Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974) Poster

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7/10
Sexy and different...
planktonrules2 October 2010
Wow, was Hammer Studios going in a different direction with this film! While it is once again a horror film (the bread & butter for this film company), it's so unlike all their other films! While it's a vampire film, you see no trace of Christopher Lee or even Peter Cushing--and the style is so totally unlike their films. Instead, the film stars a very hot guy (Captain Kronos) and he always seems to have a hot lady in tow. This vampire hunter, however, is NOT to be confused for Dr. Van Helsing. Not only does he look nothing like Cushing, but how he kills the vampires and the types of vampires are all-new! These vampires are not so much blood drinkers but creatures that suck the youth out of people--and you then see them age rapidly when they fall prey to these new vampires. And, since the vampires are different, so is killing them. Many different ways are used--some of which are wacky and new--such as impaling, hanging and burning one (wow--he was tough to kill!!). And, finally, the story is just so very different.

According to IMDb, Hammer was planning on a new series of Kronos films but canceled it due to the poor reception this film received. I can't really understand it, as the film was quite good and sexy--and an invigorating change--with a wild ending!
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7/10
Failed Experiment or Ahead of its Time
bushtony22 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In the early seventies, faced with competition from more visceral and explicit censor-busting movies such as The Exorcist, The Devils, Don't Look Now, etc, Hammer were already past their sell-by date. Their home-spun and hokey low-budget potboilers were fast losing ground, shored up by the failing gimmickry of bringing Dracula into the 20th century (AD '72 and Satanic Rites) and upping the female nudity content whilst adding strong exploitative lesbian overtones to their vamp flicks (The Vampire Lovers, Lust For A Vampire).

It couldn't last, and it didn't.

Kronos can be seen as either a brave experiment or a foolhardy stab at creating a life-preserver for the studio. The original idea was for a series of Kronos movies to be produced, and it's not a bad premise. Swashbuckling hero with academic hunchback sidekick in tow gallops around rustic non-specific locales as a vampire slaying troubleshooter. What's not to like? Clemens and Fennel had been brought in by the studio to give it new life. Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde had been a box office success so their agenda continued with Kronos. It failed to click with the masses and rapidly slipped off the box office radar before hardly registering a blip.

Adding to it's problems was the fact that the BBFC gave it a AA certificate, which made it suitable for viewing by 14 year olds and up. Audiences at the time were far more interested in adult themed shockers awarded the "for adults only" X certificate. The teen demographic it may have appealed to as a result were equally disinterested.

To the film itself. Dr Marcus enlists the help of old army comrade Captain Kronos when local girls are found drained not of blood, but of youth, and left to die as ravaged old crones. Kronos and his assistant, Grost, arrive with sultry Caroline Munro (Carla - token crumpet and sex object) and begin their investigations - much to the chagrin of the local mob and secretive arbitrary gentry (the Durward family). It doesn't take a genius with a slide-rule to figure out who is responsible for what.

Horst Janson looks the part as Kronos - agile, virile, blonde, athletic and cool - but acts with all the charisma of a cinder-block. Still, the film is a blast. The twists on the vampire legend, the well choreographed sword-fights (especially the climactic duel), the sparse and doom-laden atmosphere it invokes with almost nil special effects to speak of, minimalist sets and landscapes, positions it apart from its stable-mates. When Kronos kills three hired thugs in a bar in less than a heartbeat with a single sword slash, the reference point is resolutely Spaghetti Western. The movie draws on its influences (Yojimbo, Leone, Scaramouche, etc) and fashions them into a unique viewing experience.

There are nods to counter culture - Kronos smokes dope ("A Chinese herb" he explains) and indulges in sado-masochistic sex (suggested, not shown). With a better more high-profile lead actor and some production values he, the film and the projected series could have been contenders. As it was, we are left with one of the most individual and distinctive pieces Hammer ever churned out.

It's a standalone cult classic that demands appreciation by a new and differently informed audience. Rather than label it a failed experiment, I prefer to think of it as ahead of its time.
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7/10
this is God's blade!
dr_foreman16 March 2004
Was Horst Janson really forty years old when he made this? Damn, the man looked good!

Horst plays Captain Kronos, a man who wears a snappy uniform and hunts youth-draining vampires in the company of an affable hunchback. He also wears a bag on his head as part of some bizarre meditative ritual. Aside from the bag-wearing part, he's a solid action hero, and it's a shame that Hammer never turned this good little movie into one of its long-running franchises.

