical reaction to the intrusiveness of modern cultural change". More broadly, Locks identifies Prey as an example of an English surrealist tradition inspired by Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and sustained by works such as the TV series The Avengers – which, like Prey, is set in a "mythic" England that bears little relation to reality.[28]

Abandoned sequel

Shortly after the film's release, Warren, Marcel and scriptwriter Quentin Christopher commenced work on a sequel with the provisional title Human Prey.[12] According to Warren, this would have opened with Kator meeting potential victims in a pub; later, the aliens would have arrived en masse to "farm humans like cattle".[8] Marcel has compared the proposed plot to that of Starship Troopers.[12] The idea was abandoned due to the limited distribution of the original.[12]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Newman, Kim; Marriott, James (2013) [2006]. Horror! The Definitive Companion to the Most Terrifying Movies Ever Made. London, UK: Carlton Books. p. 206. ISBN 9781780973913.
  2. 1 2 3 Beldin, Fred. "Alien Prey (1978): Review". AllMovie. San Francisco, California: All Media Network. Archived from the original on 1 January 2013. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  3. Burton, Alan; Chibnall, Steve (2013). Historical Dictionary of British Cinema. Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts. Lanham, Maryland and Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press. p. 183. ISBN 9780810880269.
  4. Harvey, Dennis (1 April 2014). "British Horror, After the Hammer Fell". Fandor. San Francisco, California: Our Film Festival, Inc. Archived from the original on 10 April 2014. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Reed, Jim (19 February 2014). "Film Scene: Young Pacino and Sexy Aliens". Savannah Morning News. Augusta, Georgia: Morris Communications. Archived from the original on 23 May 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  6. Whittington, James (3 June 2016). "Brit films take centre-stage in Horror Channel's June line-up". horrorchannel.co.uk. New York City, New York: CBS. Archived from the original on 18 June 2016. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  7. Leigh, Danny (21 November 2013). "Kelly Marcel: 'Someone from Disney's going to come and kill me'". The Guardian. London, UK: Guardian Media Group. Archived from the original on 9 April 2016. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Rigby, Jonathan; Warren, Norman J. (2013). "Prey" DVD audio commentary. Odeon Entertainment/Euro London. ODNF389.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Exclusive Interview with Norman J. Warren". britishhorrorfilms.co.uk. Wood, Chris. 11 July 2011. Archived from the original on 13 August 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  10. 1 2 Warren, Norman J. (31 December 2015). "Interview: Director Norman J. Warren on "Inseminoid", "Prey" ... and "Bloody New Year"!". shocktillyoudrop.com (Interview). Interview with Alexander, Chris. Archived from the original on 23 May 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 Warren, Norman J. (April 2005). "Satan's Terror: An Exclusive Interview with Norman J. Warren". cinema-nocturna.com (Interview). Interview with Genier, Steve. Archived from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Producer: Warren, Norman J.; Interviewees: Faulkner, Sally; Jones, Alan; Marcel, Terry; Pearce, Hayden; Warren, Norman J. (2013). Keep on Running: Making "Prey" (DVD documentary). Anchor Bay Entertainment.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Warren, Norman J. (2013). "Prey" DVD liner notes (Media notes). Odeon Entertainment/Euro London. ODNF389.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Warren, Norman J. (April 2009). "Satan Chic: An Interview with Cult British Horror Director Norman J. Warren". sensesofcinema.com (Interview). Interview with Locks, Adam. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  15. Pykett, Derek (2008). British Horror Film Locations. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 100. ISBN 9780786451937.
  16. Botting, Josephine. "Warren, Norman J. (1942–)". Screenonline. London, UK: British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 11 June 2008. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  17. "Terror/Prey: The Original Unreleased Soundtrack – Ivor Slaney". AllMusic. San Francisco, California: All Media Network. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  18. 1 2 3 Milne, Tom (1978). "Prey". The Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 45 no. 528. British Film Institute. p. 119. ISSN 0027-0407. OCLC 2594020.
  19. 1 2 3 "Prey". bbfc.co.uk. London, UK: British Board of Film Classification. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  20. "Jeremy Heilman Movie Reviews & Previews". Rotten Tomatoes. San Francisco, California: Flixster. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
  21. 1 2 Heilman, Jeremy (15 July 2009). "Prey (Norman J. Warren, 1978)". moviemartyr.com. Archived from the original on 18 October 2015. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  22. 1 2 Lyons, Kevin (14 April 2016). "10 Great Overlooked British Horror Films of the 1970s". bfi.org.uk. London, UK: British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  23. Hutchings, Peter (2009). The A to Z of Horror Cinema. A to Z Guides. Lanham, Maryland and Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press. p. 327. ISBN 9780810870505.
  24. Newman, Kim (April 2005). "The Norman J. Warren Collection". Video Watchdog. No. 118. Cincinnati, Ohio: Lucas, Tim and Lucas, Donna. pp. 64–68. ISSN 1070-9991. OCLC 646838004.
  25. Chibnall, Steve (1999). "Alien Women: The Politics of Sexual Difference in British SF Pulp Cinema". In Hunter, I.Q. British Science Fiction Cinema. British Popular Cinema. London, UK and New York City, New York: Routledge. p. 71. ISBN 9781134702763.
  26. 1 2 Hunt, Leon (1998). British Low Culture: from Safari Suits to Sexploitation. London, UK and New York City, New York: Routledge. pp. 154–159. ISBN 9781136189432.
  27. Cooper, Ian (2016). Frightmares: A History of British Horror Cinema. Studying British Cinema. New York City, New York: Columbia University Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780993071744.
  28. Locks, Adam (2010). "Anglo Argento: A Critical Reassessment of the Films of Norman J. Warren". In Forster, Laurel; Harper, Sue. British Culture and Society in the 1970s: The Lost Decade. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 218–221. ISBN 9781443818384.

Further reading

External links

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