Dr. Georges Bonner
Anton Diffring
Dr. Georges Bonner

“HIS HIDEOUS OBSESSION LED HIM TO COMMIT GHASTLY CRIMES OF PASSION AND VIOLENCE.”
Dr. Bonner plans to live forever through periodic gland transplants from younger, healthier human victims. Bonner looks about 40; he's really 104 years old. But people are starting to get suspicious, and he may not make 200.
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Dr. Georges Bonner
Anton Diffring
Dr. Georges Bonner
Janine Dubois
Hazel Court
Janine Dubois
Dr. Pierre Gerrard
Christopher Lee
Dr. Pierre Gerrard
Prof. Ludwig Weiss
Arnold Marlé
Prof. Ludwig Weiss
Margo Phillipe
Delphi Lawrence
Margo Phillipe
Insp. LeGris
Francis de Wolff
Insp. LeGris
Street Girl
Gerda Larsen
Street Girl
Little Man
Middleton Woods
Little Man
Morgue Attendant
Michael Ripper
Morgue Attendant
Tavern Customer
Denis Shaw
Tavern Customer
Woman at Private View
Marie Burke
Woman at Private View
Man at Private View
Charles Lloyd Pack
Man at Private View
***Tepid mix of Jack the Ripper and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but still enjoyable*** In 1890, a sculptor in Paris (Anton Diffring) is suspected of something sinister when it’s discovered that he shows up in different city every ten years with missing persons linked to each transition. Hazel Court plays his romantic interest while Christopher Lee rounds out the potential love triangle. "The Man Who Could Cheat Death” (1959) is an obscure Hammer film that should be appreciated by fans of these particular gothic horrors. As my title blurb points out, it meshes elements of Jack the Ripper and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde with the typical style/sets/locations of Hammer horror. If you favor similar flicks like “The Gorgon” (1964), “Frankenstein Created Woman” (1967) and “Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed” (1969), you’ll probably like this one. Yet it’s the least of these due to unnecessarily puzzling elements concerning the sculptor’s sinister doings. Nevertheless, Diffring is effective in the titular role and it’s nice to see Lee in his younger days playing a noble character, plus redhead Hazel Court is ravishing; and blonde Delphi Lawrence ain’t no slouch. The Paris setting is another distinguishing factor. The role of the sculptor was originally offered to Peter Cushing, but he turned it down. The European release featured a tame scene in which Ms. Court briefly appears topless. The movie runs 1 hour, 23 minutes, and was shot at Bray Studios in Berkshire, England. GRADE: C+
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