The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne (1981) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
29 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Unusual, graphic, bizarre & different take on Robert-Louis Stevenson's Novel The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
poolandrews29 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Docteur Jekyll et les Femmes, or the Bloodbath of Dr. Jekyll as I saw it under, opens to a paragraph of text that reads "there was something strange in my sensations, indescribably new and incredibly sweet. I knew myself, at the first breath of this new life, to be tenfold more wicked and the thought delighted me like wine" - Robert-Louis Stevenson (the Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde). Docteur Jekyll et les Femmes then shows a photo of Big Ben & the Houses of Parliment to establish the fact that we are in London. Then we see a young girl running down a dark deserted backstreet somewhere in London clutching her doll. A shadowy figure pursues her. He finally catches her & brutally beats her with his wooden walking cane, however he is disturbed & runs off. A reception 'in celebration of the engagement of Doctor Henry Jekyll and Fanny Osbourne' is being held in Dr. Jekyll's (Udo Kier) large house where he lives with his Mother & conducts his experiments in his laboratory. The guests arrive one by one, Dr. Lanyon (Howard Veron), a General (Patrick Magee) & his fine looking daughter, Reverend Donald Regan (Clement Harari), a pharmacist named Mr. Moore, Dr. Jekyll's publisher Mr. Enfield &, of course, bride to be Fanny Osbourne (Marina Pierro). First up is a little entertainment in the form of a ballet dancer named Victoria, then it's on with dinner where various discussions take place between the gentlemen & Dr. Jekyll about his work & theories about transcendentalism & his ability to achieve a higher consciousness through science. Victoria becomes sleepy & is shown to her room for the night, dinner ends and the various guests go their separate ways. Later on that night Victoria is brutally attacked, raped & murdered in her room by Mr. Hyde (Gerard Zalcberg). Dr. Lanyon examines the body & comes to the conclusion that whoever performed the attack had an 'organ' that was at least 35cm(!) long and had a sharp pointed head as it had entered her, went right through her and pierced her stomach. After accidentally shooting a servant "misfortune follows misfortune. Madame, I have murdered your Chauffeur. My humblest apologies" the General goes a little bananas & takes charge. He grabs his daughter & stuffs her in a closet as Mr. Hyde enters their room, Mr. Hyde ties the General to a chair as his daughter steps out of the closet, bends over the nearest table & lifts her skirt and underwear up to reveal her rather shapely bottom. Mr. Hyde then proceeds to, well help himself to her rear entrance if you know what I mean as the General looks on. After he's had his fill, & filled the General's daughter(!), Mr. Hyde disappears again. The General has a disapproving tone of voice towards his daughter as she seemed to rather enjoy what Mr. Hyde was doing so he takes some rope and gives her a good whipping on her, still very shapely, bottom. However, Mr. Hyde's acts of debauchery are far from over as he goes after Mr. Moore whom Hyde rapes & kills. Doctor Jekyll's fiancé Fanny starts to become suspicious & worried so decides to try & find Jekyll in his laboratory, in doing so Fanny finds out Dr. Jekyll's secret that Mr. Hyde is in fact Jekyll's alter-ego brought on by bathing in various chemicals! Mr. Hyde is starting to take over Jekyll who can no longer resist him, as the night draws on the surviving guests are terrorised by Mr. Hyde who seems to know no limits of depravity & sadism! Written & directed by Walerian Borowczyk this is one strange adaptation of Robert-Louis Stevenson's Novel the Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The best way to describe it would be a horror film with lashings of porn & sadism masquerading as art. The first thing that stands out about Docteur Jekyll et les Femmes is that it is a beautiful film to behold throughout. The photography by Noel Very is superb & captures the wonderful production design by Borowczyk extremely well. Rays of light, shadow, flickering candles & excellent use of space & confinement help make this an absolute pleasure to watch throughout. The period settings & costumes are also top-notch, this is as good, if not better, than any Hammer Horror period piece they produced which is high praise indeed. Docteur Jekyll et les femmes is a little slow at times, but I'm sure that was deliberate & as a whole I still found it both interesting & fascinating throughout it's 90 odd minute running time. I never felt bored or lost patience in it. The film tries to tackle various issues and really goes into the psyche of Jekyll & Hyde to paint a complex picture of them both, I also loved the ending when Fanny bathes in the chemicals, turns into her alter-ego & they both head of in the back of a carriage having rough, explicit, blood smeared sex on the back seat! The cast is very good, especially Kier who is always fun to watch, although disappointingly he is dubbed throughout. This is a very strong film that borders on porn on occasion, lots of nudity by some lovely young ladies, rape, sex, sadism and some violence & gore thrown in for good measure too. I believe the version I watched was slightly cut, according to the IMDb's 'alternate versions' section mine was missing some brief shots but most of what was described as being cut in various versions was there. The film is competently made throughout, much more so than I had expected. A different kind of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde film, but one that is interesting & entertaining throughout. If you have the stomach, aren't easily offended & can actually find a copy then I recommend this as a piece of challenging film-making, although it certainly isn't for all tastes that's for sure!
17 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Avoid censored versions
Stevieboy6669 January 2022
Two nights ago I watched the heavily cut British VTC release on VHS under the title of "Bloodbath of Dr Jekyll". A party is being held at the large London home of Dr Jekyll (Udo Kier) to celebrate his engagement to the beautiful Miss Fanny Osbourne (played by Marina Pierro), a young girl is viciously attacked outside and it soon becomes apparent that a maniac is among the people in attendance. I found it rather kinky in places and it is an unusual but interesting re-telling of the classic story, I also found it heavy on dialogue and rather boring. Last night I watched the restored and uncut version, "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne", on Blu-ray and it proved to be a far more rewarding experience. This is not a movie for your typical horror movie fan, and like I have already said it is not a traditional Dr Jekyll movie. It is interesting that Kier, who has also played Dracula and Frankenstein in previous films, only plays Jekyll, here they did not go down the usual make-up route, instead Mr Hyde is played by a different actor (Gerard Zalcberg). In uncut form this movie packs in plenty of nudity, sexual perversions and violence, it's strong stuff. The sets and camerawork are superb, visually very nice and the soundtrack is excellent. I do think that it is one of those movies that benefits from a repeated viewing, not a film for everyone but I enjoyed it so much more second time round, though I don't consider it to be a cinematic masterpiece. Notable for being one of Patrick Magee's final roles, he died the following year.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Hyde the sausage.
BA_Harrison26 January 2020
Udo Kier is the eponymous Dr. Henry Jekyll, whose experiments into transcendentalism turn him into the sex-crazed Mr. Hyde, who proceeds to go on the rampage, no woman or man safe from his 35cm long, 6cm in diameter, pointy-tipped and extremely rigid phallus. Jeckyll's beautiful betrothed, Miss Fanny Osbourne (Marina Pierro), discovers her lover's secret and is forced to take drastic measures to keep her man.

Directed by Walerian Borowczyk, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne is Euro arthouse horror by way of sleazy sexploitation, meaning that it bores and entertains in equal measures. When at its most pretentious, it is an insufferable snooze-fest, but the film proves a whole lot of deviant fun whenever Hyde gets freaky deaky with his massive dong.