The acting is a highlight: John "don't call me Johnny" Carson gives one of his typically likable and neurotic performances as Doctor Marcus, Wanda Ventham makes a lovely villainess, and Ian Hendry has an amusing cameo as an obnoxious thug (how the mighty had fallen, though -wasn't he a star at one point?). There's also great lines aplenty and some nice choreography for the sword-fights.

This is the kind of movie that Full Moon - or for that matter, Dimension films - wishes it could make. Alas, modern horror is usually too gross and uninventive to match the charm and creativity of a Hammer "classic" such as "Captain Kronos."
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Without a doubt THE most underrated Hammer movie! I wholeheartedly recommend 'Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter' to every horror fan.
Infofreak5 July 2004
I'm a big Hammer fan and have been wanting to see 'Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter' for a long, long time. Now finally I own it on DVD and after watching it four times I think it could very well be my favourite from the studio. It's definitely without a doubt THE most underrated Hammer movie. It did poorly at the box office but it now has one of the most enthusiastic cult followings of any Hammer film. Quentin Tarantino is reportedly a big fan of this movie and seeing how it inventively draws upon several genres (e.g. Westerns) it's really no surprise. Hammer's long running Dracula franchise was running out of steam by the early 70s, and they were looking for a new series. Enter Brian Clemens of 'The Avengers' fame, who had previously written 'Dr. Jekyll And Sister Hyde' for the studio. He came up with some innovative ideas and he thought that this would be the first of many movies to feature the Captain Kronos character. Sadly it wasn't to be, and attempts to spin off a TV series also fell through. Watching it thirty years later I just can't understand why! Anyway, German actor Horst Janson plays Captain Kronos, the enigmatic, sword wielding, dope smoking action hero, and John Cater ('The Abominable Dr. Phibes') is his hunchback assistant Professor Grost. These are two fantastic characters, and I would love to have seen further adventures by them! Horror buffs will also get a kick out of the rest of the cast. The gorgeous Caroline Munro ('Maniac') is a gypsy girl who falls for Kronos, John Carson ('The Plague Of The Zombies') is Kronos' old doctor buddy, Shane Briant ('Frankenstein And The Monster From Hell') is a local young gentleman, and Wanda Ventham (Colonel Virginia Lake in the cult series 'UFO') plays Briant's invalid mother Lady Durward. On top of that there's a fantastic cameo by Ian Hendry ('Repulsion', 'Theatre Of Blood'). Hendry had been one of the original stars of 'The Avengers' playing John Steed's first partner in the little seen early episodes. A hard drinker, his career eventually suffered because of his vices, but he is terrific confronting Kronos in one of the best scenes of the movie. I really find it hard to fault this film. I think it's a forgotten horror classic, and why anyone would even bother contemplating watching the likes of 'Blade' or 'Van Helsing' when 'Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter' is sitting on the shelf waiting to be rediscovered is beyond me! I wholeheartedly recommend this movie to every horror fan. I can't see how any fan of the genre couldn't help but love this unfairly overlooked Hammer gem!
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7/10
This atypical and artsy Hammer movie results to be an atmospheric and entertaining fantasy chiller
ma-cortes25 July 2020
This agreeable terror/adventure movie dals with Captain Kronos : Hort Janson, he is a tough predator of ominous foes , as he tracks down , hunts and confronts by fencing bloodthirsty enemies, and , finally, a family of vampires in this thrilling Hammer horror hybrid . Along the way captain Kronos faces off a nasty contender : Ian Hendry and saves as well as falls in love for a beautiful country girl in distress : Caroline Munro. And, eventualy, fights horrifying and dark forces. Evil Ends Here. A blood lust for eternal youth!.The Only Man Alive. Feared by the Walking Dead!

This chiller is originally mounted with nice photography by Ian Wilson, as well as lively musical score by Laurie Johnson, displaying an attractive plot with a peculiar protagonist , a sort of gothic superhero who stalks and is stalked by his preys. Being well written and filmed with tongue firmly in cheek by Brian Clemens who on this occasion sat in the filmmaker's chair as well, resulting in a mixed bag containing adventures, swashbuckling, terrifying scenes and spectacular fencing. Stars Horst Janson is pretty well as the vampire hunter who will stop at nothing to get his main goal : to hunt and kill bloodsuckers. And there are fine and fetching roles for John Cater as his hunchback helper, John Carson as a doctor, the feared young Shane Briant, Lois Daine as his mysterious sister , Wanda Wentham as an old vampyr woman and the always gorgeous Caroline Munro.

