Showing posts with label B-movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label B-movies. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2025

It's Sindbad, not Sinbad!

 



Actually, I'm not bothered by the Anglocized spelling of the Arab sailor's name, but it's nice to see a more faithful translation. (If I understand it correctly, Sindbad is a Romanization of the original Arabic, but closer to the original than Sinbad. If anyone reading this can correct me on this if I've got it wrong, please let me know.)


One of those times the name is spelled the Roman way is the 1963 movie Captain Sindbad. Guy Williams, in full swashbuckler mode, had finished swashbuckling about on the TV series Zorro and was a few years away from getting lost in space as Dr. John Robinson. So he had opportunity to star in this imaginative (if obviously inexpensive) independent film. It was directed by Byron Haskin, who is best remembered for directing War of the Worlds in 1952.


Sindbad, in this version, is the only hope to overthrow the evil El Kerim, despotic ruler of Baristan. El Kerim biggest advantage is a ring he wears that forces the magician Galgo to serve him. One of Galgo's accomplishments is removing El Kerim's heart and placing it in a remote tower. That way, El Kerim can't actually be killed--a trait that unexpectedly foils Sindbad's initial attempt to dispose of the guy.



There's also a beautiful princess, of course--Princess Jana (Heidi Bruhl--whose performance endows the princess with a quiet courage). Jana is the daughter of the rightful king, so El Kerim wants to cement his position as leader by marrying her. She's in love with Sindbad, though, so is a very reluctant bride.



The movie, as I've said, is very imaginative. Sindbad's ship is sunk by men transformed into rocs who bomb the ship by dropping rocks on it. Later, Sindbad is a prisoner in an arena, forced to battle an invisible monster. Eventually, he and his surviving crew must brave a swamp full of various monsters (including a hydra-type creature--pictured below) and other dangers to get to the tower where El Kerim's heart is hidden. Then Sindbad must fight an unusual monster followed by fighting El Kerim himself to win the day. And save the princess as well. While all this is going on, Jana is being led to the execution block to be killed by getting stomped on by an elephant. Yuck.





The special effects obviously suffer from a lack of budget and technology, but you can always see what the filmmakers were going for. The story is fun and the cast gives it their all. I wish this had been a Ray Harryhausen film--that would have made it awesome. But it's still worth watching.


By the way, Gold Key put out a comic book adaptation with Russ Manning art. We'll take a look at it next week.


Thursday, February 27, 2025

The City of Lights Can Be Pretty Darn Dark

 


1935's Charlie Chan in Paris, starring Warner Oland as Chan, is a strong entry in the series. It's a good, solid mystery with an excellent climax.


Getting to that climax is a lot of fun. Charlie arrives in Paris, ostensibly on vacation but in reality investigating the source of forged bonds. He immediately receives a death threat.


Charlie shrugs this off and soon shrugs off an overt attempt on his life. Charlie is soft-spoken and invariably polite, but he has never scared easily. 




He's soon joined by his son Lee (Keye Luke), which adds in the excellent father-son chemistry that made the Oland films the best in the series. And, though Lee is always comic relief to a degree, he's also a real assett in the investigation, following a suspect and making astute obeservations. I kind of wish there had been a scene in which Lee was present when someone tries to off his dad. Other movies in the series show us that you simply do NOT threaten Charlie Chan when Lee is around. It will not end well for you. That's always fun (and a little touching) to see.




Charlie accompanies some friends to a nightclub soon after arriving in Paris, but his real reason for doing so is to meet up with a dancer at the club. She's been doing undercover work for Chan. But she's murdered before she can tell him anything significant.



There's another murder after that, with a friend of Charlie's being arrested for it. But Charlie knows she's innocent and knows this murder also involves the counterfeit bonds. The crimes are being committed by a scruffy begger. It's not hard for us to guess that the begger persona is a disguise, but each of the likely suspects has an alibi for at least one of the murders.




Charlie eventually puts it all together. Accompanied by a friend, he eventually follows the trail into the sewers of Paris, where a confrontation with the killer is inevitable. Its a suspenseful and satisfying conclusion to the mystery.


The Charlie Chan movies are now on YouTube. I don't know the legal situation, so I can't promise the link below will always be there, but here's a good quality print of the movie:






Thursday, December 5, 2024

Cute Girls and Corpses

 


Read/Watch 'em In Order #175


Rare book dealer Joel Sloan and his wife Garda have one last mystery to solve. And for the third time in three movies, there are different actors bringing the Sloans to life. This time around, it's Franchot Tone and Ann Sothern.