First to suffer is a young girl, beaten unconscious in a London street by Hyde wielding Jeckyll's cane. A pretty dancer is next to be attacked, her lady parts torn asunder by Hyde's whopping whanger, her belly perforated from the inside. Charlotte, the lascivious daughter of General William Danvers Carew (Patrick Magee), actually welcomes Hyde's attention, obligingly bending over for some rear-entry action as her father, tied to a chair, watches in horror (he later punishes his wanton girl by whipping her bare ass with a length of rope). Then, proving that he has no particular sexual preference, Hyde rapes a curly-haired man. Borowczyk, not one to shy away from a shocking image, gives us several graphic shots of Hyde's engorged member as he goes about his business, and shows the bloody aftermath of each attack in detail. The film also delivers plenty of gratuitous nudity, with lots of boobs and bush, making the film a real treat for fans of exploitative trash.

Fans of Udo Kier might come away a little disappointed: he isn't really given a lot to do, since his demented alter-ego is played by another actor (Gérard Zalcberg, sporting a really bad haircut). The most memorable performances come from Magee, who looks like he's totally off his rocker (or completely drunk), and Pierro, who impresses for a completely different reason: she's stunning!
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Artistic horror
Sanguinaire31 December 2003
This film is, as the other reviewers said, rather like watching a dream. It is interesting to note the subtle changes this film makes on the usual Jekyll/Hyde movie formula: Udo Kier's Dr. Jekyll is not really a benefactor of humanity, but a man who revels in being able to commit horrendous crimes in the guise of his alter ego - actually moving the story closer to R. L. Stevenson's original idea. He preaches a philosophy of going beyond good and evil through science.

Likewise, Hyde commits actually repellent crimes of rape, child abuse, and sadism - making him closer to the idea of "unchained evil" than the more genteel transgressions of other movie Hydes.

Overall - a memorable, beautiful, shocking, film. Well worth seeing.
21 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Strange indeed
dworldeater13 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Dr. Jekyll And His Woman is a very strange but well made arty horror movie directed by Walerian Borwczyk. This film has a very interesting and sleazy take on the Jekyll and Hyde story and as such is a deeply disturbing and unsettling movie that is a nightmarish vision of debauchery of Mr. Hyde, a persona of which is adopted when Dr. Jekyll embraces his dark side with a limitless appetite for sex and violence. This film pulls no punches in the depiction of Mr. Hyde's indulgences that brings him to life through drugs, when witnessing this his fiance is intrigued and soon follows through with her husband which ends as they explore the dark side of their subconscious and live out their dark libidos together which ends in a appropriate bloody and nihilistic fashion. This stars European horror icon Udo Keir as Dr. Jekyll and is a very disturbing film that fully embodies the sex and violence that this take on the subject matter demands.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Visually stunning!
dlancecarrington4 February 2023
A friend gifted me a subscription to the Criterion Collection, and I was able to watch the full unedited version of this film. What an unexpected treat! Udo Keir plays the infamous Dr Jekyll. The plot revolves around a series of brutal rapes/murders that takes place at his mansion where various guests have been assembled to celebrate his engagement to the lovely Miss Fanny Isbourne(Marino Pierro ). Without going into much more detail on the plot, what this film does for Stevenson's novel is to add a level of eroticism and violence that might have been over the top if it had not been so visually captivating. Intentional or not, viewing the film feels more like watching a dream sequence- albeit a quite demented one. There are several instances where the director forces the viewer to watch the action through a narrowly framed window, giving the experience a voyeuristic feel. While not heavy on substance, it does suffer for it. The whole thing works because it provides so many scenes that remain with the viewer long after the credits.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
7/10. Only for a specific audience
athanasiosze9 March 2024
I liked this movie, it's a cinematic paradox, it kept my attention and i couldn't take my eyes off it. Just like watching a car accident as you pass the accident scene, you know it's not gonna be pretty, you know the things you'll see might haunt you but you still watch. I can't say it's exactly like that, i mean, it's not that unbearable to watch, there is a dark comedy relief here and the movie doesn't take itself too seriously. But still, this is sick and twisted and perverse.

Edward Hyde's Freudian "id" (the primitive, basic, and fully unconscious part of personality) is here more obvious than ever. This movie took it to the extreme, however it captures perfectly its essence. Did it need to be that graphic ? I don't know for sure. In any case, there is zero eroticism here. You can call this movie raw, graphic, sick, even cerebral. But not erotic.

Proceed at your own risk. I'd be a liar though if i say i didn't like it.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Run and Hyde
rooee11 June 2015
The only other time my path has crossed that of grubby auteur (urghteur?) Walerian Borowczyk was for his infamous 1975 film The Beast. Emerging from the same post-Hays Code generation as Ken Russell and Michael Winner, Borowczyk's censor-baiting specialty was sex. Another art-porn touchstone is Pier Paolo Pasolini, although at least Borowczyk has a detectable sense of humour in pursuit of his exploitation.

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne – to give it the director's preferred title after it was renamed Docteur Jekyll et les femmes – is a slasher of the trashiest sort (a trasher?), focusing on the relationship between Jekyll (Udo Kier), Hyde (a devilishly creepy Gerard Zalcberg), and Fanny Osbourne (Marina Pierro). We first meet Jekyll and Osbourne as they are entertaining guests, come to celebrate their engagement. Then, a murder. Another. The bodies start piling up. Suspecting the not-so-good doctor, Fanny discovers her fiancé's secret... and chooses to join him in his experiments in "transcendental science".

A knowing attack on taste and decency is evident from the off: Borowczyk opens with some painterly compositions, exquisitely lit and lusciously diffused, and proceeds to intercut with images of murder and rape. There's an eerie dream-like quality to some of the early setups, aided by some grimy drone music by electronic pioneer Bernard Parmegiani. But nonsensical plotting and poor pacing stalks the shadows, waiting to pounce. And the most notable knife victim is the editing, which frequently fails at the basic task of depicting who's where in relation to whom.

Borowczyk, to his credit, is clearly aware of the preposterousness of his play, wisely employing the likes of Patrick Magee – always good value – to give us a gloriously OTT army general, who at one point shoots the wrong guy and apologises by saying, "This is war... The soldier fires; the good Lord carries the bullets." But it's not enough to defend against the onset of cheap kinkiness, bad acting, worse dialogue, and weirdly tame stabbings. Any surprise? We are talking about the guy who made Emmanuelle 5, here.

Some oddities, it seems, are better off consigned to the past. But if the promise of seeing Udo Kier writhe naked in a bath of beef stock is tempting, be my guest.
4 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Truly transgressive
christopher-underwood26 March 2014
I can't believe I had never seen this film before but it would seem so unless I saw some heavily cut version on video, because this viewing was a revelation. Much helped by the musical score and varied conditions of light so loved of the director, this is unworldly from the start, despite its seeming drawing and dining room settings. Things go wrong (or is that rather, right?) from the very beginning as we get the impression of something ghastly going on and the film does not pause, indeed it gathers momentum all the time. As if we too are on the same drug, our perception and involvement changes as we begin to see the transformation of Jekyll through the eyes of his fascinated fiancé. Truly transgressive, this is a magnificent portrayal of repressed desires and the beast within and such is the level of joyous destruction and killing that I shall have to include it in my 'Sadean' list.
15 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Erotisized Stevenson
kirbylee70-599-52617921 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I have to admit something up front. I've never been a big fan of Euro-stylized films that seem more interested in just that as opposed to telling a story. Certainly there have been exceptions to the rule but I honestly can't name one off the top of my head. I just felt I had to make the point before saying that for me this film wasn't the be all to end all that Michael Brooke makes it out to be for me. I'm happy that for him this release in this form met his expectations and delight. For me, not so much.

