The Blood on Satan’s Claw: unearthing the locations for the witchy … – British Film Institute

Posted: November 6, 2023 at 6:26 pm

Come now, rise now, from the forest, from the furrows, from the fields, andlive!

So goes one of the ritualistic chants heard in Piers Haggards terrifying horror of haunted landscapes The Blood on Satans Claw (1971). Produced for Tigon Pictures, Haggards film was one of the defining moments of countercultural British folk horror. In fact, it is one of the few films of its time actively made as a folk horror before the term really gained prominence. I was trying to make a folk horror I suppose, Haggard once told horror magazineFangoria.

The Blood on Satans Claw is a chilling and atmospheric film set in 17th-century rural England. When ploughman Ralph Gower (Barry Andrews) unearths the grotesque fragment of a devilish creature, a series of nightmarish events unfold in the nearby village. As inexplicable occurrences plague the community, the villages youth begin to indulge in increasingly sinister behaviour, led by the malevolent Angel Blake (LindaHayden).

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Superstition grips the villagers, while a visiting judge (Patrick Wymark) investigates the ungodly happenings. Unravelling a dark secret, he discovers that the local youth have formed a cult devoted to Satan, led by Angel. With demonic forces taking hold, and the demon slowly rebuilding his body, the villagers find themselves entangled in a desperate battle between good andevil.

In this startling and deeply unnerving folk tale, the landscape itself seems to gain an alarming sentience. Because of this, the films sense of place and its use of locations are essential components. Working with cinematographer Dick Bush, Haggard imbued a number of real rural locations with foreboding eeriness, some of which arguably still lingers in some of the older, lonelier spots theyused.

Here are five locations from The Blood on Satans Claw as they standtoday.

Churches of various sorts dot Haggards film appropriately for this effective tale of Christianity battling Satanism. One of the first churches we see in the film is the one used as the Sunday school where the local youth are taught by Reverend Fallowfield (Anthony Ainley). The location is St James the Less in Stubbings, on the Henley Road in Berkshire, though the undergrowth restricts recreating the shot from exactly the sameangle.

Landscape plays an important role in Haggards film. Fields are filmed in unusual ways, often from very low angles, to give the pervasive sense of the soil watching the characters. Trying to find the actual fields from the film is tricky as there are few distinguishing features, but they are situated around the area of Bix Bottom in Oxfordshire, close to some of the films more recognisablefeatures.

This spooky shot of a field seen from the edge of a wood is also likely taken further up the valley where the fields are at theirsteepest.

The range of old houses and farm buildings at the centre of the narrative are also in the Bix Bottom area. Miss Banhams manor was Pages Farm, which is now a lavish property with a great variety of modern extensions, making exact recreations of the many shotsdifficult.

The farm is private and surrounded by fences guarded by dogs that make the judges hunting hounds seem tame in comparison. This shot, however, shows the original building used throughout the film as well as the various extensions added behind it over theyears.

One easier location to spot is the road leading up to Pages Farm. Though no longer a dirt track used by carriages, the shape of the road and its surrounding field and woods isunmistakable.

The other standing church seen in the film is St Mary the Virgin in Hurley, Berkshire. We first see the church during the funeral of Mark (RobinDavies).

The funeral scene allows various views of the church as the scene is extended to show Angel Blakes subsequent accusation against Reverend Fallowfieldunfolding.

The churchs busy stone entrance can be seen when Angels father (Godfrey James) tells Squire Middleton (James Hayter) of Angels false claims against thereverend.

Before this, Haggard shows a wider view of the churchs graveyard as Fallowfield tries to speak to the squire ahead of MrBlake.

Later in the film, the church becomes the meeting point for the judge and the villagers before they set off to stop the final ritual. This shot shows Hurleys high street heading towards thechurch.

Of all of the churches seen in the film, the centre-piece location is the ruin of St James Old Church in BixBottom.

Dating back to the 12th century, the ruin has a genuinely creepy atmosphere, its unmistakable age making it a perfect haven for the cultish teenagers and their evilrituals.

As can be seen from these shots, the location has somewhat changed since the filming. In the film, the ruin blends into the local forest, with its edge being mostly woodland. These trees have since been cut down so that the ruin now stands alone in a grassy field. It was likely done to preserve the structure, as its frontage almost collapsed a few yearsback.

Eagle-eyed viewers may recognise the location from another spooky folk horror film: The Witches (1966) by Cyril Frankel. Five years before The Blood on Satans Claw, Frankels film saw some suspicious locals use the ruin for their own esoteric practices, showing just how ripe the location is as an occultsetting.

The film concludes within these ruined grounds with the judge wielding his sword against the evil demon before putting it to the flame. The greenery may have disappeared, but the isolated vista and the ever-present cawing of crows make it one of the spookiest real locations a film fan can visittoday.

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The Blood on Satan's Claw: unearthing the locations for the witchy ... - British Film Institute

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