I don't have a lot to say about this one, because after two fast-paced and entertaining comedy/mysteries, Fast and Furious (1939) is a bit of a dud. 


I don't blame Tone and Southern for this. They play against each other nicely. But their dialogue fails to sparkle the way it did in the first two films. One major problem is Garda's almost obsessive jealousy. In the earlier movies, this was an occasional running gag. Here, it pretty much defines every interaction they have.


Also, the movie takes a half-hour (nearly half of its 73-minute run) to set things up and actually get to the murder. And that murder does not involve stolen or missing rare books, meaning that Joel's special skillsets are not used and he becomes a more generic amateur detective. Joel is asked to help judge a beauty contest, allowing this Busby Berkely-directed movie to fill itself up with pretty girls in bathing suits.


There's also a sequence in which several trained lions end up in the Sloans' hotel room. It's a funny scene, but seems a little too slapstick to fit into a comedy that depends on sharp dialogue for its humor.




The mystery itself (involving missing money and the murder of the guy who originally embezzled it) is pretty good and the resolution is satisfying. But we simply don't have as much fun getting there as we did in the first two movies. Though, to be fair, there is a pretty nifty scene in which the Sloans have to escape a death trap.





This wraps up our examination about how being a rare book dealer inevitably leads to investigating murders. We also finished up the Tom Corbett novels a few weeks ago. At this moment, I have no idea what the next Read/Watch 'em In Order subject will be, but I'll think of something.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Stolen Manuscripts and Multiple Murders

 


Read/Watch 'em In Order #173


A year after we were introduced to rare book dealer Joel Sloan and his wife Gerda in Fast Company, the two returned in 1939's Fast and Loose.


But they are no longer played by Melvyn Douglas and Florence Rice. Rather, they've been transformed into Robert Montgomery and Rosalind Russell.



It is perhaps even more obvious in the sequel than in the original that MGM is trying to replicate a Thin Man vibe with this series. The Sloans banter with each other constantly. As with the first movie, this is just fine. Montgomery and Russell have good chemistry together and Russell in particular is a master at playing that sort of character. 


In this one, Sloan is asked to be an agent in the purchase of a Shakespeare manuscript. He and Gerda are staying at the home of the current owner when things begin to get hairy. The manuscript turns out to be a forgery. The owner's personal librarian disappears. And then the owner is murdered.


Gerda isn't happy about Joel investigating another murder after he got shot in the behind last time. But there's no choice. The cops suspect someone Joel believes to be innocent. 




There are a number of other suspects, including a ruthless gangster who tries to threaten the Sloans and later has his thugs run them off the road. Sloan keeps plugging away, even after his best theory is seemingly shot down and two more murders occur. But eventually, he is able to finger the killer and find the real Shakespeare manuscript.


It really is a fun movie. I think Montgomery and Russell play off one another even better than Douglas and Rose (though that's subjective--both couples are excellent). The murder mystery is relatively clever and the banter is indeed witty.


One more movie in the series to go---with different actors again taking over the lead roles. We'll soon see how they stack up against the others.




Thursday, October 3, 2024

Rare Books and Murder

 



Read/Watch 'em In Order #171


We still  have a Tom Corbett book to eventually look at as part of the In Order series, but I caught a movie on TCM today that I want to write about. That movie had two sequels made the next year AND I just scored a triple feature disc with all three of the films on it on Ebay. So we'll add them to the In Order line-up. If I get confused and start writing about Tom Corbett being a rare book dealer... well, I'll try to keep it all straight. Besides, Tom would only deal in rare SPACE books.


Anyway, Fast Company (1938) was directed by Edward Buzzell and released by MGM. It's based on a novel written by Marco Page--a pen name for screenwriter Harry Kurnitz, who also co-wrote the screenplay. I'd like to read the book as well, but quick search makes me think an affordable copy will be hard to find.



The movie features Melvyn Douglas as a rare book dealer named Joel Sloan, who runs his business with the help of his wife Garda (Florence Rice). Joel's bookshop doesn't make a lot of money, but he supplements his income with detective work--tracking down stolen rare books and getting rewards from the insurance companies. 


But when a rival and probably corrupt dealer is murdered, a friend of Sloan's is the main suspect. So Sloan is obligated to step up his detective game and look for a killer. 



He has a lot of suspects to chose from. There's Eli Bannerman (Louis Calhern), who--like the dead man--deals in stolen books. Sid Wheeler (Dwight Frye) has a talent for making fake first editions. And the victim's lovely secretary (Claire Dodd) was probably involved in the crooked side of the business as well.