This enjoyable motion picture that isn't at all typical of Hammer's output comes from the fertile brain of Brian Clemens who directed as well, being his only one. He developed a long career with Albert Fennell at times, and mostly in television, as he penned many TV episodes from known series as Avengers, Bugs, Perry Mason, Alfred Hitchcock presents, Remington Steele, The champions, Danger man, The expert, Tension, My wife next door, Darkroom, Suspicion, The protectors, Quiller, The man of the clown, Wideworld of mysteries, The Baron, CSI the new professionals. And occassionaly for cinema as Highlanders II, Highway to battle, Trasatlantic. Rating : 6.5/10. Decent Hammer horror. Better than average .
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7/10
A Bit Corny But Fun
Rainey-Dawn21 December 2014
Captain Kronos is a bit on the corny side but it is fun to watch. Captain Kronos is a swashbuckling vampire hunter that is reminiscent of a comic book superhero. He was featured in a grand total of 4 Hammer Magazine Comics: The House of Hammer » 3 issues (#1, #2, #3) and Hammer's Halls of Horror » 1 issue (#20).

The movie is decent - funny sometimes. It's not a bad afternoon film. It's quite fun to watch, has a pretty good story, good costuming and sets, and a dashing, daring vampire hunter named Captain Kronos!

Basically if you like vampire stories, a comic book feel to a film, swashbuckling, and a film that does not take itself to seriously then you might enjoy Captain Kronos - Vampire Hunter. It's entertaining!

7/10
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6/10
Vampire
btreakle26 March 2020
Unfortunately I thought this vampire movie was kind of a stinker. It's a movie with watch if you got nothing else to watch
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7/10
Captain Cool!!!
Coventry14 January 2004
CAPTAIN KRONOS : VAMPIRE HUNTER….Be honest, isn't this one of the most powerful and macho sounding film titles you've ever heard? Well, I think it is and it gives an extra status to this great film. Kronos certainly is one of the best Hammer productions and they accomplished this even without casting Peter Cushing or Christopher Lee. It's a very intriguing story that can rely on great settings, lovely costumes and a light-headed atmosphere. And above all, it's very original. Captain Kronos fools around a bit with the traditional vampire-characteristics and by doing so; it adds a lot of values to these mythical creatures. Kronos states, for example, that vampires aren't exclusively after the blood of people, they might as well just suck the youth and beauty out of their victims. This little difference in plot is enough to create a complete and fascinating movie. Add a few very original and surprisingly good little elements to this ( like the frog-theory ) and you've got yourself 90 minutes of pure fun.

Horst Janson portrays the captain. He's a strong and rather goofy looking German but the role fits him real well. He rides with Prof. Hieronymos Grost ( some sort of variant to Doctor Van Helsing with a hump) and on their way, they free the extremely good looking Caroline Munro ( her character was sentenced for dancing on a Sunday – which gives you and idea of the religious theme in this film ). The image of Miss Munro might ring several bells in the heads of horror and cult freaks. She has done quite a lot horror films ( Maniac, Slaughter High, Dracula A.D ) and worked together with great, legendary directors such as Jess Franco ( Faceless ). Captain Kronos has everything in the right proportions: some nice and gruesome make-up effects, lovely action sequences, a tad bit of humor and very good screenplay. And I do believe it was a rather influential film. The recent box-office hit Blade certainly found some of its inspiration here. Recommended !
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8/10
A Different, Inventive Kind Of Vampire Film
ccthemovieman-122 June 2008
I've only seen a couple of Hammer horror films, but I'm impressed. They seem to be subtly effective if you're looking for a few thrills and chills, not overdoing the gore, being mild on the language but yet having a definite edge to them.

"Captain Kronos" isn't super but it's enjoyable. The direction is excellent, the DVD transfer looked nice, and - like a good mystery - there's a good twist at the end regarding the murderer, er.....vampire. For us guys, there are also a lot of pretty women in here, too. The acting isn't the best but who cares? It's entertaining, and not made to be taken seriously.

I enjoyed the team of "Captain Kronos and Professor Hieronymous-Grost," and I'm surprised there wasn't a sequel. These two guys make a good team: Horst Janson as the younger, dashing swordsman, and John Cater as the older assistant. The latter provides a little comic relief, too. Their relationship reminded me a bit of Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce at "Holmes and Watson."

