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Movie Review: “CLARK ASHTON SMITH: THE EMPEROR OF DREAMS”

Saturday, November 17, 2018 | Review

By: Dejan Ognjanović

Directed by Darin Coelho Spring
Starring Donald Sidney-Fryer, Harlan Ellison and S.T. Joshi
Hippocampus Press

Clark Ashton Smith (1893–1961), a seminal figure of American fantastic prose and pioneering writer of fantasy, horror and SF, finally gets a feature-length documentary treatment, which debuted at this year’s H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival.

Crowd-funded and very low budgeted, but rarely showing it, this is clearly a labour of love of its makers and participants. Chief among the latter is the recently departed titan, Harlan Ellison, in his last appearance on video, who admits his debt to CAS: “Reading him aloud taught me how to put accent, emphasis, meaning and order,” and gushes enthusiasm, saying: “To read CAS is to be washed over by a tsunami… Just a page by CAS is better than an entire book by most writers.”

The film also features Smith scholar and poet, Donald Sidney-Fryer, the ubiquitous Lovecraft and Smith scholar S.T. Joshi who talks about these two writers’ mutual influence, the noted Smith editor Ron Hilger and Smith’s biographer Scott Connors, writer Cody Goodfellow and colourful aficionados like Charles Schneider, poet and magician, and Wilum Pugmire, “The Queen of Eldritch Horror.” Actor Nick Savino portrays CAS in a few re-enactments.

At 110 minutes, the film is an exhaustive overview of this reclusive and complex man’s life and works. Readings of his poetry are followed by a rare sound recording of CAS intoning his “High Surf”. Samples of his paintings and creepy statuettes are shown, together with rare photographs and shots from the locations relevant to his life. There are brief clips from adaptations, Return of the Sorcerer from Rod Serling’s Night Gallery and The Mother of Toads (from The Theatre Bizarre anthology) by Richard Stanley, who also participates.

After some special screenings, the DVD and BluRay of the film are available from Hippocampus Press. The discs include a few deleted scenes. In any shape or form, this film is not to be missed!