While looking into the murder, Joel often pauses to banter with his wife. The movie is obviously going for a Thin Man vibe. And this is fine, because it suceeds here. Douglas and Rice have a nice chemistry together, their one-liners are often very funny, and she comes across as smart and capable herself. In fact, Garda will get a chance to save Joel's life near the end of the film.


Another similiarity to the first Thin Movie at least is having the protagonist suffer a minor gunshot wound in an... embarassing location. I don't know if that was intentional or coincidental, but it's another fun conntection between the two series. 





The murder mystery in Fast Company is satisfying and the supporting cast is quite good. I always like seeing Dwight Frye outside the Universal monster movies. He was an excellent character actor whose early death in 1943 was a loss to the movie industry.


I also enjoyed seeing former wrestler Ned Pendleton as a less-than-brilliant thug. Ned, by the way, was in several of the Thin Man movies as a less-than-brilliant cop. He was good at playing befuddled and slow-witted character parts. 


The two sequels came in 1939. Provided there's no problem with my getting the DVD, I'll review those soon as well. It will be interesting to compare them, since the Sloans are played by different actors in each of the three films. Douglas and Rice got the series off to a strong start. Will the other actors do as well? 






Thursday, September 19, 2024

Captain Scarface

 


Barton MacLane was a great character actor who probably played bad guys more often than good guys. He also probably holds the record for the person most often shot or beaten up by Humphrey Bogart.


In the 1953 film Captain Scarface, he plays the title character and he's definitely the bad guy. A tramp steamer named the S.S. Banos is torpedoed and sunk by a Soviet sub, with survivors machine gunned in the water to keep this act of destruction a secret. Well, everyone but the radioman Clegg (Paul Brinegar), who was paid off to make sure no SOS was sent. 


Captain Tredor (also known as Scarface) then brings a nearly exact duplicate into a South American port, with plans to continue on to the Panama Canal. There, an atomic bomb hidden on the ship will be detonated. It's a suicide mission, but Scarface and his crew are fanatics--willing to die to accomplish their mission.



In port, Scarface takes aboard a  Soviet scientist and his daughter, who think they are being helped to defect. Instead, Scarface is soon forcing the scientist to make sure the bomb will work. 


But there's a fly in Scarfaces's ointment. Sam Wilton (Leif Erickson) is an American who has gotten in trouble and needs to leave South America as quickly as possible. Circumstances land him on the ship, using the identity of another Soviet agent without at first realizing that's who he's impersonating. Fortunately, Scarface is expecting the agent, but has never met him.


Wilton doesn't know what's going on, but (despite his own shady past) soon realizes he'll have to do something to save innocent lives. Outsmarting Scarface won't be easy, though. The ship captain might be a fanatic, but he's smart as a whip.




It's a fun movie, generating suspense as it moves the story along briskly. A sort-of side plot involving two innocent middle-aged passengers plays out in a way that ends up intertwining with the main plot and adding a several moments of sincere heartbreak. 


The ending is a little anti-climactic, but overall this is a movie worth watching.




Thursday, August 1, 2024

Bullet Scars (1942)

 


Whether it was an A-film with Bogie, Cagney or Edward G.--or a B-movie with solid character actors who knew how to give life to a role--... well, if it was from Warner Brothers, it was likely to be good.


1942's Bullet Scars is a fine example. Made on a small budget, it has a nifty story backed up by two actors expertly playing off each other.


Howard da Silva is bank robber Frank Dillon (the similarity in last name to Dillinger is probably on purpose). When a robbery turns violent, one of Frank's men is badly wounded. The wounded man (named Joe) is Frank's best friend, so he'll do whatever is necessary to keep Joe alive.



A clever pre-prepared trick gets Frank and his men past a police roadblock and they soon arrive at their ranch hide-out. Frank then hires a doctor named Steven Bishop (Regis Toomey) to care for Joe, telling the doctor that the gunshot wounds were from a hunting accident. He also drafts Joe's sister Nora, a nurse, into the set-up. Nora knows Frank and her brother are crooks, but family loyalty motivates her to come along.



Much of the movie at this point is Frank trying to keep the Bishop from tumbling to the truth. The two actors do indeed play well against each other. Frank is often subtly threatening, while Bishop is slowly putting two and two together. 


When the situation comes to a head, Bishop uses a clever trick of his own to get a message to the police. This leads to him and Nora beseiged in a room in the ranch, though fortunately Bishop proves to be as adept with a pistol as he is with a scapel. When the police show up, the scale of the gun battle widens to include tear gas bombs and lots of stuff catching fire. It's a fun, well-directed action scene that brings the movie to a satisfying conclusion.