The good captain is not your normal vampire hunter. He's just as anxious to get it on with the ladies, and he has a sexy one for a partner in Caroline Munro as "Carla." Kronos also smokes "herbal" cigars! The brief touches of comedy, western, swashbuckling, horror, mystery, romance, sex, supernatural, and who-knows-what else all make it an inventive and fun hour-and-a-half. Hey, it even gives God several good plugs! This horror movie is different, all right.
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7/10
Horst Janson & Caroline Munro are great in this Awesome old Hammer Horror.
lukem-527603 November 2021
Ex-soldier & Swordsman, Captain Kronos (Janson) is a warrior that hunts & kills Vampires in the beautifully Gothic woods & castles of this Classy Hammer Horror production.

I really enjoyed this perfect late-night type movie with a fun cast & their very posh British accents & the stunningly sexy & seductive CAROLINE MUNRO as Carla a beautiful woman saved by Captured Kronos & joins his small team with his Hunchback assistant as they travel accross creepy Country to hunt the undead. There's a lovely old fashioned cosiness to these movies & i have fond memories of watching many Hammer Horror films on t.v late at night.

I like how Captain Kronos was like the template for the Marvel character BLADE. Horst Janson is solid as the Captain & totally looks the part. The whole production is lavish old Gothic & i loved it.

Great old music too.

This wasn't very gory but it plays more on adventure & atmosphere.

All the woman that they encounter are absolutely beautiful, wow what a village that was.

Simply one of the most fun & thrilling of the 70's Hammer Horror films.
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5/10
Bad in a fun way
oguzer30 May 2019
Captain Cronos is a fun B movie. A vampire hunter who carries a samurai sword and smokes cigar, uses dead frogs, ribbons and bells to find vampires. The vampires don't suck blood, they suck life out of people. Cronos hold his sword by the blade and hits villagers with its grip. It has a lot of funny scenes like these.
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9/10
The Swashbuckling Vampire Moie
Captain Kronos (Horst Janson)is a retired officer from the Imperial Army. He is handsome, debonair and has an eye for the ladies but his full-time job sees him seeking out and destroying Vampires with the assistance of his sidekick Professor Hieronymos Grost(John Cater)(now where have I heard that name before).Grost is a hunchback and an expert on the different types of Vampire and how to seek and destroy each different kind, for we learn there are many types. On the way to assist a former army buddy of his Dr Marcus(John Carson),Kronos frees the lovely Carla (Caroline Munro)from bondage and she joins our heroes on their quest to rid the world of evil. On arriving at the home of Dr Marcus, his old friend tells him of the blight that has been affecting the area namely Young girls are being found dead with blood on their lips but more importantly they have aged rapidly. Grost is immediately able to tell which kind of Vampires they are dealing with they are the kind that needs blood of youth to stay young themselves,so Grost sets out a plan to find them. Some thugs are hired by an unknown man in a local Inn to get rid of Kronos and his associates but they are no match for our swashbuckling hero and are soon dispatched without Kronos learning who the thugs employers were. There are unfortunately no witnesses who can describe or point a finger at the guilty parties but Kronos believes that the Durwood Family(real name Karnstein) is somehow involved and so sets about luring them into his trap.

Review:Captain Kronos:Vampire Hunter is a very unusual entry in the Hammer Canon…. Director/Scriptwriter Brian Clemens film is full of interesting and original ideas which he brings to screen with an assured confidence. The Hooded figure that lurks in the leafy glades and stalks the local wenches is done very well and the identity is never given away until the end.The shadow of a crucifix that comes to life in a church is also a high point. The film is also quite funny with some very good witty dialogue that helps the film move along at a fair old pace. Kronos is a also not scarce on action and contains a good few Excellent action set pieces. Captain Kronos:Vampire Hunter was initially planned to be Hammer's next big franchise but sadly poor box office put an end to that which is a huge shame as it is truly a classic of 70s Horror and a film that all Hammer enthusiasts should see.
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7/10
Stylish Fun From Hammer
Witchfinder-General-66611 January 2008
"Captain Kronos - Vampire Hunter" of 1974 is certainly not one of the most brilliant films from the immortal Hammer Studios, but it is definitely a stylish and highly memorable immensely entertaining vampire flick, a typical product of the 70s, and a little gem of super-cool macho cinema. This very humorous horror flick that doesn't take itself very seriously may lack the extreme creepiness and haunting Gothic atmosphere of Hammer's masterpieces, but it features a lot of originality, great action, a great sense of humor and one of the coolest vampire hunters in motion picture history - Captain Kronos - in exchange.