While most of us are already well aware of the classic novel on which this movie is based, it gets a different treatment here than what has come in the past. The film opens impressively with an eerie blue tone as a young child runs through the streets to avoid a well clad gentleman chasing her. He eventually catches up and brutally beats her within an inch of her life. Then we quickly shoot off to the home of Dr. Jekyll where he and his soon bride to be are in a romantic embrace trying to still their lust since they're about to host a party concerning their upcoming wedding.

Guests begin to arrive and conversation begins. Along the way word of the child found outside comes up and concerns are discussed that dwell off as new conversation topics arise. As the evening progresses different guests begin to be attacked by someone in the house. The fact that no one notices each time this happens Jekyll is nowhere to be found says a lot about said guests. That these attacks can happen in a house that isn't near mansion status confounded me. Yes, I know you should suspend belief in a movie but between the size of the house and the behavior of the guests I felt like the deaths of these people was a way of thinning the herd.

The passing of each guests is discovered and discussed and the weapon of destruction is apparently a long, curved penis with a point on the end, shown at one point as one of the guests allows herself to be used by Mr. Hyde as a way of getting back at her father who is tied up and forced to watch. And not to worry, Hyde is an equal opportunity provider as he later kills a man in the same fashion.

The twist in the story here, along with the way Hyde is killing the guests of his alter ego, is that his wife to be has no problem with most of it. When she discovers what her husband to be has been doing, she joins in by dousing herself in the same manner he has been and becomes a female version of sorts to his Mr. Hyde. A second twists from most films of this topic has a different actor playing Hyde rather than a single actor in make up as has been done in the past.

But as this story unfolds it isn't the tale at all that has had people talking about this production. Instead the talk focuses on the cinematography and use of light and soft focus that has fans clamoring to watch the movie. It's the small amount of naked flesh that titillates and thrills pre-teen males enough to have made them rent this movie years in the past. It's all under the guise of art film as opposed to exploitation with discussions of the film's director, Walerian Borowczyk, and his earlier works involving stop motion animated pieces and short art films prior to this release.

Included in the extras are two of those short films as well as a lengthy discussion of Borowczyk and his works from a producer for this DVD and long-time fan I mentioned earlier, Michael Brooke. While the information Brooke provides is interesting his delivery is very monotone and his enthusiasm doesn't quite come through. Several other interviews are included as well making this the typical Arrow Video release, in other words a fantastically rendered version of the film itself accompanied by what could arguably be said to be the best collection of extras found in DVD releases today.

Some may thoroughly enjoy this movie and I don't want to have you walking away thinking this is the worst piece of film ever made. I have little doubt that fans of this genre will walk away scratching their head wondering why it was I didn't enjoy it as much as they did, thus my disclaimer at the start. For me I'm not likely to revisit this film in the future and sitting through it once was more than enough for me. For others I suppose repeat viewings are in store as I am sure they are for Mr. Brooke. In the end it all depends on your own personal taste. For most this won't be your cup of tea.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Summary: weird, beautiful, haunting
info-1087 March 2000
Doctor Jekyll is a rather different version than most adaptations of the Jekyll & Hide story. Its emphasis lies on sex, this time. Jekyll changes into a rather beastly kind of lover/murderer who seduces, haunts and kills all the people gathered in the house for a party. Although the story is well known, this change of direction makes it very interesting to watch. The photography is rather special, with light almost bursting of the screen. The only negative thing I found was the English dubbing which is done very badly. Try to find the original version if you can. Udo Kier and Patrick Magee are very amusing to watch.
10 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Did I Watch The Right Movie? 1-2-Miss.
P3n-E-W1s31 August 2022
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Dr Jeckyll And His Women; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

Story: 0.25 Direction: 1.50 Pace: 0.25 Acting: 0.50 Enjoyment: 0.25

TOTAL: 2.75 out of 10.00

Did I watch the right movie? At the time of writing this review, IMDb has Dr Jeckyll And His Women with a 6.1 Rating with 1.1k votes. The movie I just wasted an hour and a half on had the same cast and director, so I deduce it was the same film. However, I cannot, for the life of me, understand the high Rating.

Walerian Borowczyk, who wrote and directed this masterpiece of monotonous drivel, should never pick up a crayon again. His writing skills are dreadful. For his story, he's decided to extend upon the engagement party of Dr Henry Jekyll to Miss Fanny Osbourne. This idea would have been grand had he been able to create and develop engaging, appealing, and credible characters. Even though Robert Louis Stevenson did the bulk of the work with Jekyll, Borowczyk still manages to make the drug-addled and tortured man appear less than two-dimensional. Most of the individuals in his narrative suffer from similar thinness of personality. But that is just the start of the troubles. Once we get around the dining table, he turns the dialogue into precocious nonsense about transcendental medicine. I would be very surprised if your finger isn't tapping the off button at this moment. If I were you, I'd hit it, and hard, because it's only going to get worse. As we progress through the quagmire of crap, we realise Borowczyk has decided that structure and continuity are for the sane - and out the window, they fly. We are then privy to people making themselves hostages in their house. Instead of seeking refuge, they run from room to room while a doddery old general repeatedly fires his pistol at nothing in particular: All the while, screeching out his orders to run and protect yourselves. And it still worsens. The decrepit old soldier hides his daughter in the wardrobe, fearing the molester is in the house. Not only is Mr Hyde in the house, but he appears to manifest from nowhere in the General's quarters. Sadly, the man-at-arms has spent his load and his pistol clicks on empty. As he begs like a true coward, give the man a headdress of white feathers, his daughter comes out of the cupboard, topless and bends over the sowing machine to give Hyde easy access, all the while goading Daddy to look. However, there is one shining sliver of ingenuity in this miserable mess of a story. The way Jekyll transforms into Hyde. It's not by imbibing a potion. No! Jekyll has to bathe in it. I have to admit that though the story is horrendous to the extreme, this idea is excellent. I even liked the idea of Hyde having to take a second drug to resurrect Jekyll, though why the madman should is beyond me, as both the personalities get their rocks off being Hyde.

Now the strange thing about this whole mess of a picture is Borowczyk's filmmaking. It is quite superb. He has a fine eye for composition and a delicate touch for using natural lighting. Regrettably, the scenes are not riveting enough. Though superbly captured, there is little of interest happening. And the majority of the picture is shot in a standard fashion with lots of camera shake, which looks accidental - making the direction less powerful. His main downfall is the tempo. For some unknown reason, he appoints to tell the tale at the slowest pace possible. Everything is on the screen for too long: even the excellent composites. By extending every scene, Borowczyk reduces their effect, effectively making them boring for the audience. I will say this for him; he knows how to stab himself in the back. Another component he should have directed with a firmer hand is the cast.