The movie is in the public domain. Here it is on YouTube:




Thursday, October 5, 2023

Gracie Allen solves yet another murder

 



A few years ago, I reviewed The Gracie Allen Murder Case, in which Gracie (playing herself--or rather playing her usual comedic persona) teams up with Philo Vance to solve a murder. The movie was great fun--a good mystery as well as very funny.


That was in 1938. Four years later, Gracie starred in Mr. and Mrs. North. This is based on a play that in turn was based on the first North novel written by Richard and Francis Lockridge in 1936.



In the novel and the movie (and I assume the play, which I have never seen or read), the Norths are a happily married couple that finds a body in their apartment. Pam North (played by Gracie in the movie) seems a bit ditzy, but she's actually smart as a whip. She demonstrates regularly throughout the North novels, solving many a murder.


Played by Gracie, Pam becomes just plain ditzy. She is good at noticing things, but never completely puts clues together on her own and solves the murder pretty much by accident.


For fans of the novels, this can be a little disappointing. Pam is turned into Gracie Allen, who is again simply playing to the comic persona she and George Burns had perfected on vaudeville and radio.


But taken on its own, the movie is (like the Gracie Allen Murder Case) a lot of fun. It is a good, solid mystery--with the vital clue subtly dropped into the dialogue partway through the movie. The clues at first point to different suspects, including Pam and her husband Jerry, but in the end finger the actual guily party. The supporting cast, most notably Paul Kelly and Millard Mitchell as homicide detectives, are excellent. Tom Conway as a friend of the Norths and another suspect in the crime is also particularly good. 


And its funny. Gracie was a brilliant comedianne and she's a the top of her game here. One can help but wonder what the movie would have been like if George Burns had been cast as Jerry North rather than William Post Jr., but Post handles his straight man duties well. And perhaps George's presence would have made it too much of a Burns/Allen show and distracted from the murder mystery aspect of the story.



And Gracie doesn't hog all the funny bits. Felix Bressart is wonderful as a put-upon Fuller Brush salesman who has important information about the murder. But whenever he walks into a detective's office or the D.A.'s office, they assume he's there to sell them something and immediately throw him out.


So, as an alternate version of Pam North, Gracie does quite well. Here's a clip, but you can currently access the entire move on the Internet Archive HERE






Thursday, July 27, 2023

Make Your Own Bed

 




Make Your Own Bed, released in 1944, is a ton of fun. I love the premise. Alan Hale, Sr. is an eccentric rich guy named Walter Whirtle. He and his wife have trouble keeping servants. After Whirtle (who is also the world's worst driver) insults a police officer over a traffic ticket, he meets a down-on-his-luck private eye named Jerry Curtis, who is in jail because he mistakenly arrested the distric attorney while on his last job.



The P.I is played by Jack Carson, who gives the character the same fast-talking huckster vibe that he gave nearly every other character he ever played. This is fine, because Carson was born to play such roles.


Whirtle comes up with a brilliant plan. Well, if not brilliant, at least its unique. He convinces Curtis that he's beset by Nazi spies (his factory is producing war supplies). He hires Curtis to pose as his butler to catch the spies. Of course, there are no spies, but Whirtle gets a butler out of it. That the butler is a detective who thinks he's looking for spies doesn't matter. He's still a butler.


Determined to make good and catch the spies, Carson brings his girlfriend Susan (Jane Wyman) along to pose as a cook, though she's notable incompetent in the kitchen. So Whirtle gets two servants for the price of one. And to keep these servants on the job, he hires a quartet of radio actors to his home to u pose as suspects. Whirtle also sends some threatening letters to himself. 


Before long, Jerry has heard the actors rehearsing a scene from a radio play, in which they play Nazi spies planning to blow up a factory. Jerry now "knows" they are planning on blowing up Whirtle's factory. 


Misunderstandings and slapstick rapidly ensue, in which Susan "finds out" that Jerry is playing around with the two female actors and Jerry "finds out" Whirtle's wife is having an affair with a neighbor. In addition to demonstrating his obliviousness as a detective, healso doesn't contribute much to Susan's inept attempts to cook meals. There's a scene in which the two are trying to cook dinner that's about 80% as good at the classic Kathern Hepburn tries-to-cook-breakfast scene from Woman of the Year. And that's pretty darn good. 


Oh, and those radio actors pretending to be Nazi spies?  They might not be what they seem to be.


Make Your Own Bed is funny, with Carson, Wyman and Hale lifting an average script to a higher level. Perhaps not on the same level as a Hepburn-Tracy movie, but it'll still make you laugh.



