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Charles Beaumont and Richard Matheson strip back the more extravagant scope of Fritz Leibers book and surprisingly to the films advantage. In the book, all academic wives are engaged in witchcraft, whereas the film strips makes it just two of them; an incarnated stone dragon becomes the animated stone eagle of the title (a not very convincing special effect, the one area the film falls down); and they trim many of the subplots involving possession and people ending up in other bodies. The resulting film has been pared down to the essential core of Fritz Leibers droll comedy of academic rivalry and magic. Matheson, Beaumont and director Sidney Hayers then proceed to further strip things away to a level that was not in the Fritz Leiber story and tell Night of the Eagle as a psychological horror story not unakin to the work of producer Val Lewton in the 1940s. (Lewton produced works like Cat People (1942), I Walked with a Zombie (1943) and The Seventh Victim (1943) wherein the element of horror always inhabited a place of psychological ambiguity). Director Sidney Hayers had first emerged on the Anglo-horror scene with the enjoyably Sadean Circus of Horrors (1960) and would go onto become a regular tv director on series like The Avengers, Magnum P.I., The Professionals and Baywatch, among many others. (See below for Sidney Hayers other genre work). Night of the Eagle is is Sidney Hayers finest moment he never again made a work with such effectiveness as this. His sharp contrasts of fore and background exude a tightly wound tension. There is lucid eeriness as the film plays out and the world of superstitions starts manifesting around Peter Wyngarde with scary but ambiguous effect. Hayers memorably restages the sequence from Vampyr (1932) with a person looking up out of a coffin as they are buried. The film culminates in the clever symbolic shot where Peter Wyngarde brushes against the blackboard where he had earlier boldly written his claim I do not believe and erases the not. Peter Wyngarde, later the title character in the tv series Jason King (1971-2), gives a cool, rationalising performance, although the neurotically charged level that the wife Janet Blair starts on fails to go anywhere. Margaret Johnston creates a disturbed intense portrayal full of twitchy, bird-like mannerisms. Sidney Hayers also directed the enjoyable Circus of Horrors (1960) about a psychopathic beauty-obsessed plastic surgeon hiding at a circus and two minor psycho-thrillers Assault (1970) and Revenge (1971). He is also credited as director on the third cinematically released Battlestar Galactica movie Conquest of the Earth (1981), although this was merely recut from episodes from the Galactica 1980 tv series. The Fritz Leiber novel was later filmed as the cheap Witches Brew (1979), which plays the story for comedy. The only other Fritz Leiber work to have been adapted to the screen is the vampire film The Girl with the Hungry Eyes (1993).
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