Haunted Summer
Haunted Summer is a 1988 romantic period-drama film directed by Ivan Passer. The film is a fictionalized retelling of the Shelleys' visit to Lord Byron in Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva, which led to the writing of Frankenstein.
Plot summary
In 1816, authors Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and Mary Shelley get together for some philosophical discussions, but the situation soon deteriorates into mind games, drugs, and sex. It is the summer that Lord Byron and the Shelleys, together with Byron's doctor, John William Polidori, spent in the isolated Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva. There they held a contest to produce the best horror story, so as to kill the dullness of summer. The contest led to one of the world's most famous books being given life — Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.Cast
- Philip Anglim as Lord Byron
- Eric Stoltz as Percy Shelley
- Alice Krige as Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
- Alex Winter as Dr. John William Polidori
- Laura Dern as Claire Clairmont
Development
Production
Principal photography began in May 1987 and ran until July. Passer was so keen to cast Stoltz as Percy that he delayed production by seven months. Location shooting took place in Switzerland and Italy, with Lake Como doubling as Lake Geneva, on whose shores the movie's main events happened; finally, sound-stage filming took place in Malta. Hollywood Reporter gave the film's final cost as $6 million.Reception
The film opened in Los Angeles on 16 December 1988. By the time of its release, Ken Russell's Gothic, about the same events, had already appeared, but Michael Wilmington, reviewing for The Los Angeles Times, compared Passer's more restrained film favourably:He approved of the deliberate, "anachronistic" casting of Americans and suggested parallels between the film's historical moment and the late 1960s "summer of free love".
By contrast, Haunted Summer was not released in New York until the summer of 1989, when it played briefly as half of a double bill with the same director's Cutter's Way. Caryn James wrote in The New York Times,
Like Wilmington, she contrasted the film with Gothic, but preferred Russell's film, concluding by calling Haunted Summer "supremely disappointing".
By the time of its New York premiere, the film had gone on release in Britain. Derek Malcolm in The Guardian, like James, compared it invidiously with Gothic: "hardly an ounce of humour or visual flair, despite the fact that Giuseppe Rotunno shot it". The Sunday Telegraph was equally dismissive, calling it "Ken Russell's Gothic minus the monsters". David Robinson in The Times struck a similar note, but at least praised the film's look and the performances, particularly Laura Dern's.