Thursday, April 6, 2023

Border Cafe (1937)

 


Last week, we looked at the short story "In the Mexican Quarter," by Tom Gill. Today, we'll look at the movie based on that story, 1937's Border Cafe.


The original story is indeed short and fairly straightforward. Billy Whitney is driven to drink and runs away to Texas because he feels he can't live up to his family's expectations. He redeems himself at the end by single-handedly pursuing rustlers.


Well, the movie is only 67 minutes long, but still needed to expand upon the original story. Billy's name is changed to Keith--I have no idea why--and we get a few scenes back East to see how badly he's messing up his life. When he gets to Texas, he takes up residence just across the border in a cafe, playing piano in exchange for a room and drinking money.




Movie Keith is initially a bit more of a rotter than story Billy. Both versions of the character wrote home to falsely claim becoming partners in a ranch, but Keith actually asks for money from his Dad to finance this. He then blows the money on drinks and gambling.


The two biggest changes are:


1. Introducing a love interest for Keith, the fiery tempered Domingo. She's played with charm by Armida. She's at first revolted by Keith, but then gradually warms to him after both go to work at the ranch. She's a great character. I'll admit I fast-forwarded through her brief musical numbers--but that's more a matter of personal taste rather than a commentary on her talents as a singer. Otherwise, Armida gives her character a strong personality and brings a lot of humor into her role.


2. In the story, the rustlers just show up at the end with no foreshadowing. The movie introduces them pretty much right away--converting them into Chicago gangsters who are organizing a combination rustling/protection racket. The big boss is played by the great character actor J. Carrol Naish, whose performance overcomes his cliche-storm dialogue to bring a real sense of menace to the role.





Keith, by the way, is played by John Beal. The rancher he eventually teams up with is named Tex Stevens and played by Harry Carey, who is in full surrogate-dad role. This is the sort of role Carey could pull off, making his efforts to encourage Keith to man up believable if still predictable.


When Keith's parents and his old girlfriend come to visit, the various plot elements come together. Keith's dad disapproves of Domingo, but Keith impresses us when he doesn't even briefly consider buckling under. This foreshadows that the time he's spent working on the ranch really has manned hin up.


And that's a good thing. When the gangsters, whose racket has been busted, kidnap Keith's dad and Domingo while they try to flee the state, Tex and Keith are going to have to work together to save them.


The movie also benefits from its humor. Keith and Domingo play nicely off each other to get some laughs. Keith's attempts to catch and saddle a horse on his first day at the ranch are hilarious, as is a later scene when Tex and Keith's dad (both a bit drunk) trade increasingly unlikely tales about how awesome their respective ancestors were.


One criticism I have of the movie is that the final shootout, though mostly fun, suffers from severe Red Shirt Syndrome. Several ranch hands are killed along with the gangsters, but their deaths are immediately forgotten, allowing for the heroes to immediately joke with each other after the shooting is over.  Oh, well. 


The extent to which Border Cafe expands on the original story makes each its own thing and it's not really fair to say one is better than the other. Both serve their own purposes and do so quite well. 




Thursday, January 19, 2023

The Mummy's Curse (1944)

 



Read/Watch 'em In Order # 156


The Universal Monster movies always played fast and loose with its timeline. The final Mummy movie--1944's The Mummy's Curse--might have the oddest time jump of all. It is set 25 years after the previous film. I suppose that means it's set in the far future year of 1969. Obviously, the producers didn't care about that detail. But, when you watch the film, there's nothing really overt about it that says it's NOT set in 1969 other than the car the protagonist is driving. Perhaps the guy just likes antique cars.


Anyway, remember that Kharis, carrying the reincarnated Princess Ananka, sank into a swamp. A quarter century later, Kharis has been recovered from the swamp by a couple of members of  Ananka's cult, strangling some poor shlub when they acquire it. One of the cultists is posing as the assistant to an archeologist named Dr. James Halsey (Dennis Moore). Halsey is in the swamp specifically to recover Kharis and Ananka for a museum. 



One of the things I like about this movie--in fact, about the entire series--is the casualness in which people accept that an undead mummy occasionally walks around and kills people. It's understandable, because after Kharis is reanimated in the first movie, there's plenty of evidence to show that it's true. In this case, the head of a construction crew draining the swamp is skeptical, but Halsey has no problem with the idea.


Anyway, the cultists use Tana leaves to bring Kharis back to life. In the meantime, in a scene that is remarkably creepy for this low budget film, Ananka climbs out of the swamp. She's young again despite having aged rapidly in the last film. She also has amnesia.



