The film takes an imaginative approach to biography, narrated by Peter Serafinowicz through a marionette puppet incarnation of Lee himself. This device sets the tone immediately irreverent, theatrical and self-aware, while celebrating the mythic stature Lee occupied in cinema history.
The documentary features contributions from film legends including Harriet Walker, John Landis and Peter Jackson, each reflecting on Lee’s remarkable screen presence and enduring influence. Drawing from his prolific career, particularly his defining work within the horror genre. The title sequence repeatedly subjects Lee’s puppet likeness to exaggerated and often absurd deaths: electrocution, buzz-saw dismemberment, hanging and other macabre fates. These vignettes knowingly reference the countless on-screen demises that became synonymous with his persona, particularly through his iconic portrayals of Dracula and other gothic villains.
The hand-drawn typography was inspired by the original titles of Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, grounding the sequence in the aesthetic language of late-1960s Hammer horror. This tactile, illustrative approach added texture and authenticity, balancing nostalgia with a contemporary wit. The interplay between morbidity and humour helped establish the film’s distinctive tonal balance, light in spirit yet attentive to the darker complexities of Lee’s life and legacy.
Sky Arts
Scifinow
Jon Spira
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