Because the cast is appalling: I was willing to put it down to the overdubbing, but I simply couldn't. Nearly every actor or actress in this movie has performed a hundred times better in other productions. There's a tie for the worst performer - Udo Kier as Jekyll and Patrick Magee as General William Danvers. Watching Kier fully clothed in the bathtub splashing about like a fish out of water is hilarious, while Magee appears to be adlibbing his lines - very badly. I felt embarrassed for all the performers, except Gerard Zalcberg, as he's not too bad as Jekyll's alter-ego Hyde.

Now with all that said, I cannot, even with a stout heart and malice in mind, recommend you watch Dr Jeckyll And His Women. There are so many superior movies out there to entertain you. Even the multitude of Jekyll and Hyde flicks are better than this tripe.

Back in the cupboard with you, my precious; you're not my type. While you're waiting for Hyde to resurface, check out my Absolute Horror, The Final Frontier, and Killer Thriller Chillers lists to see where I ranked Dr Jeckyll And His Women - But, better yet: You can find a more enjoyable movie to watch.

Take Care & Stay Well.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES (1981) ***
Bunuel19762 December 2004
'Borowczyk brings to this the same bizarre poetic sensibility which made GOTO, ISLAND OF LOVE (1968) and BLANCHE (1971) such outlandish wonders, but which forced him into working in the margins of the sex-film industry. He takes the traditional elements of the Stevenson story and turns them to his own surreal ends: the good doctor is transformed into a raving beast and then stalks the corridors of a rambling Victorian house; the inhabitants find themselves under siege from within, and the threat is largely sexual. As usual Borowczyk exercises his immaculate, painterly eye for unusual objects and settings and a fetishist's delight in costume (especially shoes). God knows what the raincoat trade makes of it: a film of strange and outrageous beauty which seems to emanate from that place where our fears are also desires.' – Chris Peachment, Time Out Film Guide, 1998.

This succinct but intuitive review introduced me to Walerian Borowczyk's controversial adaptation of the Robert Louis Stevenson novella but it is only now, some five years later, that I finally managed to watch the film for the first time via a dub taken from the out-of-print Belgian VHS released by the 'Hollywood' label, albeit after having had the ignominy of being detained by the local censors for nearly a month due to its 'obscene' content! Even though the VHS tape is entitled THE BLOODBATH OF DR. JEKYLL, the film's opening credits give the title in French which is then subtitled in English as THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MISS OSBOURNE.

DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES marked the first time I had witnessed Udo Kier in the lead: at times, his curly-haired Dr. Jekyll was visibly reminiscent of a straight Gene Wilder. I had previously only watched Udo Kier doing his cameos in Dario Argento's SUSPIRIA (1977); Rainer Werner Fassbinder's THE THIRD GENERATION (1979); two for Lars von Trier - the 1994 TV-Series THE KINGDOM and BREAKING THE WAVES (1996); Wim Wenders' THE END OF VIOLENCE (1997); Armageddon (Michael Bay, 1998); END OF DAYS (Peter Hyams, 1999); and as producer/art director/costume designer Albin Grau in SHADOW OF THE VAMPIRE (E. Elias Mehrige, 2000). I'd love to watch him playing Jack The Ripper in Borowczyk's LULU (1980), a remake of one of the finest of all Silent films – G.W. Pabst's PANDORA'S BOX (1928).

Furthermore, DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES was also the third time Borowczyk had utilized the then twenty-one year old Marina Pierro, after 1977's INTERNO DI UN CONVENTO aka BEHIND CONVENT WALLS (which has just been released on R2 DVD in an English-dubbed version in the UK) and 1979's LES HEROINES DU MAL aka THREE IMMORAL WOMEN, and he would go on to use her twice more in ARS AMANDI aka THE ART OF LOVE (1983) and his own last completed film, CEREMONIE D'AMOUR aka LOVE RITES (1988). Even though she was supposed to have partaken of Jekyll's serum, Borowczyk chose not to tamper with the actress' loveliness by transforming Fanny Osbourne into a wretched-looking creature (with king-sized boobs, perhaps?); the effect the potion had on her was more a liberating one, shedding all her sexual inhibitions and, perhaps more tellingly, severing the repressive ties which had bound her all her life to the hypocritical social mores of the ever-so respectable Victorian society by repeatedly stabbing her mother to death with a knife. In the end, after decimating the entire household, all that is left for them to do is to devour each other in one last tender, bloody, animalistic embrace.

Borowczyk also managed to offer meaty roles to two fine actors who weren't always used sensibly by other film-makers – Patrick Magee and Howard Vernon. Magee's distinctive voice was definitely one of his major assets and proves to be the saving grace in an otherwise poorly-dubbed picture. Although unusually restrained in the earlier part of the film, he gets more and more unhinged (which is the way we love him) as the film goes on and the hunt for the assassin gets underway, culminating in his ecstatic whipping of his bare-bottomed daughter for nonchalantly indulging in some serious love-making with the well-endowed Edward Hyde, as he lies tied to a chair a few paces away from them! Vernon, playing Dr. Lanyon, even gets to examine the dead bodies of the underaged ballerina and a young male guest, who had unceremoniously been subjected to Hyde's 'organ'. Unfortunately, these two particular scenes are often cut due to the graphic nature (both visual and verbal) of the examination.

Borowczyk directs the film in a strange and elliptical style which is characterized by intermittently interweaving, in the earlier parts of the film, unsettling flashforwards to the murders yet to come, thus further disorienting the viewer and ensnaring him in the sick climate which pervades the whole film. Besides writing and directing (for which he won the Best Direction Award at the Catalonian International Film Festival), Borowczyk himself was also responsible for the film's elegant but sinister décor which, confined as it is almost exclusively to the Jekyll household, imbues the proceedings with a highly appropriate feeling of claustrophobia, which not only implies the imminent danger that the guests constantly face from the predatory beast lurking within the premises, but could also reflect the chains of propriety I mentioned earlier and which had a strong hold over the British people in those Victorian times, a theme which was also explored in the classic Mamoulian/March version. The only scene which is set away from the Jekyll mansion is the film's very opening sequence: Hyde's vicious attack on a little girl in a fog-bound alley in the dead of night is a brutally effective scene which plunges the viewer immediately into the narrative and requires that he/she be already familiar with the plot line. I also liked the blackly humorous touch of having Hyde sign the register of congratulatory notices as if he were a regular guest to the party celebrating the engagement of Dr. Henry Jekyll to Miss Fanny Osbourne.

The transformation sequences were quite different from what we were used to in other film versions by virtue of the fact that this time around Dr. Jekyll dissolves his mixture in a bathtub full of water and jumps right into it (rather than by simply drinking the potion). I have my doubts whether it was actually Udo Kier who was stomping around in the Hyde make-up so complete and 'successful' was the transformation, especially the face which bears an uncanny resemblance to a dark-haired Brian Eno! The mythic 'phallus', which was perhaps the direct side effect of the potion (and I daresay intentionally so), does make its presence felt (ouch!) but not in a vulgar or gratuitous way; in fact, we see it in action only twice - on the General's oversexed daughter and, more disturbingly, on the aforementioned male guest – but, for all I know, it wouldn't really have embarrassed much any consummate male porno star!