Ananka ends up working for Halsey, proving herself to be very knowledgable in all things ancient Egyptian. Kharis starts stalking her. Several people get strangled. Ananka is finally taken by Kharis and brought to the ruins of a monastery the cultists are using as a hideout. One of the cultists brings Halsey's girlfriend along as well. This sets off a "you-betrayed-your-oath-of-secrecy" conga line involving the cultists and Kharis. One cultist backstabs the other. Halsey shows up and gets into a fight with the still-living cultist. Kharis takes a hand in all this and also decides to kill the cultist. In the end, a big chunk of the monastery collapses on the mummy and the cultist. Since that cultist was the last living person to know the secret of the Tana leaves, there's apparently no danger of Kharis being brought back to life again.


Poor Ananka, lying in a mummy case in the monestary, has once again aged back to her normal 3000 years, so she's a goner as well. But Halsey gets his girlfriend for himself and the mummy for his museum. The end.




The low budget often shows in this entry, but despite that, I like it a lot. It's very atmospheric, with Ananka's resurrection from the swamp being particularly striking. Also, shots of the mummy walking up to the monastary ruins look pretty cool. The 60-minute film moves at a brisk pace and tells its story effectively. The Mummy's Curse is definitely a 2nd-tier entry in the Universal Monster canon, but it's still worth watching.




Thursday, January 5, 2023

The Mummy's Ghost (1944)

 


                                             


Read/Watch 'em In Order #155


What I love about The Mummy's Ghost (1944) is the casualness with which everyone in a small New England town accepts the idea of undead mummies and Egyptian curses. It's understandable, of course, since they had just had a mummy rampaging through their town not long ago. Now, we get a recap of the first two films via a lecturing college professor. And when Kharis reappears and people start getting strangled to death again, the cops accept that the mummy is back. 


One of those cops is played by Barton Maclane, playing a tough cop in the same hard-boiled manner that he always played tough cops, logically planning a way of trapping a "criminal" who is immune to bullets. I love it. 


As in the previous film, the movie also benefits from the actor playing Kharis' Egyptian "keeper." This time, it's John Carradine, an unfailing professional as an actor who always gave his all in any movie, regardless of that movie's overall quality.


The quality of movie, this time, actually isn't bad. There's a bit of a continuity glitch as the Egyptian cult now seems dedicated to bringing Kharis and Princess Anaka together. This is quite a change in attitude. Remember, after all, that Kharis was cursed to guard Anaka's tomb because his love for her was forbidden. But it does allow this film to go in an unusual direction. Oh, well. The villains in the previous films kept getting distracted from their mission by falling for a pretty girl. Perhaps the cult simply decided that there's no beating True Love. 




After Kharis kills an Egyptologist to get some Tana leaves (the stuff he needs to stay alive), his next mission is to recover Anaka's mummy from a local musuem. But when Carradine's character uses the juice of the Tana leaves to resurrect her, her mummy crumbles into dust. This means, he realizes, that she's been reincarnated into someone else.




That someone else is Amina (Ramsey Ames), who is of Egyptian descent. She's also the girlfriend of the film's bland protagonist, played by Robert Lowery. Eventually, Kharis kidnaps Amina. But when Carradine is about to inject her with Tana juice, he starts to fall for her as well. Seriously, the cult's Human Resources department really needs to put out some guidelines about this sort of thing. Anyway, this situation isn't going to make Kharis happy.


There's a lot of nice touches. The shots of Kharis (played again by Lon Chaney, Jr.) walking up and down elevated railroad tracks to a hideout in an abandoned warehouse look just plain cool. The variation of the usual plot is interesting and the way Amina's hair gradually turns from brunette to grey over the course of the movie is pretty nifty. She is indeed Anaka and she is now rapidly aging. She is, after all, 3000 years old. 

The movie has a bit of a tragic end, with Kharis and Amina/Anaka sinking into a swamp. But this sets up the creepiest scene in the series, which we'll examine when we look at The Mummy's Curse in a few weeks. 





Thursday, December 15, 2022

Mummy's Tomb (1942)

 


Read/Watch 'em In Order #153


The Mummy's Tomb was released in 1942, two years after the previous movie. But it's set 30 years after The Mummy's Hand. This retroactively sets Hand in the early 1910s.  The timeline of the Universal Monster movies--and the exact time in which they are set--was always a little elastic. But in this case, the time frames work just fine. There's nothing in Hand to firmly indicate it didn't take place 30 years before it was made. In fact, it actually makes sense, since Egypt in 1940 would have been more concerned with the Afrika Korps than with archeology. 


