Amanda Donohoe Movie:

The Lair of the White Worm



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Amanda Donohoe Movie:
The Lair of the White Worm



Movie
The Lair of the White Worm
The Lair of the White Worm
List Price: $14.98Label: Lions Gate

Salesrank: 20918

Released: August 19, 2003
Our Price: $6.99
Used Price: $4.76
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Color
  • DVD
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Amanda Donohoe
  • Hugh Grant
  • Catherine Oxenberg
  • Peter Capaldi
  • Sammi Davis
  • Editorial Review:
    No Description Available.
    Genre: Horror
    Rating: R
    Release Date: 19-AUG-2003
    Media Type: DVD

    Description of The Lair of the White Worm:
    Wittily updated from one of Dracula author Bram Stoker's lesser-known horror novels, The Lair of the White Worm is a camp classic that only Ken Russell could have delivered. It's got all the perversity one expects from the bombastic director of Tommy and Altered States: sensible plotting, intelligent dialogue laced with double entendre, graphic imagery with Boschian intensity, and a mischievous disregard for good taste and decorum. In other words, it's heretically hilarious, especially when skeptical Lord D'Ampton (fresh-faced Hugh Grant, in one of his earliest films) begins to suspect that seductive neighbor Sylvia (Amanda Donohoe, game for anything) is connected to the local legend of a monstrous serpent that feeds on sacrificial virgins. Evidence mounts with the help of a local archaeologist (Peter Capaldi) and two endangered sisters (Catherine Oxenberg, Sammi Davis), and Russell infuses Stoker's grisly plot with his inimitable brand of blasphemy, including a gouged eyeball, a venom-splattered crucifix, Roman soldiers raping nuns (in a delirious hallucination sequence), and some of the funniest one-liners since Young Frankenstein. Prudes beware; everyone else…enjoy! --Jeff Shannon

    The Lair of the White Worm Reviews:
    Movie review 5 Star Review
    2009-03-31 - I have thought for a long time it was a very good movie but owning it and having a copy I can watch whenever I want is a whole lot better. The copy is very good and plays well.

    What if Monty Python made a vampire movie ? 4 Star Review
    2008-02-17 - What if Monty Python made a vampire movie ?

    That would make a good tag line to describe this film.

    And while our baddie is not a vampire, but rather a
    snake goddess, a snake goddess with really big fangs,
    you get the idea.

    Hugh Grant, early in his career plays a hair-brained
    dare-do-all. Catherine Oxenberg is his dumb,
    blond bombshell girlfriend (apologies to Ms.
    Oxenberg). And some awesome british character
    actors fill out the entourage.

    And how does one go about fighting a snake goddess ?
    Why with Hindu snake charmer music blasting from the
    castle walls over loud speakers and an angry little
    snake-hating mongoose of course!

    This is not your typical Horror movie with axe and
    chainsaw weilding psychopaths. But rather evil in the
    disguise of shiney latex bodysuits, 6-inch stilettos
    and black lace garter belts.

    Filmed on location in merry old England amidst dreary
    dairy farms and haunted castles our director
    expertly assembles his cast of good guys and a really
    bad, bad girl, played with a mesmerizing performance
    by Amanda Donahoe. Remember her as Jim
    Carrey's boss in Liar Liar ?

    And lets not forget the eerie and sexy soundtrack
    laced with synthisers and sexy saxaphone. And oh yes, the
    occasional bagpipes! And a rousing song about the
    dread Dampton worm by the local village rock band is very
    entertaining.

    Miss Donahoe steals the show from Mr. Grant and Ms.
    Oxenberg. In one scene she literally slithers across
    the stage thanks to some tricky camera work by
    director Ken Russell.

    And believe me Mr. Russell is full of tricks in this
    Infernal Parade of Mischievous Mayhem. Half the
    time instead of trying to scare you to death, the
    director is out to make you laugh to death, and then gasp to
    death at all the crazy chaos he delivers with dry
    british humor making this a one of a kind romp.

    Not for the faint of heart, the easily offended, the
    traditional teen movie slasher fan or probably anyone
    else for that matter !!!