The eponymous hero is played by the German actor Horst Janson. Janson may not be a great acting talent, but he greatly fits in his role of the ass-kicking vampire-killing-machine Captain Kronos, and his thick accent makes the character even cooler. Kronos is the epitome of coolness, a master swordsman and former soldier with a fat 'K' signet ring on his finger and a samurai sword as a weapon of choice who always has a cigar in the corner of his mouth. He is assisted in his profession by the hunchbacked Professor Hieronymus Grost (John Cater), who does all the work for him, since Kronos has to save his strength for the vampire killing. The two are furthermore accompanied by the stunningly hot Carla (beautiful Caroline Munro, who was in quite a bunch of memorable horror films) whom Kronos has freed from the pillories... I don't want to give too much of the story away, but I can assure that the movie is worth the time. It may lack the suspense of other Hammer flicks, but it is an extremely stylish piece of cult-cinema that entertains like hardly another film. Every fan of stylish cinema should give this a try, for my fellow Hammer-fans "Kronos" is a must-see! Highly recommended!
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4/10
Wholly underwhelming Gothic vampire effort
kannibalcorpsegrinder21 March 2020
Heading through the countryside, a vampire hunter and his servant find a young woman left behind by the local villagers and take her along with them where they find the area is being haunted by a series of vampire attacks that becomes far more intense and pointed at them forcing them into action to stop them.

This is a wholly underwhelming enough effort. Among the few bright spots here is the sterling Gothic atmosphere that is usually prevalent in their films coming into play here. The English countryside and remote village where the action takes place are perfectly utilized here, as the woodland scenes of the vampire stalking the various girls in the village provide numerous fantastic imagery that feels very olde-world creepy and chilling. Likewise, the castle finale where it takes place in is a suitably rustic and expansive setting that looks straight out of their classic-era efforts. Throwing in a swordfight for the major action battle is unique and manages to generate a different atmosphere for the finale, and with the fine make-up work on the dead bodies offers up the film's positives. There are a few problems to be had here. The main factor holding this one back is the rather unappealing and bland vampire hunter that we're supposed to follow along who is nowhere near the sympathetic type that's worthy of being followed. The depiction of a brash man of action who rushes into everything with slack-jawed determination and steely-resolve makes him instead be condescending and arrogant to a point that doesn't engender audience sympathy when he gets to be in danger. A loner who treats his support staff with disdain when he doesn't require their assistance doesn't strike any kind of imposing physical threat that would make the vampires fear him in any manner which further reduces the effectiveness of him in the lead role. As well, the other issue here is the decided lack of action that doesn't have much energy going for it. All we get are brief flurries of attacks that barely constitute vampire action for the first hour of the film, and these aren't all that impressive at all making their inclusion not only unnecessary but seemingly an afterthought at the expense of his struggles through the countryside village. There's nothing on-display as for how the vampire plague threatens the area since they're hardly on-screen to generate that kind of impact and the lack of information as to their purpose or why them draining victims turn them into accelerated-aged victims that has very little to do with traditional vampirism. All told, these here really lower this one significantly.

Rated PG: Violence and Brief Nudity.
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Goth and Soda
rrichr17 February 2003
Among the least known of the Hammer Studios horror output, Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter is also one of its most interesting and unusual productions. As opposed to the more in-your-face Dracula series that immortalized Christopher Lee, CK:VH knows that it is just a cinematic comic book and works with itself in a restrained, somewhat lighthearted way that is, off and on, quite effective. This film never really tries to outright scare you which, I think, is extremely cool. Instead, it sets an atmospheric table at which your imagination is invited to partake. This suave slant is the work of Director Brian Clemens who was largely responsible for the legendary '60's British TV series, The Avengers; the original, with Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg. If you remember that series, you'll recognize some of its essential look and feel in this film. Viewed from one azimuth, CK:VH is nonsense but, if you lighten up a bit and just get into the story, the movie takes on a dreamy quality against which its more `horrific' elements play in a most interesting way.