Anyway, Dick Foran and Wallace Ford are back as Steve Banning and Babe Hanson. Now, though, they are made up as old men. Steve is a widower and has a grown son. 



George Zucco also makes a reappearance. He was shot by Babe in the first film, but it turns out he survived. The mummy Kharis had been set on fire, but he was apparently only singed. 


Anyway, Zucco's character assigns Mehemet Bey (played by Turhan Bey) to take Kharis to the U.S. and wreak vengence on the entire Banning family. As the book Universal Horrors: The Studio's Classic Films 1931-1946 (1990: written by Michael Brunas, John Brunas and Tom Weaver) points out, there's no explanation why the bad guys wait 30 years before instituting this plan.


I remember how surprised I was when I first saw this film when the stars of the first film (both Steve and Babe) end up getting ruthlessly killed by Kharis so early in the film. Steve's sister is also killed. The 30-year time jump helps make this a little more palatible, since both men are implied to have lived full lives, but it was still a shock. This cycle of Mummy movies aren't the equal to the true classics, but I still liked Steve and Babe. 


 Steve's son John and the cops eventually tumble to the existance of Kharis. 


Mehemet Bey, in the meantime, takes a liking to John's girlfriend and has Kharis kidnap her. This brings everything to a head as John and a torch-bearing posse kill Bey and run the mummy into an abandoned mansion, where the mummy is presumably killed in a fire. But fire didn't completely destroy Kharis in the last film, did it?




By necessity, the 60-minute film moves along at a brisk pace. In fact, the first ten minutes taken up by a flashback to recount the important points from The Mummy's Hand, so there's really only 50 minutes to tell the new story. Univeral Horrors is justly critical of the film in this regard:


"There is a pointed emphasis on speed and efficiency at the expense of character development and atmosphere." (page 318)


All the same, I like the movie. Turhan Bey stands out in his performance as the bad guy. Lon Chaney, Jr. takes over the role of Kharis and, though he isn't given a chance to give the monster any real personality, he does make an effective unstoppable killing machine. And the ending, set in that burning mansion with John Banning fighting to rescue his girl and escape, is quite good. On a more minor but very entertaining point, I do enjoy that the good guys eventually decide that they are indeed pursing a 3000-year-old undead killer based on crime scene forensics. 


This, though, is not the end of Kharis.




Thursday, December 1, 2022

The Mummy's Hand (1940)


 

Read/Watch 'em In Order #152


By 1940, it must have been pretty obvious to the bigwigs at Universal Pictures that their monsters were money-makers. They could keep churning out sequels and audiences would keep buying tickets.


There had already been three sequels to Frankenstein and one to Dracula. The introduction of the Wolfman was still a year away, but both The Mummy and The Invisible Man would be getting sequels.


Well, The Inivisible Man Returns is definitely a sequel, even though the title tells a bit of a white lie in that it's a different guy turning invisible this time around, so the original not really returning. The Mummy's Hand, though, can be seen as a reboot. The 1932 original featured a resurrected mummy using the name Ardeth Bey and who could pass as a regular human. The 1940 sequel involves an entirely different mummy (named Kharis) who, over the course of a total of four films, never gets out of his mummy wrappings. Or, for that matter, get any dialogue.



Still, he's an effective monster. Played by Tom Tyler during a lull in Tyler's B-Western films, he glares out at the world through pitch-black eyes and shambles through the night in search of his victims. He's legitimately creepy.


The Mummy's Hand is very low-budget. It reuses scenes from the 1932 film, lifts its score from Son of Frankenstein and employs sets built for another movie. The end result is 2nd-Tier Universal Monsters, but even 2nd-tier U.M. can be a lot of fun.


Archeologist Steve Banning (Dick Foran) and his comic-relief sidekick Babe (Wallace Ford) are in Egypt and have picked up a clue to the location of the three thousand-year-old tomb of Princess Ananka. They talk a vaudeville magician into financing an expedition. The magician's pretty daughter Marta (Peggy Moran) tags along because she's initially convinced that Steve and Babe are con artists.


What none of them know is that there is a secret organization dedicated to making sure no one ever defiles the princess' tomb. Also, there's a mummy entombed outside Anaka's resting place. 3000 years ago, Kharis tried to use the forbidden Tanis leaves to resurrect Ananka after she died. As punishment, he was buried alive. The secret society is able to use the juice from Tanis leaves to bring him back to life if necessary. 