Apart from the common violent outburts and anarchic characteristics present in earlier film adaptations of the story, Borowczyk's vision of Hyde possesses a few distinctive traits like his penchant for hanging the carcasses of his victims from the ceiling - perhaps as a nod towards Leatherface's antics in Tobe Hooper's THE Texas CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974), a film which I haven't yet had the opportunity to watch, by the way – but also, more amusingly, his fondness for shooting poisoned arrows (an engagement present from the General, no less) at his victims, including the very same General and his daughter! The latter also brings out another of Borowczyk's thematic attributes - which can also be found in the two other films of his which I have watched so far, BLANCHE (1971) and LA BETE (1975) – which is the eroticising of inanimate objects: in LA BETE, both Lisbeth Hummel (a rose) and Pascale Rivault (the bed-post) made unique use of such items to satisfy their lustful appetites; in DOCTEUR JEKYLL, the General's daughter lovingly caresses a sewing machine as she is being sodomized by Hyde's 'organ'.

I cannot finish off this review of DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES without mentioning the immeasurable contribution made by (don't laugh) Bernard Parmegiani, whose highly effective minimalist score recurs unnervingly almost throughout the film's entire duration. The print utilized for the VHS transfer was a bit murky and soft on the whole, but this may have been a conscious decision on Borowczyk's part as to how the film should look…or else, it may have been the result of the various screenings that the tape underwent at the hands of those bastards at the local censorship board!

DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES is the eighth film version I have watched of the famous horror story: the Silent 1920 version starring John Barrymore and directed by John S. Robertson; the magnificent Rouben Mamoulian version which led to Fredric March winning his first Academy Award in 1931; the 1941 Spencer Tracy/Victor Fleming version; the Tom and Jerry Oscar-nominated animated short subject DR. JEKYLL AND MR. MOUSE (Joseph Barbera and William Hanna, 1947); ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (Charles Lamont,1953) with Boris Karloff playing the good doctor; Hammer Films' second stab at the story, DR. JEKYLL AND SISTER HYDE (Roy Ward Baker, 1971), which added a gender-bending twist by having Ralph Bates turn into Martine Beswick; and the inevitable Christopher Lee/Peter Cushing take on the material in the form of I, MONSTER (Stephen Weeks, 1971).

Even so, there are still a handful of film versions I'd like to watch, namely the 1913 Silent with King Baggott and directed by Herbert Brenon; Edgar G. Ulmer's DAUGHTER OF DR. JEKYLL (1957) with Gloria Talbot in the title role; Jean Renoir's 1959 French version with Jean-Louis Barrault which goes by the name of LE TESTAMENT DE DR. CORDELIER (it has been released on R2 DVD in France earlier this year but the print utilized sports no English subtitles); Hammer's THE TWO FACES OF DR. JEKYLL (Terence Fisher, 1960) with Paul Massie in the title role; and the two TV adaptations – the 1968 Jack Palance/Charles Jarrott version entitled THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, and even the 1973 Kirk Douglas/David Winters adaptation sponsored by NBC and set to an original song score by Lionel Bart!
18 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The Decadent Charm of the Kinky Bourgeoisie
matheusmarchetti8 August 2010
After being very disappointed with "The Beast", I had little expectations towards Borowczyk's other entry in the horror genre "Dr. Jekyll and his Women", and ended up being very surprised. It feels like the more serious but neglected younger cousin of Paul Morrisey's "Flesh for Frankenstein" and "Blood for Dracula", which also starred Udo Kier, and took a considerably more violent, erotic and often humorous approach at a classic horror story. While it does have a witty sense of humor, "Dr. Jekyll.." is a darker affair, that actually does seem to try and creep you out. While it isn't a 'terrifying' film, it is genuinely disturbing, haunting and sometimes creepy. The various changes from the source material worked in favor for the film, as it made it more fresh and engaging than other versions of the story. The empashis on Mr. Hyde as a sex maniac is much bigger in this one, as basically all he does is rape members of the high society, men and women alike, to death with a 35 foot, sharp-as-a-knife "organ". Despite the rather "absurd" premise, the subject matter is treated very elegantly and doesn't really come off as exploitive or comical. As a matter of fact, the rape scenes are all quite hard to watch, and unlike "The Beast", are not at all arousing, with gruesome aftermaths. Still, it's also quite beautiful and, as usual for a Borowczyk film, very dreamlike and surreal indeed, with some deliciously otherworldly shots that you'd want to frame and hang on your wall. The film also works as an interesting social commentary on the decadent lives on 19th century high society, as Jekyll and Hyde seem to represent the depraved, monstrous characterstics of the bourgeoisie, hidden behind an elegant, sophisticated facade. As I mentioned before, the film is quite different from the novel. Nevertheless, it manages to capture the novel's atmosphere perfectly, unlike many other more faithful adaptations. Borowczyk pays extreme attention to detail, with everything from set design, costumes to background lounge piano music, just screams "Victorian England". The synthesizer soundtrack by Bernard Parmegiani is subtly used to great effect in creating the fear of the unknown prowling every corner. While the film is slow, it's never really boring. There's an impeding sense of doom that grows with every minute, and each frame has such visual flourishes that it's simply impossible to look away. Last but not least, the film also benefits from a great cast that includes Eurohorror regulars such as Marina Perro and Howard Vernon - Dr. Orloff himself! Though the dubbing is not very good, the actors still manage to give good performances, particularly Pierro and Kier (who, unfortunately, gets the same kind of dubbing as he had in "Suspiria"). Overall, another great, obscure art-house horror gem that deserves more praise and recognition. 10 out of 10
11 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
unknown masterpiece
LewisPritchard1 February 2019
Little people know of "the strange case of doctor jekyll and miss osbourne" i brought the arrow video release of the film and watched it and really enjoyed it. the film is a bizarre piece of art yet beautiful with all shots and lighting standing out. the film is a great reimagining of the original dr jekyll and mister hyde novel. the film stars udo kier in a faultless performance along with a clockwork oranges patrick magee with both actors at the top of their game. the films chilling soundtrack creates a lonely abstract feel to the film making each scene more and more terrifying. you can buy the film easily online and highly recommend it to every horror fan.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A surreal and disturbing retelling of the Jekyll and Hyde story from the director of the infamous art/porn movie 'The Beast'.
Infofreak7 July 2003
Even though I watched the dubbed and censored (about 15 minutes of footage cut out as far as I can tell) version of 'Dr Jekyll and His Women' I was still very impressed by it. Director Borowczyk is best remembered for the infamous art/porn classic 'The Beast' so anyone who has seen that eye-popping oddity will have some idea what they're in for. Exactly what was left out of this cut I don't know, but looking at what Mr Hyde has in his pants it isn't difficult to guess! Cult legend Udo Kier ('Flesh For Frankenstein', 'Blood For Dracula', 'The Story Of O', 'Suspiria', etc.etc.) plays Dr Henry Jekyll, Marina Pierro (Rollin's 'The Living Dead Girl') is his fiancee, and the supporting cast includes the marvelous character actors Howard Vernon (who appeared in innumerable Jess Franco movies, 'Alphaville', 'Delicatessen' and many other cult favourites) and Patrick Magee ('Dementia 13', 'The Masque Of The Red Death', 'The Birthday Party','A Clockwork Orange'). Magee gives a classic performance and almost steals the movie from Kier. Both actors make 'Dr Jekyll and His Women' essential viewing for any fan of the bizarre and "out there". I can't wait to see the complete version of this movie, I'm sure it's amazing! As it is, despite my intense dislike of unnecessarily butchered video cuts, I highly recommend this movie.
10 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Well Crafted and Creatively Executed Sleaze
robertmfreeman6 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I honestly expected this movie to be pure trash, and make no mistake, this movie was definitely sleazy, often to the point of revulsion.