The setting, never precisely defined, seems to be central Europe during or just after the Napoleonic Wars (from the clothes). Let's call it early 19th century. Captain Kronos himself appears to be a former officer of Dragoons, separated from service although still in uniform. The implication is that, while away in the wars, he lost his wife, and possibly his child, to vampires. Now, in the company of his good friend, a hunchbacked academic and authority on vampire lore who drives a wagon loaded with tools of the vampire-killing trade, the Captain roams the region hunting the undead.

Captain Kronos is played by the German actor Horst Janson who, with his grave, nearly too-nordic features, balanced by eyes that seem to constantly smile, brings a nice sense of mystery to the role. Kronos is aloof and taciturn, though never unpleasant. He smokes long cheroots and carries a Samurai sword that he, evidently, did not acquire at a flea market. We don't learn the history of the sword, but we see that he can definitely wield it, as does a trio of toughs fronted by the local alpha-blade (the late Ian Hendry, a prominent British character actor of the period who, interestingly, was a regular during the Avengers' first season.) Actually, they don't really see the sword. They just feel it, sort of, before collapsing in a heap. Janson plays the Captain with a certain Playboy Magazine, lady's man sense of cool, echoing a time when people were just finishing up talking about sex and beginning to actually do it. If you were around then, you'll recognize the spin. It's a nostalgia hit, for sure. You might even recognize Janson's face, which was seen in full page ads in American magazines during that period; men's apparel, liquor, etc.

The Captain and his trusty companion have arrived in the film's locale in response to rumors of bad happenings. Young women of the area are undergoing drastic reverse-makeovers, emerging from them as exsanguinated centenarians. The locals, rather superstitious rural types, are in a tizzy. Could the recently-deceased head of the local, reclusive aristocratic family, whom some suspect of not being completely dead, be involved? It's an angle definitely worth investigating. The Captain makes contact with the only person in the area still in possession of his wits - the local physician - and the hunt begins.

If most Hammer films tend to be hissing fastballs down the middle, CK:VH is an off-speed slider on the corner. There's nothing fancy here, no baroque sets or sophisticated effects. In fact, the film overall has a sparse look and feel that enhances its credibility. The hunt for the vampire proceeds as a believable combination of scientific method and lore. Much of what transpires does so in daylight which, to me, carries significant implications. Evil that does not fear sunlight carries a big stick. We, as its prey, have no real hiding place. The film balances its occasionally goofy moments by never sacrificing its dignity and, at times, is quite poignant. It also features one of the most brilliantly effective sequences ever seen in this genre, illustrating how much can be accomplished with the simplest of cinematic means. I think you'll know it when you see it. This film was produced as the first in what was hoped to be a series of Captain Kronos adventures but the concept failed to grab the required audience. Pity, but at least we have this one. It's fun, stylish, and a perfect rainy-day diversion.
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7/10
Action Adventure
bz_comics19 February 2020
Captain Kronos is a great action adventure film with thrills, mystery and a dash of horror. There is a different take on vampirism, the vampire takes the youth of the victims.
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7/10
Unusual, in some ways unique vampire flick
ebeckstr-18 August 2020
This well might be the first vampire movie to propose the idea that there are different "species" of vampires which have their own abilities and vulnerabilities, and which must be dispatched in different ways. This characteristic makes it different from other Hammer vampire movies, as does the casting of lesser-known actors besides Lee and Cushing. In addition, while Cushing as Van Helsing is very physical, and even swashbuckling at times (the climactic battle with Lee's Dracula in the first movie in the series being the most famous example), Captain Kronos is literally a swashbuckler, crossing swords with antagonists a number of times in the movie. There is even a plot surprise or two in Kronos that I didn't see coming, and some moments of pretty clever dialogue.

So, as many other reviewers have noted, this is one of the best Hammer horror movies, and probably the only reason it isn't more famous is that it lacks Cushing or Lee's presence. On the other hand, that's actually part of what makes it a really interesting movie. In any case, it is unjustifiably overlooked, and should be on the watchlist of any fan of British horror or vampire flicks.
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7/10
You'll die as you lived--in a flash of the blade!
Tender-Flesh28 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Prepare to be hammered by Captain Kronos, Vampire Hunter. He's a swashbuckling, brooding, silent type who cavorts across the countryside with his assistant, Prof. Grost, who is a hunchbacked sort of Dr.-Watson-Meets-Hephaestus. As you will learn well into the storyline, Kronos's family was attacked by vampires, so now he has to repay the "species" a thousandfold by hunting them down in the, well, dead of day, actually, and learning along the way that vampires are a varied species that must be snuffed in a multitude of ways as no one set of rules works for all of them(a nice twist).