And that, of course, is what happens. Steve's expedition finds the outer tomb and is close to finding the entrance to Anaka's tomb. The leader of the society (played with quiet menace by George Zucco) brings Kharis to life. The mummy kills a couple of people. But both he and Zucco's character are distracted by Marta, taking her alive rather than killing her as well. And, to be fair, she is awful pretty.




The Mummy's Hand takes a little too much time to get to the mummy and some of the comic relief falls a little flat. Though, to be fair, the magician (Cecil Kellaway) has an hilarious scene when he tries to explain to his daughter what he's done with the last of their money. Also, the character of Babe is actually useful in the expedition. If his comedy scenes are only mildly funny, Babe at least serves a useful purpose in the narrative.


I also like that both Marta and Steve use their brains to figure out stuff at key moments. It's Marta who deduces there's a secret entrance to Anaka's tomb somewhere in the first tomb. It's Steve, using his knowledge of hieroglyphics, who finds a way to get to that tomb in time to save Marta.


And, as I said, Tyler's mummy is sincerely creepy. It is apparently completely destroyed at the climax, but--as we all know--it's very, very hard to permanently destroy a Universal monster.


By the way, there are several plot points here (most overtly the existance of a secret society protecting an ancient tomb) that were re-used in slightly altered form for the 1999 reboot of The Mummy.


But that raises an important question that all good nerds are forced to consider. Is The Mummy's Hand a reboot of the 1932 film? Or is it set in the same universe with another mummy popping up as a result of another curse? After all, in a world where one mummy can exist, there's no reason why there can't be a second mummy.


Well, I like to think of the Universal Monsters all existing in the same universe (with the exception of one Invisible Man film which simply can't be made to fit). So I think the 1932 film and the four movies that begin with The Mummy's Hand are indeed in the same universe as Frankenstein, the original Mummy, the Wolfman, the Invisible Man, Dracula and the Creature from the Black Lagoon. It means that, in ancient Egypt, there were two separate incidents in which a guy is cursed to be a mummy after falling for a princess. But those princesses were darn good-lookin', so I'm okay with that idea. 


Soon, we'll look at the next film in the Mummy series. 




Thursday, September 15, 2022

Pa Kettle is My Hero

 


One of the usual sources for humor in the Ma and Pa Kettle movies released by Universal is that Ma (Marjorie Main) does all the work around the house and caring for the kids, while Pa (Percy Kilbride) searches out ways to avoid work and laze about.


But we still like Pa, because he regularly demonstrates that, despite his faults, he loves his wife and is there for her when she really needs it. He is also, at heart, a downright decent and compassionate human beings.



We see evidence of that several times in Ma and Pa on Vacation (1953),  Friends invite them on a trip to Paris. Despite a quest to buy postcards featuring pictures of can-can dancers, Pa pays attention to Ma and makes a point of complementing her regularly. 


And when Pa's willingness to do a favor for a stranger gets all of them involved with spies and a quest for stolen secret plans---well, Ma ends up a prisoner of the spies. Pa knows where she is and wants to bring the cops along to help. But the cops don't speak English and Pa doesn't speak French. How does he get them to follow him? Pa comes up with a plan. He might be naturally lazy, but when the woman he loves is in trouble, he'll take direct action without a second thought. 


Observe the awesomeness of Pa Kettle in the clip below:




Thursday, June 23, 2022

Counterspy Goes to the Movies

 



The radio show Counterspy ran from 1942 to 1957. Right smack in the middle of that run, there was a movie version made. 


During World War II, the radio Counterspy usually had David Harding (who ran a fictional anti-espionage bureau) chasing down Axis spies. After the war, the show took on a Cold War vibe. Interesting, the movie--a Cold War-era product released in 1950--flashes back to World War II, with Harding's men working to take out a spy ring set up in a factory making newly designed torpedoes.




Harding is pretty sure the accidental death of a Naval officer wasn't so accidental. He has another officer assigned to him--a guy who knew the dead man and was, in fact, an old flame of the man's widow.


That could be good or bad, depending on whether the widow is working with the Nazis.


David Harding Counterspy sometimes plods along too slowly, especially considering it only runs for 67 minutes. But it still manages to entertain. It has an effective Film Noir look to it and the plot does unfold in a logical manner. Willard Parker is essentially the lead as the Navy guy, but Howard St. John shines as Harding. In several scenes, he feels obligated to bawl out one or more of his men. And he is fun to listen to when he's mad--provided you are not the person being yelled at. Also, the movie has more fun showing off some then-modern surveillance equipment. 


Character actor John Dehner, who plays an agent good at accents and imitating voices, adds another level of fun to the movie.



So if you get a chance to see David Harding Counterspy, go for it. 




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