What I didn't expect was for the movie to be worthwhile otherwise. The sleaze actually works well within the Jekyll and Hyde mythos, as none of the crimes committed in the movie are beyond Hyde in any of his incarnations. I've definitely seen Hyde hammed up far worse in other movies and stage performances.

So why cling to the unnecessary sleaze? I think the director felt it wouldn't be commercially viable without it, and unfortunately, he was probably right.

This version of Hyde is closer to what Stevenson originally envisioned, a barbaric and small minded monster, that only cares about satisfying his base impulses, and nothing else. He can't concentrate long enough to form a plan or vendetta. He's a savage, primitive monster, through and through.

What separates this version from others is its unnecessarily over the top sexual violence, a few VERY graphic scenes, and the fact (SPOILER COMING) that his 'bride to be' joins him in his debauchery at the end, becoming a Hyde-like monster herself.

She's actually far more interesting than Hyde, because instead of acting like a basic sex fiend, she delves headfirst into nihilism, as does the film as a whole. It's fascinating to see a movie shift tones from 'shock horror' to complete anarchy. The carnage isn't as shocking as it is unexpected, and the actors really dive into it head first. Makes you wonder if it was only their 'characters' who were reveling in the destruction.

The ending is the best part of the movie, as the 'happy couple' destroy the entire house and everyone inside it, in a fit of violence, fire, and self gratification.

It ain't pretty, but I have to admit, it was original.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Borowczyk's Best Film?
Steve_Nyland26 November 2006
I gotta say that I was really impressed with this one and sorely wished I had given this a shot before trying director Walerian Borowczyk's wildly over-rated THE BEAST first. That film is more of a smutty, profane little one liner joke (a good joke, mind you) hidden inside of about 70 minutes of artsy-fartsy French crap. This movie actually has a pair of balls by comparison, is equally unafraid to offend/shock, yet has an actual story worth bothering with at it's root.

It's yet another potentially smutty little adaptation of classic literature, namely "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson. According to Peter Tombs' "Immoral Tales", Borowczyk claimed at the time to have based his screenplay on a previously lost early draft of Stevenson's story that Borowczyk stumbled upon while doing research at Oxford's library ... with Colonel Mustard and his lead pipe no doubt. Stevenson's estate sued Borowczyk for slander or plagiarism or both -- my memory is vague on the subject, someone nipped my copy of the book for all the pictures of naked boobs with blood oozing over them -- and he had to settle out of court before the film could be released.

Whatever. It was only on reflection after wards that I realized if Udo Keir could find himself a role as a mummy and a wolfman he would have a rare claim to eternal fame for having played all of the classic Universal monsters at one time or another: Dracula, Baron Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll being under his belt already. Look out, Paul Naschy. One of the weaknesses of this film was some idiot's decision to DUB the voice of the man who gave the world the expression (sic) "ZE UNMAIGHTY NASUM". The film is not depleted by lacking Keir's distinctive voice but would have been more, ehh, distinctive for having it. If you book an actor as famous for their diction as they are their willingness to take on risky projects you should at least do them the courtesy of being heard on the audio track.

As a sort of glaring example, take Patrick MacGee: He steals the show for two or three scenes just by the way that he speaks his lines, he was such a marvelous actor & film presence. Howard Vernon is awesome as Jekyll's nosey doctor friend, Marina Pierro looks like she would have been an animal in bed with her blood red contact lenses and moist cleavage, and yes that is a different actor playing the Edward Hyde role & not just an oddly made up Udo.

As for the cut/uncut considerations, try to find the English language print with the funny Scandanavian subtitles: All the others are censored to one degree or another, and this certainly is a movie with quite a bit to offend any ratings board member: Murdered violated young girls, a sex harlot being enthusiastically spanked by her father, a murdering sex maniac with a distended sex member who uses it on anything with some body heat. The scene where the young dancer is medically examined received a couple three playbacks so we could make careful note of the dimensions: 35 centimeters in length by 6 centimeters in width, and rigid enough to cause abdominal injuries visible from the outside. To hell with a cure, that Hyde formula could make Viagra obsolete.

So what is it about Walerian Borowczyk? Is adapting classical literature into borderline obscene movies with sly social commentary his particular schtick? Why all the emphasis on sex? And why does it always have to be sex that revels in a one form of deviancy or another? He shoots great interior scenes: Claustrophobia and rigid definition of space combined with offbeat methods of obtaining orgasm. It's effective art & film, easily the most provocative adaptation of the Hyde story to the screen that I can remember seeing, but what is he really trying to tell us here? By not offering an explanation he succeeds where THE BEAST was all explanation. This movie rulez, see it any way you can find it.

8/10
8 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A Bath Salts Version of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"
zardoz-137 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson's classic morality tale about evil "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" has been produced over 30 times since the dawn of the silent film era. Polish writer & director Walerian Borowczyk's uninhibited adaptation of Stevenson's literary landmark, titled "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne" (1981), differs considerably from the traditional mainstream versions. Indeed, if you have any reservations about violence, you might forego this grisly adaptation with its bizarre sexual content. This atmospheric epic opens after dark with a child fleeing from an immaculately attired gentleman in a top hat, suit, and gloves. Nothing stops him from overtaking the unfortunate girl and then clubbing her to death with his cane. Later, the broken pieces of the cane found at the crime scene testifies to Mr. Hyde's sadism. "Immoral Tales" lenser Noël Véry conceals the loathsome ferocity carried out on this fragile child in ominous but impenetrable shadows. This appalling opening scene sets Borowczyk's "Dr. Jekyll" apart from its counterparts. Kindly Dr. Jekyll doesn't the imbibe chemical potion that transforms him. Instead, he sloshes around in a bathtub with using this toxic concoction as if it were bath salts and emerges looking nothing like his former self. Udo Keir plays Dr. Jekyll, while Gérard Zalcberg plays Mr. Hyde. Borowczyk has criticized other takes on the tale because the actors were forced to add prosthetics or appliances to alter their physical appearance.