    You will either hate this film or be really, really
    embarressed to tell your friends how much you love
    this Masterpiece of Camp.Lair of the White Worm

    Very Weird Story from Ken Russell 3 Star Review
    2008-02-10 - Words cannot describe my feelings when I first saw it about ten years ago. I have seen it again and I still don't know how I should write about it, but one thing is clear; the film is never boring. Ken Russell's "The Lair of the White Worm" is certainly "weird" and "campy," but those words are not strong enough to express my impression after watching this film, which is fascinating in more than one way.

    The story opens with a curious skull found by archaeologist Angus (Peter Capaldi) in the ruins of a convent. It is only the beginning of a series of weird occurrences including the return of seductive, evil, venom-spitting Lady Sylvia Marsh (intentionally and delightfully over-the-top Amanda Donohoe), who plans to do something very bad and bizarre for a strange creature that lives deep in the cave.

    Oh, and don't forget the legend of D'Ampton Worm (told in a catchy song) and Lord James D'Ampton (young Hugh Grant) who just inherited the estate, funny dialogue delivered in a deliberately theatrical fashion and weird hallucinations about Jesus Christ, a big white snake, nuns and Roman soldiers assaulting them. Roger Ebert in his review (two stars out of four) compared this film with Roger Corman's AIP films, but whatever people say about his B-movies, Corman was never called blasphemous. After all "White Worm" is directed by the person who did "Tommy," "Altered States," "Crimes of Passion," "Salome's Last Dance" and "Lady Chatterley."

    Besides these extraordinary visions that you must see for yourself, Ken Russell should be praised for one thing, and that is, 95 per cent of the film's updated Bram Stoker story does NOT happen the original novel, usually regarded as the least successful one from the creator of Dracula. And try to find Gina McKee who is to co-star with Hugh Grant in "Notting Hill" 10 years later.

    Ken Russell satisfies a taste for the bizarre... 4 Star Review
    2007-12-08 - Leave it to director Ken Russell to find an obscure Bram Stoker novel and take its most exploitive elements and turn it into a bloodfest of snakes, vampires, virgin sacrifices, phallic symbols, Christian symbolism and more. He throws in some comic book slashings along with some sly humor to create a tacky Gothic horror called THE LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM. It kept me awake until the last shot where the dimwit hero HUGH GRANT is about to find out he's made another mistake before the screen fades to black. ("How about stopping for a bite?"). This must have been the film that first made Grant known to American audiences.

    He plays an aristocrat who is attracted to a new neighbor whom he later learns is a woman (AMANDA DONOHOE) who is keeper of a giant worm waiting to devour people whole if she decides to feed victims to it. She's played with delicious relish by Donohoe, who picks up a scout trudging along a deserted country road and must quickly dispose of him in a bath when Grant knocks on her door.

    It's weird stuff from start to finish, but try to look away! It's typical Ken Russell overkill--or should I say overbite--since much of the action involves vampirism and some friendly suburbanites who suddenly grow fangs. Handsomely photographed in color with attractive settings indoor and out, it provides a steady mix of laughter and fright while managing to be entertaining despite the overly weird material.

    CATHERINE OXENBERG plays the virginal heroine who falls under the spell of the demonic woman, at her best when forced to assume a vacant expression. PETER CAPALDI is excellent as Hugh's friend who comes to her aid before the white worm can do its work and claim another victim.

    Silly stuff, but if you like the work of Ken Russell, you should find it extremely interesting to watch.




    Campy Cult Movie with the usual cast of creeps and evildoers 5 Star Review
    2007-11-30 - A cult movie that will thrill Hugh Grant Fans and anyone who likes Ken Russell movies. A lot of the regular cast and crew. An archaeologist digs up a massive skull of an ancient snake or white worm. A strange woman moves into the neighbourhood and the local lord's girlfriend disappears as does a boy scout. This movie has snakes, snake charmers, naked priestesses, innocent young women hostages who manage to keep their underwear clean after days in captivity, brave men, vampires, the lot.

    You're gonna love it.










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