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HorrorScience Fiction

I, Monster

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Christopher Lee stars in this Amicus production of “Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde” where the names have been changed to Dr. Marlowe and Mr. Blake. Lee as Dr. Marlowe experiments with intravenous drugs that are suppose to release inner inhibitions. So comes forth Mr. Blake (also Lee) who gets more monstrous with each transformation. Peter Cushing plays his friend and colleague, Dr. Utterson.

Release Date : 1971-11-01

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Amicus ProductionsBritish Lion Film Corporation

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Christopher Lee

Character Name : Dr. Charles Marlowe / Mr. Edward Blake

Original Name : Christopher Lee

Gender : Male

Peter Cushing

Character Name : Frederick Utterson

Original Name : Peter Cushing

Gender : Male

Mike Raven

Character Name : Enfield

Original Name : Mike Raven

Gender : Male

Richard Hurndall

Character Name : Lanyon

Original Name : Richard Hurndall

Gender : Male

George Merritt

Character Name : Poole

Original Name : George Merritt

Gender : Male

Kenneth J. Warren

Character Name : Deane

Original Name : Kenneth J. Warren

Gender : Male

Susan Jameson

Character Name : Diane

Original Name : Susan Jameson

Gender : Female

Marjie Lawrence

Character Name : Annie

Original Name : Marjie Lawrence

Gender : Female

Aimée Delamain

Character Name : Landlady

Original Name : Aimée Delamain

Gender : Female

Michael Des Barres

Character Name : Boy in alley

Original Name : Michael Des Barres

Gender : Male

Ian McCulloch

Character Name : Man at Bar (uncredited)

Original Name : Ian McCulloch

Gender : Male

Chloe Franks

Character Name : Girl in Alley (uncredited)

Original Name : Chloe Franks

Gender : Female

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Charles Marlowe is I, Monster. I, Monster is directed by Stephen Weeks and written by Milton Subotsky. An interpretation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, it stars Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Mike Raven, Richard Hurndall, George Merritt, Kenneth J. Warren, Susan Jameson and Marjie Lawrence. Music is by Carl Davis and cinematography by Moray Grant. Kept By The Power Of God! Stevenson’s age old tale gets another make-over as Dr. Charles Marlowe (Lee) invents a drug that releases his patients’ inhibitions. However, upon trying the drug himself, Marlowe finds that he turns into the monstrous Mr. Blake, who with each transformation becomes more cruel and debauched. Dull and Hyde! Amicus never quite made the mark on British Horror that they aspired to, a few films are enjoyable, certainly there’s good value to be found with some of the segments in their portmanteau releases, but so many others just come off as weak attempts to create a niche in the market. Quite often there was good intentions on the writing table, such is the case with I, Monster, which has literary intentions that are honourable. The Eastman Color photography is lovely, the period design equally so, and the use of canted angles is a good move, but unfortunately the film is just too dull and beset with problems elsewhere. First off is Cushing and Lee, two bona fide legends of British cinema and bastions of horror. Lee is miscast, never quite convincing in the Mr. Blake role, which isn’t helped by the make up work which would look more at home in Carry On Screaming. With Cushing it’s just a case of him being underused, which is unforgivable in a horror film aiming for literary smarts. Carl Davis’ musical score is awful, at times I sounds like something that belongs in a silent movie farce. Starting out as a 3-D venture, that idea was abandoned early in the production, it’s hard to believe that the gimmick would have stopped this being the dreary film that it is. 4/10

W

Wuchak

@Wuchak

2025-04-15

**_Amicus’ version of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” with Lee and Cushing_** In 1906, a psychologist in London entertains Freudian theories while experimenting with drug injections, which he eventually tries on himself with damaging results. “I, Monster” (1971) changes the two names of the protagonist/antagonist (Christopher Lee) simply to preserve the surprise of the well-known plot twist in “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” They did this because there had been so many versions of the story done in cinema by that point. The rival studio, Hammer, did a version eleven years earlier, “The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll,” and were doing another variation the same year this came out, “Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde.” Producers even tried to hide the fact that it was the Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde story in the opening credits when acknowledging Robert Louis Stevenson. I can see why it’s relatively obscure seeing as how it’s nowhere near as entertaining as “Two Faces.” It takes a lowkey approach with a talky focus on the psychology of the novella and inserts Freudian theories into Stevenson's story with the events taking place two decades after the tale was published. Also, the editing is sometimes questionable with certain things ambiguous rather than spelled out, such as the fact that Marlowe injects Diane with his experimental drug. This isn’t shown and the viewer has to connect the dots. I'm assuming the BBC frowned upon depictions of drug injections at the time. Nevertheless, this is one of Lee’s most expressive roles and it’s worth viewing just for that. Also, the psychological theories are interesting and there are entertaining bits throughout. But the idea that Marlowe’s colleagues couldn’t recognize him as Blake is laughable. I guess you have to pretend that he looks different enough than the movie actually shows. It runs 1 hours, 20 minutes, and was shot at Shepperton Studios, which is located just southwest of London. GRADE: B-