The score is adequate, and in some places, rousing. Acting is somewhat of "Horst of another color." Janson is tolerable as Cap'n Kronos, sometimes delivering his lines very well, other times you might groan. If I were to cast a remake, I'd lovingly place Dave Mustaine in the lead with John Hurt as his quasimodo-in-tow. Anyway, I know plenty of horror fans dig this film and there is a lot to be said for it 35 years later. Part of its appeal would lie in when you watched the movie, though. If you are a geezer like me and waited until you were older to see this, it certainly won't have the same attraction as it might for a kid in high school in the 70's. This is not to say it's a bad film or even really dated. You just have to be in the right mindset when you start watching or you'll end up being too critical. Personally, I'd have preferred more swordplay and a few more vampiric slayings. The swordfight in the cemetery is beyond pathetic and at least the cinematographer was able to clean up the shortcomings a bit with fast camera-work. However, the sword fight at the end is considerably better and will make up for the one previously derided.

There are a bevy of beauties in the film, including the delicious Caroline Munro, so there's no shortage of flesh, although nudity is kept in the shadows. If you are a careful viewer, and I know you are, you'll spot the main baddie rather early on, but that doesn't necessarily spoil things. Perhaps the best thing about this movie is not so much the action or dialogue as the uber-creepy vampire moving about the countryside, mainly in the forests, donning a black shroud and sucking the youth out of the fair maidens. The fact the vampire's face is not shown until the end greatly helps the film, which has little in the way of effects or gore.

Today, we have Van Helsing and the late-in-coming Solomon Kane as a sort of modern cinematic Captain Kronos, but that doesn't mean his character couldn't live on in more stories. I'm sure there are enough fans of this film to warrant his resurrection.
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6/10
Not Bad!
aaronhansley5 September 2020
This film was not bad! The acting was mostly good, though Grost was my favorite. The Captain was dashing and strong and I could definitely see this movie being rebooted in the modern era. It is slow and like a lot of films from this time period, it feels twice as long as it's actual running time.
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8/10
Not Your Average Sanguineous Necksuckers!
ferbs5413 December 2007
Fans of the hit 1960s TV series "The Avengers" will not be surprised to learn of what a marvelous movie "Captain Kronos Vampire Hunter" turns out to be. Not, that is, after hearing that Brian Clemens, the producer and oftentimes writer for that cult TV favorite, was also the producer/writer/director of this film, and that Laurie Johnson, who wrote so many musical scores for "The Avengers," provided his great skills to this film, as well. But wait..."Kronos" has a lot more going for it than these two formidable talents. It concerns a swashbuckling swordsman, late of the Infantry Guard, who--with the help of a hunchbacked professor, an ex-Army doctor friend, and a gypsy girl that he meets on the highway (played by yummy cult actress Caroline Munro)--journeys around what looks to be late 18th century England, hunting and slaying vampires. But the vampires here are NOT your average sanguineous necksuckers; rather, they drain the very youth and spirit from their victims, leaving them withered husks. "Kronos" turns out to be another wonderful entertainment from the House of Hammer, with extremely handsome sets, lush outdoor photography, and one of the most interesting sword fights this side of "Scaramouche." It is remarkably imaginative throughout, and directed by Clemens with great style and panache. What a remarkable series this could have made! As an extra, the DVD features extensive commentary from Clemens and Munro that should be of great interest to all fans of films of this genre. This DVD is a real winner indeed!
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6/10
Not As Good As I Rembered
Theo Robertson1 March 2014
An unnamed region in 17th Century Eurpoe is being stalked by a vampire . The bodies of young woman are being found who have lost their youth , their vitality and lifeforce has been drained from them . In to this region rides a mysterious soldier of fortune Captain Kronos

I first saw this in my early teens and remembered it well as a very creepy and exciting horror movie featuring vampires and their nemesis in the shape of Captain Kronos . Two scenes I remembered very well were the opening pre-title sequence of a young woman consumed by a vampire and the scene in an Inn involving a trio of loud mouthed ruffians . I couldn't recall any else from the film and that's simply because there's very little memorable about the movie . The opening sequence is striking and well done but the Inn sequence is ridiculous as it cuts to an Inn keeper and his daughter hiding behind the counter as Kronos gets in to a stand off with three hooligans . Some people seem to have described this movie as a " spaghetti horror movie " and you can see their point and much of this opinion is probably down to this silly scene which merely seems to exist to shoehorn a relatively well known name in the shape of Ian Hendry . Horst Janson has a dubious starring role as Kronos . I say dubious because he looks like a cross between Bjorn Borg and Roman Polanski and if someone is corrupting young girls then a Polanski lookalike is the last person you're going to trust to save the situation . Caroline Munro is very noticeable looking hot , sultry and sexy . No make up required and unfortunately no acting required either

