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Ancient Egypt in the Popular Imagination: Building a Fantasy in Film, Literature, Music and Art PDF

255 Pages·2012·20.341 MB·English
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Ancient Egypt in the Popular Imagination ALSO BY DAVID HUCKVALE AND FROM MCFARLAND Visconti and the German Dream: Romanticism, Wagner and the Nazi Castastrophe in Film (2012) Touchstones of Gothic Horror: A Film Genealogy of Eleven Motifs and Images(2010) Hammer Film Scores and the Musical Avant-Garde (2008) James Bernard, Composer to Count Dracula: A Critical Biography(2006; paperback 2012) Ancient Egypt in the Popular Imagination Building a Fantasy in Film, Literature, Music and Art D H AVID UCKVALE McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Jefferson, North Carolina, and London LIBRARYOFCONGRESSCATALOGUING-IN-PUBLICATIONDATA Huckvale, David. Ancient Egypt in the popular imagination : building a fantasy in film, literature, music and art / David Huckvale. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7864-6577-4 softcover : acid free paper 1. Egypt—In motion pictures. 2. Egypt—In mass media. I. Title. PN1995.9.E32H84 2012 700'.45832—dc23 2012009362 BRITISHLIBRARYCATALOGUINGDATAAREAVAILABLE © 2012 David Huckvale. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, i ncluding photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without p ermission in writing from the p ublisher. On the cover: Boris Karloff in The Mummy, ¡932 (Universal Pictures/Photofest); background © 20¡2 Shutterstock Manufactured in the United States of America McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640 www.mcfarlandpub.com To Anthony Sellors Acknowledgments All the photographs are by the author unless otherwise stated. I would like to thank Marcus Hearn for providing many of the Hammer film stills, Dave Hawley for allowing me to use his photographs of Egypt, Simon Harvey Williams for his photograph of the Egyptian House in Penzance, Dez Skinn for the illustrations from House of Hammer magazine (courtesy of House of Hammer © Quality Communications 2011, http:// dezs kinn.com/w arner-w illiams/), and the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali in Rome for granting permission to reproduce the etching by Piranesi. My thanks in general are also extended once again to Gail-Nina Anderson for invaluable help and encouragement. vi Table of Contents Acknowledgments vi Introduction 1 ONE • Films 7 TWO • Egyptology 59 THREE • Myth and Magic 86 FOUR • Art 107 FIVE • Fiction and Fantasy, Part 1 132 SIX • Fiction and Fantasy, Part 2 159 SEVEN • Music 188 Conclusion 218 Filmography 223 Chapter Notes 225 Bibliography 235 Index 239 vii This page intentionally left blank Introduction Imagine that you are walking through a wood, surrounded by tall trees, lush bracken, ferns and birdsong. It’s a familiar scene: the babbling stream that runs from the lake on the grounds of a large house in the adjoining park. We might allow ourselves to think of the house as slightly sinister, perhaps. Hasn’t it just been occupied by a foreign gentlemen who wears a fez? You recall something to that effect. The meandering path that threads its way through the overhanging branches leads you to the dark waters of a somber little pond sur- rounded by bullrushes. A breeze ripples its silent waters as you pause to watch a couple of startled Mallard ducks fly off. Bubbles rise to the surface as though something is stirring in the depths. With a shudder, you don’t wait to find out what has caused them. You move swiftly on. Shafts of light pierce the canopy of leaves overhead, the fresh smell of recent rain rises from the loam at your feet. But into this sylvan scene, you now perceive a human shape in the distance—a stum- bling silhouette emerging from behind a screen of silver birches—an alien presence, band- aged from head to foot, its eyes glaring with demonic malevolence. Perhaps you are one of those people who always laugh at the actors who play such terrors from the tomb in the movies, but you are not laughing now. You are alone in an otherwise tranquil forest with a lumbering, unstoppable horror advancing upon you, dripping water and slime from the dark pond you have just passed. Part of you—the rational part—might think yourself the victim of a grotesque practical joke, but as the figure advances, thrashing the undergrowth from its path with a bandaged hand, your irrational instinct doesn’t allow you to wait and see. Frightening though an encounter with a living mummy in an Egyptian tomb would be, it is even more unnerving in this context—a familiar scene, far from the origin of this monster from the ancient, alien past. The reason for starting our journey in this manner is to stress that mummy movies and the stories that inspired them are motivated by a fear of what we might term “the other.” Every mummy movie ever made pits East against West. Either a mummy is reanimated in England or America, or an Englishman or American encounters an ancient evil in Egypt. Frequently, both these things happen. With the exception of The Night of Counting the Years (a.k.a. The Mummy, dir. Shadi Abdel-Salam, 1969), which is hardly a mummy movie in the accepted sense of the term, a mummy film with a cast consisting entirely of Egyptians has yet to be made. This suggests that mummy movies are a fundamentally racist form of entertainment. According to this view, such films express a fear of religious conflict, cultural infiltration and even invasion. They also express the imperialist desire to dominate and 1

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