The Seventh Victim (1943)

Media / 1/12/2009 6:36:09 PM

Jill Cooper writer and reviewer for Killer-works is the publisher of the article Seventh Victim (UK).

Welcome to the brand spanking New Year of 2009 here at Killer-works everyone.  We're going to ease you into this winter season with a vintage noir thriller, to curl up with on these noir nights.  Take it away, esteemed guest writer, Michael Penkas...

The Seventh VictimAfter watching one of his films, a friend of Val Lewton asked the director, "What is this film trying to say?" Lewton's alleged response was simply, "Death is good." A hard sell to audiences even today; but Val Lewton produced nine horror films unlike anything audiences had ever seen back in the early 1940s. RKO Studios was looking to produce a series of horror movies to cash in on the trend that had made Universal Studios so much money in the 1930s. Lewton was hired to produce these films; but saddled with strict budgetary requirements and a string of titles chosen by the studio (ranging from the corny The Cat People to the unintentionally hilarious I Walked With a Zombie ... both recommended, by the way). Val Lewton chose to use these restrictions to his advantage, using shadow and ambiguous plotlines to suggest horrors that he could never afford to actually show.

In The Seventh Victim, Mary (Kim Hunter) is a young woman who goes to New York in search of her missing sister, Jacqueline (Jean Brooks). What she uncovers is a cult of devil worshipers. At one point, it is revealed that, in their past, the cult has murdered six people in order to protect their secrets and Jacqueline may well become the seventh.

The Seventh Victim is a film that deals with contradictions. The devil worshipers, although portrayed as evil, are also pacifists (acknowledging that violence can turn on itself and accidentally accomplish good). It turns out that Jacqueline is both suicidal and fleeing for her life. By the end of the film, it could be argued that everyone gets exactly what they want; but none of them are happy.

Val Lewton's low-budget scare tactics are still effective today and still used (with varying success) in both low- and big-budget films. The use of shadows, both real and thematic, places The Seventh Victim in the film noir category of that time.  The sophisticated devil worshipers in Greenwich Village bear more than a passing resemblance to the Satanists who graced the screen some thirty years later in Rosemary's Baby. It's a moody piece that unsettles without any overt violence and well worth checking out.

Michael Penkas

Jill's p.s.  Get your copy of "The Val Lewton Horror collection with Martin Scorsese Presents Val Lewton Documentary" in our Killer-store

p.p.s.  Looking to win a FREE HORROR DVD?  Check out this  contest with our pal Miguel at AAAAAH!! Indie Horror Hits.

p.p.p.s. If you're in Chicago next weekend (January 17th) check out B-Movie Madness for some Extreme Horror at the Portage Theatre.  Tag line: B-Movies, Booze, and Babes. You might see us there!

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