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The Keep

The Keep

  • Status: Released
  • 16-12-1983
  • Runtime: 96 min
  • Score: 5.607
  • Vote count: 276

Set during World War II, a German army garrison is sent to guard a mountain pass in a village in Romania's Carpathian mountains and sets up barracks in an ancient stone fortress. Two of the soldiers unwittingly release a mysterious entity that kills or corrupts those within its influence, drawing the attention of a Gestapo commander, a Jewish scholar, and a mysterious traveller.

Scott Glenn

Glaeken Trismegestus

Alberta Watson

Eva Cuza

Jürgen Prochnow

Captain Klaus Woermann

Robert Prosky

Father Mihail Fonescu

Gabriel Byrne

Major Kaempffer

Ian McKellen

Dr. Theodore Cuza

William Morgan Sheppard

Alexandru

Royston Tickner

Tomescu

Michael Carter

Radu Molasar

John Vine

Lutz

Wolf Kahler

S.S. Adjutant

Jona Jones

Otto

Rosalie Crutchley

Josefa

Frederick Warder

Border Guard 1

Bruce Payne

Border Guard 2

David Cardy

Alexandru's Son

John Eastham

Alexandru's Second Son

Philip Bloomfield

Josefa's Son

Yashaw Adem

Carlos

Stephen Whittaker

S.S. Kommando

Ian Ruskin

S.S. Kommando

Stephen Jenn

S.S. Kommando

Benedick Blythe

S.S. Kommando

Robin Langford

S.S. Kommando

Renny Krupinski

Wehrmacht Soldier

Peter Guinness

Wehrmacht Soldier

Sean Baker

Wehrmacht Soldier

Timothy Block

Wehrmacht Soldier

Owain Griffiths

Wehrmacht Soldier (uncredited)

Ralph G. Morse

Wehrmacht Soldier (uncredited)

Doug Robinson

Guard (uncredited)

Peter Ross-Murray

Nazi Soldier (uncredited)

Wuchak

**_Arty fantasy/horror taking place at a citadel in Romania during WW2_** In late 1941, a motorized German infantry unit holds a pass in the Carpathian Mountains by occupying a strange fortress that’s “built backwards,” as the captain observes (Jürgen Prochnow). When soldiers start mysteriously dying, it draws a ruthless Nazi commander into the fray (Gabriel Byrne), as well as a Hebrew professor and his daughter (Ian McKellen & Alberta Watson). A strange nomad is also attracted to the proceedings (Scott Glenn). Based on the 1981 book of the same name, "The Keep" (1983) is a supernatural thriller set in WW2, one of director Michael Mann’s early flicks before his great success with films like “The Last of the Mohicans” (1992). While this was a flop at the box office, it has since developed a cult following. It was no cheapo movie, costing a whopping $11 million at the time and hence has quality production values, especially for an early 80’s horror flick. It’s comparable to a late-era Hammer movie, just made on a huge budget and without Cushing or Lee. There are elements of “Altered States” (1980), “The Formula” (1980), “The Seventh Sign” (1988) and “Howling V: The Rebirth” (1989) so, if you like those films, check it out (and, yes, I realize those last two came out 5-6 years later). The production was troubled with Mann’s original edit being 3.5 hours, which is well over TWICE as long as the version released to theaters (!). This has caused critics to denounce “The Keep” as a jaggedly-edited outlandish mess that attempts to be an art film, a horror flick and a WW2 movie without really succeeding at any. The film’s peculiarity is augmented by a dream-like score by Tangerine Dream. Nevertheless, there’s enough good here to entertain open-minded viewers. While there are obvious cut parts, the story isn’t hard to fill-in the blanks. There is a creature and it’s easily the most intriguing part (in later scenes it sorta rips-off of Jack Kirby’s Darkseid). Yet I found the characters played by Prochnow, Byrne and McKellen interesting too. Scott Glenn’s role would’ve been better if he was fleshed out more. He was the protagonist of the book, but his scenes were cut. What we are left with is an enigmatic traveler with glowing eyeballs and a magic stick who has no qualms about jumping into bed with a woman he barely knows (in defense of this sequence, he instinctively KNOWS her and vice versa to a degree). The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes, and was shot in Blaenau Ffestiniog & Llanberis in northwestern Wales, as well as England at Shepperton Studios, just west of London, and Kent (the concentration camp); with Spain standing in for Greece in one scene. GRADE: B-