The Life And Deaths Of Christopher Lee
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1h 42m
Christopher Lee appeared in more films than almost any actor in history, became the definitive face of horror cinema, and was consistently, bafflingly underrated throughout his career. The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee fixes that, using archival footage, wild animations, a marionette, and an eerily perfect narration by Peter Serafinowicz to trace the life of an icon who was far stranger, darker, and more extraordinary than even his most famous roles suggest. John Landis, Peter Jackson, and Joe Dante all show up. This is pure cinephile gold.
Why This Film Matters: Christopher Lee spent decades being dismissed by critics who couldn't see past the genre he dominated, a pattern that reflects a broader cultural bias against horror and genre filmmaking that is only now beginning to shift. His story is also one of extraordinary resilience: a man who kept creating, kept showing up, and kept delivering powerful work well into his nineties, refusing to be defined by either his limitations or the industry's low expectations. At a time when the entertainment industry continues to wrestle with who it values and who it overlooks, Lee's late-career renaissance offers a quietly radical message: it's never too late to be recognized for what you actually are.