DVD: Blacula - The Complete Collection | reviews, news & interviews
DVD: Blacula - The Complete Collection
DVD: Blacula - The Complete Collection
Surprisingly straight Blaxploitation with fangs
![](https://theartsdesk.com/sites/default/files/styles/mast_image_landscape/public/mastimages/Blacula.jpg?itok=YFDcIzBW)
Blaxploitation, like Krautrock, is an early Seventies term that sounds faintly uneasy now. Begun by Hollywood studio hits such as Shaft, the craze for films with mostly black casts and often black creators made expressly for black audiences was basically positive, though.
Neither Blacula nor its stronger sequel, Scream Blacula Scream, also included on this DVD-Blu-ray collection, are as camp as you might think, though. Classical theatre actor William Marshall plays the prince with dignity and coiled physical power, finding both tragedy and madness in his curse. Pam Grier’s presence in the sequel as an uncharacteristically timid voodoo priestess provides a scene of real force, as she strains to lift Blacula’s curse, playing off a groaning Marshall with strong sexual undercurrents, as nearby his undead army battle the LAPD.
Blacula’s knack for chucking members of one of the USA’s most black-despised police forces through windows was, like several good one-liners, aimed straight at ghetto cinema audiences. Both films lack the energy and enjoyable salaciousness of other Grier-starring productions by the exploitation specialists behind them all, AIP. Blacula especially is pretty straight, and flatly filmed. The films only really needed their titles to turn a profit, but are better than that because of Marshall, playing in a B-movie with fangs and a cloak as if it’s Othello.
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