Sign Up |  Login

     
 
    My Blog |  Popular Posts |  Top 100 Blogs |  Recent Blogs |  Random Blogs |  Write a Blog |  Manage Categories  
   View Blog
 Two Wrays
Vampire Bat-1933- is a creaky low budget horror film from the early 30's but despite it's obvious restrictions and drawbacks it's fairly entertaining. It stars the great Lionel Atwill as Dr. von Neimann, the local doctor in a village where vampire like murders are taking place. Whenever giant bats appear at night, some unfortunate local dies, the body drained of blood. Melvyn Douglas (who was in James Whale's THE OLD DARK HOUSE the year before) is the investigating police constable. Fay Wray (the same year as KING KONG) is his love interest.

The best performence though is by Dwight Frye, essaying another village idiot role (it would type-cast his career) as Herman, a bat loving red herring (who meets his demise at the famous Bronson Canyon). Familiar '30's character actor Lionel Belmore (2 Lionels for the price of one! What a movie!) also appears. The photography is a little too dark at times and there's a lot of talk but it's short running time makes it enjoyable.

Screenwriter Edward T. Lowe had been writing movies since the '20's (including the Lon Chaney HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME). He later penned HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, HOUSE OF DRACULA, several Charlie Chan and Bulldog Drummond mysteries and other stuff.

Director Frank Strayer made several unusual movies in the '30's (like THE MONSTER WALKS, THE GHOST WALKS and CONDEMNED TO LIVE) before devoting most of his time to the movie series based on the "Blondie" comic strip in the '40's.

I also recently saw THE CLAIRVOYANT (aka THE EVIL MIND)-1934-made one year later and also featuring Fay Wray. The always entertaining Claude Rains (one year after his film debut in THE INVISIBLE MAN) stars as a phony mind reader named Maximus who's predictions start to come true whenever he's around a certain woman (English actress Jane Baxter). Wray is his assistant-wife who fears his new power. Rains' trance states are very eerie (especially his last!). It's ok and probably influenced a few future films.
    Posted by CavedogRob on 2008-01-13 20:42:43 | Rating: | Views: 40
  Email This to a Friend  

  Bookmark:
Permalink:  
   Blog Comments
  
Great review as always!
Posted by  SubTomato  on 2008-01-14 16:57:14 
Would you like to comment?

    (Maximum characters: 5000)
    You have characters left.
  
  Security code:  
                        
                         Refresh Image
                         
  Blog Information
 

CavedogRob
New York, United States

Latest Posts

 The Name Game...
 Hello There
 Change Is Good
 A Must Miss For Everyone!
 On and On We Go....

CavedogRob's Links

 The Mark...
 Cartoon...
 movie...
 bio of...
 King...
 Greatest...
 Classic...
 Cost of...
 Zombies Rule!
 The Odd...
 Japanese...
 movie Box...

Blog Categories

 Nothing found

Blog Archive

 August 2008 (2)
 May 2008 (23)
 April 2008 (18)
 March 2008 (28)
 January 2008 (10)
 December 2007 (23)
 November 2007 (23)
 October 2007 (27)
 September 2007 (29)
 August 2007 (9)

Comment Archives

 August 2008 (5)
 July 2008 (1)
 May 2008 (10)
 April 2008 (8)
 March 2008 (20)
 January 2008 (6)
 December 2007 (30)
 November 2007 (27)
 October 2007 (10)
 September 2007 (9)
 August 2007 (2)

   Bookmarked Posts
Art (II).