I can see what writer/director Brian Clemens is trying to do here and that is bring a new twist on the vampire legend for Hammer studios which by this point in its history was becoming a little bit too old fashioned . It was also meant kick start a series of films revolving around Captain Kronos but this film combining horror chills and swashbuckling thrills doesn't succeed simply down to the two aspects cancelling one another out . It is moderately entertaining and does pull the rug out from under the audiences feet as to who the vampires are but it's not a great horror movie
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4/10
Humdrum Hammer Horror
Steamcarrot23 November 2006
Slightly at odds with Hammer's usual offerings, this is a film which could have been sooo good, but as it is as much miss than hit. The story is straightforward as usual-a soldier returned from the war teams up with a hunchbacked Professor to travel the land and seek out vampires, in this case a vampire that literally sucks the life out of it's victims, leaving them as wrinkled pensioners. So far so good, but unfortunately Horst Janssen, as the eponymous hero, is woefully miscast never coming close to giving the character depth. This, of course, is a problem that doesn't lie squarely at his feet as the writer/director Brian Clemens has to hold his hand up too. Clemens was one of the great British TV writers (The Avengers being one of his major credits) but he doesn't seem to be able to shake off the shackles of TV while directing this film. He tries to get some of the surreal humour that he used in The Avengers included but it seems at odds with the rest of the film. However, this disjointed film does have it's moments and I would recommend viewing at least once, but don't expect glory days Hammer. Apparently the film was hopefully going to be the start of a new series of films and you can see how that could have happened if the film had a surer touch and a different star.
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8/10
Stylish and Witty One-Off
richardchatten8 October 2021
If there were any justice there would have been several other films featuring Horst Janson's swashbuckling eponymous hero, but - like 'The Devil Rides Out' - this flopped (and unlike the former was curiously ignored by Hammer authority David Pirie) and remained a one-off while Hammer's ghastly spin-off of 'On the Buses' was the top money-maker of it's year and spawned two sequels.

Originally intended as a TV pilot, it eventually emerged as the only feature film ever directed by 'Avengers' creator Brian Clemens, whose customary wit it displays in lines like "What could be more improbable than God? But I believe in him..."; while it's said of John Cater as Kronos' faithful sidekick Professor Grost (sporting a hunchback that makes him resemble Mr. Punch) that "What he doesn't know about vampirism wouldn't fill a flea's codpiece".

Hammer glamour is supplied by Caroline Munro and by Lois Dane as the languidly androgynous Lady Sara Durwood (described by Kronos as "quite a bedfull"), class by Ian Hendry and both by Wanda Ventham as the matriarch of the House of Durwood.
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6/10
Kronos is part ninja.
KingM2122 April 2006
Quirky, stylish, humorous, and creepy, this flick makes for a fine introductory experience to the world of Hammer. This take on vampire lore has said creature drain the actual life of its victims, right through the lips, leaving merely an ancient shell of the person afterwards! Kronos is part ninja. There's a great scene in the bar where three hired baddies attempt to cut him downKronos has his sword drawn, two bloody swipes, and put back in its sheath before the guys knew they were dead! Kronos also moves with the speed of a ninja. Each time his peasant girl (Caroline Munro) rests up against him and he gets called for, the next scene just shows her falling over. Great stuff. Another highlight was the trial and error vampire death testwatch it and see. Overall, Captain Kronos made for a pretty entertaining watch and had some nice original details and twists.
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5/10
Entertaining Hammer Cheese-Fest
erg-2224 October 2013
Women in village ageing prematurely, evil at work, call in Captain Kronos, mayhem.

Hammer cheese-fest which despite the silliness is entertaining and has its creepy moments.

Horst Jansen is the striking Captain Kronos and looks and plays the part well with good support from the Dr.Watson-esque John Cater as Grost and, although Caroline Munro looks fantastic, the less said her about her acting the better.

The sets are well made as you'd expect from Hammer, the sfx aren't bad either for its time and a memorable swashbuckling sword fight at the finale.
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