We hear initially from Dr. Jekyll while he is sitting alone in his laboratory. He reads aloud from the text of a book: "Men have before hired bravos to transact their crimes while their own person and reputation sat under shelter." The action unfolds as usual in Victorian England. Miss Fanny Osbourne (Marina Pierro of "The Living Dead Girl") and Dr. Jekyll are celebrating their marriage engagement with a reception of friends and family. The film is told partially from Fanny's perspective because she eagerly anticipates a life of shared affection with Jekyll. The action occurs over the next 24 hours as Fanny discovers to her chagrin depth of her prospective husband malignant mind. Incredibly, she yearns to experience her future husband's experiments. In an ironic bit of foreshadowing, one of the obnoxious dinner guests, General William Danvers Carew (Patrick Magee of "A Clockwork Orange") compliments Fanny, "Young lady, you're a monster, an incredibly deformed creature, the very incarnation of monumental ugliness." Later, the General presents Jekyll with a bow and a quiver of arrows soaked in poison. This serves as another example of foreshadowing, since this primitive weapon exerts a part in the ending. Meantime, the 'transcendent' minded Dr. Jekyll feels emphatically that science entitles him to defy conventions. Similarly, when his vicious alter-ego Mr. Hyde strikes, the maniac doesn't confine himself to the raping and killing women. Moreover, he rapes men with similar abandon. Makes you wonder if Borowcyk somehow retrieved Stevenson's original manuscript that so horrified his wife from the ashes.

Jekyll's guests at engagement dinner indulge in philosophical debates about transcendentalism versus empiricism. Borowczyk weaves reams of exposition into the fabric of their dialogue. He provides us with everything we must know about Dr. Jekyll's ideology and ambitions along with his guests' opposing arguments. Some of Jekyll's friends take issue with his ideas, and tension boils over during the discussion. At one point, Jekyll proclaims, "I wish to make one point clear. Reactions in the body are not caused by chemicals. Chemicals do not determine actions. They do not dictate to the organism. They assist the body to create its own state." During those last words, we glimpse a huge, erect penis stroking a woman's derrière. Actually, this is a flashforward. Not long afterward, Edward Hyde storms the house, tries to trample Fanny, and then rips out the telephone line. The pugnacious General Carew takes command during the chaos, while Hyde continues his rampage. Carew orders the men to arm themselves with any weapons at their disposal. The trigger-happy officer goes berserk, shooting Jekyll's coachman by accident, in a futile attempt to kill Hyde. Earlier, before Hyde's assault on Fanny, Carew wrestled briefly with her. Ultimately, the General confronts Hyde and pleads with him to spare himself. Carew indicates where the women are hidden. Hyde displays no qualms about skewering the military warhorse with a sword, ripping his medals off at sword point, and then trampling them, too. Hyde ties the General to a chair and savors the occasion as General's daughter Charlotte Carew (Agnès Daems of "Rebelote") emerges from a closet with bared breasts to see what has happened to her father. Voluntarily, Charlotte crouches over a sewing table, caressing the machine, while Hyde plunges into her from behind to conqueror his lust. The symbolism of sewing discord is pretty obvious. Later, Carew whips his daughter's bare bottom with a rope.

After his recovery from the transformation, Jekyll is upset that this attack has taken place in his residence. Dr. Lanyon (Howard Vernon of "The Diabolical Dr. Z") conducts an impromptu autopsy on the ballerina, Victoria Enfield (Magali Noaro of "Savage Nights"), and describes the details of her demise. According to Lanyon's calculations, Victoria died from the insertion of "a male organ, human or animal," roughly two inches in diameter and 14 inches in length. Concluding his analysis, the physician observes, "Due to the unusually pointed tip and the hardness of the shaft, Miss Victoria Enfield's belly was perforated from inside, just below the stomach." Borowczyk does triple duty not only as writer & director, but he also as production designer. This claustrophobic yarn features lush production values. He confines the action largely to the interior of Jekyll's residence and has compared his film with "Alien." Altogether, "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne" qualifies as an erotic arthouse classic, despite the notorious sexual penetration images that some argue classifies it as pornographic. Neither the nudity nor the penetration scenes are gratuitous in this nimble 91-minute film.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
"I knew myself, at the first breath of this new life, to be tenfold more wicked and the thought delighted me like wine"
morrison-dylan-fan11 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Reading an old issue of Empire,I found a review by Kim Newman praising Arrow for bringing out Blu-Ray that have caused a major re- evaluation of "Adult" auteur film maker Walerian Borowczyk. Taking part in a poll on ICM for the best movies of 1981 whilst reading the review,I noticed a fellow poster share tantalising screenshots of a Dr. Jekyll adaptation,which led to me looking at Borowczyk for the first time:

View on the film:

Bringing Borowczyk's Dr. Jekyll into light,Arrow deliver a superb transfer,with the French/English dubs (the title was shot with no original soundtrack) being clean,and Arrow retaining the film grain on the picture.

Opening Jekyll's eyes with Giallo black gloves and a stylised,extended first person tracking shot,writer/production designer/director Walerian Borowczyk & cinematographer Noël Véry set their sights on fetish, masochism,with Borowczyk finding an unsettling elegance in shots whirling round a drenched in blood body,and a bath of Jekyll's potion having a grubby earthy appearance.

Backed by an excellent simmering electronic score from Bernard Parmegiani, Borowczyk heightens the masochism by taking the Gothic Horror to the level of a surrealist farce,as the guests, Miss Fanny Osbourne and Jekyll become entranced in a cocktail of transgressive aggression and horror decadence.

Entering this adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's book from a distinctive corner,the screenplay by Borowczyk brews a frosty nightmare horror state of Jekyll's future murder/sex attacks being threaded into the "present" dinner like a darkness on the horizon. Investigating the strange case between Jekyll and Osbourne, Borowczyk brilliantly builds a toxic bond which leads to them bathing in each other's potions, as Miss Osbourne and Dr. Jekyll discover the strange case of Mr. Hyde)
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Entrancing
le_chiffre-120 February 2010
This movie was recently screened at a local theater and being a fan of old horror movies, I went to see it based on the title alone, not knowing what I was in for. I didn't find the movie all that engaging for the first twenty or so minutes and thought I might've made a mistake in going. Boy was I wrong! It turned out to be one of the best movies I've seen. The first 20 minutes couldn't have prepared me for the insanity that would subsequently erupt on the screen.

The person I was with kept snickering at what she perceived as plot holes or moments that she found over the top, but if you're concerned about the plot or expect this to be a faithful rendition of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel, you're missing the point. The coherence of the story doesn't really matter; what makes this movie amazing are the mesmerizing dream-like images and atmosphere, enhanced with excellent photography and lighting (some of the best lighting I've seen in a color movie) and set to a soundtrack of piano and hypnotic, minimalist electronic music (from the days when "electronic music" meant analog technology, not Casio keyboards), occasionally punctuated with silence. There were parts where I almost felt like I was watching a silent film, except with music and in color.

The photography reminded me somewhat of Andrei Tarkovsky's boring but visually beautiful film Stalker.

There were scenes in this movie, like one that took place in a bathtub, which played with the viewer's sense of time in a manner that I've only encountered in some of David Lynch's work. I have to wonder if Lynch might not have picked up a few tricks from this movie.

The closest thing I can compare it to in terms of "feel" would be to Carnival of Souls or perhaps more appropriately, to the 1964 "pink film" Hakujitsumu (Day-Dream).

Even though there is a realistic, and hence viscerally unsettling, quality to much of the brutality in this film, Docteur Jekyll et les femmes is not a gorefest. It might be best to think of it as more of an "arthouse" film than as standard horror, kinda like a Russian Ark that won't put you to sleep. If you go into it expecting Friday the 13th or something like that, you're going to be disappointed.

