EURO-FANTASTICO
DOUBLE FEATURE: THE BLACK COBRA (1963)/NO
SURVIVORS PLEASE (1964)VCI’s new “Euro Fantastico” collection is just that, a rediscovery of two seldom-scene West German thrillers made in the early 1960s. While this Euro cult double feature isn’t of the overly raunchy, gory or exploitive kind, it’s sure to satisfy those filmgoers with a soft spot for the black & white “Krimi”, “Edgar Wallace” and “Dr. Mabuse” pictures of the same era, which in some cases utilized some of the same familiar performers. My recommendation to you if you decide to pick up this disc: watch these features late at night to recapture the far off days when unconventional imports were given their fair share of air time, at least by the local TV affiliates.
THE
BLACK COBRA (Die schwarze Kobra) tells of a young truck driver named Peter Karner
(Adrian Hoven) who is unknowingly transporting a cargo of illegal narcotics.
His companion, who is in the know, is shot dead by thugs guised as police officers,
and after Peter is detained and given a beating by their gang, he manages to
make his escape. With the demolished truck and the dead companion discovered
by the authentic authorities, Peter is now wanted for murder. He takes refuge
at the roadhouse operated by his gorgeous girlfriend (Alexa Bergmann, JOURNEY
TO THE SEVENTH PLANET, HOUSE OF 1,000 DOLLS) as well as an oversized handyman/mechanic
played by Ady Berber. Peter's refugee status is confirmed on all angles by the
police trailing him, as well as being tracked down by the crime lords, drug
dealers and other sleazy interested parties, many who will be picked off along
the way.
THE
BLACK COBRA (a direct translation of the German title, a reference to a slithery
creature who is let loose and does battle with a mongoose later in the film)
has the look and feel of most of the early 1960s Krimi mysteries, with the only
real mystery here being the identity of the baddie behind all the contraband
and murder (known as "Mr. Green"). On the onset, the film appears
to have taken some inspiration from the Hollywood darling THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT,
but the plot turns out to be pretty standard stuff involving pin-striped suited
gangsters, erratic sleazeballs, bumbling detectives, busty cocktail waitresses,
etc. It’s basically made much more fun by a top notch Euro cult cast headed
by Adrian Hoven, as the film appears to have been a vehicle for him at the time
of release.
Hoven
had been acting in German movies since the late 1940s, becoming more of a leading
man in the 1950s and 1960s, sometimes appearing in genre pictures like 1963’s
CAVE OF THE LIVING DEAD. In the late 1960s, he collaborated with Jess Franco
on several sex/horror films, but would go down in infamy by producing MARK OF
THE DEVIL and its even grosser sequel (which he directed). Ady Berber plays
a good guy for a change, at one point wrestling a hairy cranium-scarred brute
who makes even him look like a pretty boy. Once hyped (at least in small circles)
as a sort of German Tor Johnson, Berber (a former wrestler) is best known for
his unforgettably fiendish performance as the bald-headed blind stalker in DEAD
EYES OF LONDON. Receiving special “and” billing in the cast credits,
Klaus Kinski (without the accommodation of his real speaking voice, as usual)
plays an obnoxious, snitching junkie and naturally steals every scene he’s
in. The film also features Herbert Fux (MARK OF THE DEVIL), Wolfgang Preiss
(who played the titular character in most of the 1960s Mabuse films) and Günter
Meisner who you’ll all recognize as Slugworth from WILLIE WONKA AND THE
CHOCOLATE FACTORY (1971).
In
NO SURVIVORS PLEASE (Der Chef wünscht keine Zeugen), a pilot is asked by
a mysterious voice to crash his plane, requesting that there be “no survivors
please.” That very plane holds American ambassador John Farnsworth (Robert
Cunningham), who is all about world peace. The plane does crash, and Farnsworth
miraculously survives, only he is not himself but rather the shell for an alien
being. More important people of different nations die in violent circumstances,
and they're all taken over at the moment of their death by these aliens –
their ultimate mission being to destroy the Earth by causing an atomic way.
A savvy young journalist named Howard Moore (Uwe Friedrichsen, GORILLA GANG)
becomes increasingly suspicious about how Farnsworth and others like him manage
to survive, and at the same time he begins a torrid love affair with Farnsworth’s
attractive assistant (Maria Perschy, HUNCHBACK OF THE MORGUE) while attempting
to find some answers.
Starting
off with cryptic “Twilight Zone” like narration over a black sky
of stars, NO SURVIVORS PLEASE is an interesting mix of science fiction and drama,
though if you missed the first few minutes, you’d fancy it more the latter.
Without encountering the typical alien invasion clichés, the film mounts
a convincing chaotic tension and cold war paranoia in the tradition of INVASION
OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, and in essence is the superior of the two features on
this set. It’s quite a strange film with characters being bumped off in
various ways and then reappearing in the next scene via their alien takeover,
with the love story between and Perschy and Friedrichsen taking a front seat,
and there's a sort of compassion on display in several of these other-world
invaders, despite their intentions. There's a bit of documentary style camerawork
and lots of stock footage on hand, and despite some scenes dragging on a bit
long, it’s quite a unique little film as a whole. A cult figure more known
for her numerous appearances in 1970s Spanish genre films, Austrian born Maria
Perschy has never looked more glamorous in face and figure, and even though
she’s speaking her lines in English (as does most of the cast), she’s
unfortunately dubbed by another actress.
VCI
presents both black and white films in serviceable 4x3 full frame transfers,
likely transferred from their American TV broadcast masters. Both films appear
to be compromised from their original 1.66:1 aspect ratios, with BLACK COBRA
looking the more cropped of the two in terms of its framing. BLACK COBRA looks
the better of the two, with NO SURVIVORS suffering from more blemishes in its
print source, but then again, the movie does utilize a lot of stock footage
from variable sources. Both contain the English dub tracks which have their
intermittent limitations, but no severe problems. (George
R. Reis)