My only real complaint is the gratuitous sleaze, in particular the quasi-pornographic homosexual rape, the father flogging his daughter's bare buttocks, and the close-up on the dead maid's crotch, parts which needlessly drag the movie into sexploitation territory, making it less effective. I might've considered this a masterpiece if it hadn't been trashed up with what I can only assume were the director's pet perversions. I guess he just couldn't help throwing a couple of turds in the punch bowl.

Here's hoping that this unique film gets a proper release on DVD sometime, since as of this review, it appears to be unavailable on home video. I suppose I should count myself lucky that I got to see it at all.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Dark, Violent and Unforgettable take on Jekyll/Hyde
curious_chaos19 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
What a movie! Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne is a strange and intense experience, that still holds shock value and artistic quality today, 30+ years later. This is how Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde was intended to be. The story is a bit different than the novel, in that Borowczyk added Fanny Osbourne, writer Robert Louis Stevenson's real life wife, into the movie. However, it feels completely natural, and the way things are presented to us are quite original, unique, and at times, horrifying. The film itself is on the extreme side of things; it is not for the conservative. Violence, sex, nudity, sexual violence, and aberrant behavior abound.

We all know the story of Jekyll and Hyde, so I won't go into it, but where this marvelous adaptation really excels is in its atmosphere and strong references to man's evil within himself. Jekyll seems a decent man, but as Hyde is a more dominant persona, unaware and uncaring of any societal rules and regulations, he makes wild and corrupt choices without feeling anything but the deliciously wicked sense of pure animalistic freedom. That very feeling of chaos consumes Jekyll until there is no way for him to turn back. Miss Fanny Osbourne loves her fiancé Jekyll so much, that she is willing to give up being a law abiding, good citizen to join Hyde in a life of anarchy and destruction, a much freer and enjoyable existence. The things people do for love...

The cinematography is outstanding, really and truly. It has a very soft, gauzy haze to it, almost like its misty or smoky. The house it was filmed in is very striking, and feels like a maze almost, with its closed rooms, tall staircases, and winding passages that seem to lead everywhere and no where. The music is jarring and startling, but appropriately. Acting is good all around. The real star of this picture, though, is the atmosphere. It's other-worldly!

Borowczyk was known for his highly sexual and bizarre films, and this surely ranks as one of his most developed, fully realized movies. The symbolism of man's dark half inside everyone, waiting to come out at the right time, with the right person, is there and true about all of us.

I recommend this film highly if you can handle extreme content.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
weird sex horror movie
marquee-329 September 1999
A strange and dream-like interpretation of the Jekyll and Hyde story that brings out the themes of sexual fantasy and violence. It's several years since I saw it, but there are still scenes that stick in the mind, like memories of a disturbing nightmare.
4 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A bloody "ocean of feeling and pleasure"
jaibo12 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Wild and raving film, in which the great Polish director Walerian Borowczyk takes the Jekyll and Hyde story and transforms it into a phantasmagorical trip into the stranger dimensions of our animal lusts.

The film begins as it means to go on, with a small girl child chased through the dark Victorian London streets and then violently attacked by an unidentified gentleman. The action then goes inside the house of radical scientist Henry Jekyll, where visitors are arriving to sign a condolence book (Jekyll's pater has died) and celebrate the engagement of Henry to Fanny. Fanny's mother has brought them a beautiful Vermeer painting as a present, and the two are obviously very into each other, so promises well. But the evildoer who killed the child is found in the house, and of course it's Henry's lunatic beast of an alter-ego, Edward Hyde.

Hyde rampages through the house, raping men and women to death with his enormous spiked dick. A puritanical army general tries to bring order to the chaos but ends up killing innocent bystanders before being tied up to witness his own daughter acquiesce willingly to the blandishments of Hyde. The general whips his daughter after in fury. Things go from bad to worse, from mad to madder as Fanny discovers Jekyll's secret and, rather than rejecting him for his sexual violence, bathes in the same transforming bath as he and throws herself into the carnal carnage.

The film rampages along at a violent pace, as Borowczyk throws all caution to the wind to show us a repressed world in the grip of a rising demon, "an individual with no morality." The characters sometimes get together for philosophical debate - carried out at a passionate fever pitch - as Jekyll challenges his rival Dr Lanyon's dry materialism. When in the mouth of Hyde, the argument for "transcendentalism" becomes full of boasting that he can be both respectable and know infinite, unbounded freedom combined with accusations to the rational: "you commit even great atrocities in your dreams." The attempt to divide the world and human nature into civilised and bestial has resulted in Jekyll's utterly riven nature, as he emphasises that "both of my faces are me!" The film's biggest innovation is Fanny's throwing herself enthusiastically into the wicked ways of Hyde. Borowczyk's feminism is, as usual, complete and radical - patriarchy is a prison for women and they must commit any crime possible to escape. At the end, with both Henry and Fanny transformed into monsters of blood lust, they have at least finally achieved an equality which the civilised world denied them, as we leave them "wallowing in an ocean of feeling and pleasure." Borowczyk's take on the tale is amoral to the core, and Hyde's salaciously described and occasionally glimpsed weapon is used to puncture in the most visceral way society's veneer of respectable morality. Hyde is never condemned, and the "moral" characters are mocked and satirised mercilessly; only a brief glimpse of a black servant girl mourning over the death of the Indian butler gives us a pause to question the rampage of Hyde.

With it's enveloping dark shadows, maniacal sexual beasts, stabbing pizzle and constant murmuring & throbbing electronic score, the film is finally not rational statement at all about human sexuality and civilisation; it is rather something far more terrifying, totalizing, tempting and challenging - an embodiment of a human being's wildest fantasies, a letting loose of all reigns, an admittance of the deepest and darkest of desires, when a man might look at his lover and say "my dream is to see your dead body" and find that this dream actually turns the lover on.

Udo Kier has wonderful moments as the shook-up Jekyll; Marina Pierro has never been more ravishing and striking; and Patrick Magee is at the zenith of his madness, and gets put through worse atrocities by Hyde than even Alex in A Clockwork Orange could provide. In Dr Jekyll et les Femmes, Borowczyk reaches his apotheosis with this film, and no one in cinema have ever gone further from a moralistic stance.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
bizarre, interesting, great movie
totaldracula5 July 2002
Warning: Spoilers
I cant believe that this director made this movie with only intention of retelling this fable wrote by stevenson..., i think borowcyk is always scoffing at society, military, Church, patriarchal family..., he uses the already known plot for his purposes..., yes..., he is an artist..., watch how is portrayed the General, watch how he is always giving orders, using a gun and watch how he beats his daughter when she tells him "i love him, i love him..." i.e.: she loves Mr Hyde... Watch too the scene in which Hyde kills his mother or Jekyll´s wife hers..., ay the end... ,Hyde and Jekyll´s wife makes love in a cab..., then you understand: love, or sex, cause in this movie is rhe same thing, is relly good and joyfull whithout the limitations imposed by society.

Very good soundtrack, that reminds me a lot of Rick Wakeman´s works and interesting using of editing.
3 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed