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Review
THE MUMMY
Rating:    
USA. 1932.
Director Karl Freund, Screenplay John L. Balderston, Story Wilcox Putnam & Richard Schayer, Producer Stanley Bergerman, Photography (b&w) Charles Stumar, Special Effects John P. Fulton, Makeup Jack Pierce, Art Direction Willy Pogany. Production Company Universal.
Cast:
Boris Karloff (Im-ho-tep/Ardath Bey), Zita Johann (Helen Grosvenor), David Manners (Frank Whemple), Edward Van Sloan (Professor Mueller), Arthur Byron (Sir Joseph Whemple)
Plot: In 1921, a British Museum expedition to Egypt headed by Sir Joseph Whemple digs up a mummy. They find that it has been buried in non-traditional ways and a curse placed on the casket. An eager young assistant breaks open the casket but this causes the mummy to awaken. The rest of the expedition returns to find that the mummy has vanished and the assistant in a state of catatonic fear. Eleven years later, the British Museum sends another expedition headed by Sir Josephs son Frank. They receive a visit from the sinister Ardath Bey who directs them to find the tomb of the Princess Anck-es-en-amon. But Bey is the reincarnation of the cursed High Priest Im-ho-tep, whose mummy it was that went missing in 1921. Bey sneaks into the Cairo Museum and steals Anck-es-en-amons mummy. He then sets out to conduct a ritual that will reincarnate Anck-es-en-amons spirit in the body of Helen Grosvenor, the British governors daughter.
The Mummy is one of the genuine classics from the so-called Golden Age of Horror (which took place principally at Universal Studios between 1931-9). Indeed, The Mummy soon became one of the key figures in the pantheon of Famous Monsters, alongside Dracula, the Frankenstein Monster, The Wolf Man and Dr Jekyll/Mr Hyde. Although for all that, The Mummy (the film) is very different from the Mummy that became the cliche figure of Famous Monsters hagiography and even kitset models. The image we usually have of the Mummy is a figure wrapped in bandages, slowly shuffling across the screen like a severe arthritic sufferer. There is little of that in The Mummy. There is a bandage-enwrapped mummy in one scene at the very start but that is all that we see of it. Certainly, during this scene the work of makeup artist Jack Pierce who also made up the face of the Boris Karloffs monster in Universals Frankenstein (1931) in creating the look of the mummys face is expert. However, it was not until the various sequels see bottom of the page that The Mummy became remembered as the figure that it is today.
The plot seems to be consciously rehashing elements of the Bela Lugosi Dracula (1931) that was a huge hit the previous year and for which The Mummys director Karl Freund was the cinematographer. The influence is noticeable in the plot involving the courtly foreign villain with hypnotic powers, his possession of the heroines mind, the image of Isis being used to hold back the mummy instead of a crucifix, and most notably in the casting of David Manners and Edward Van Sloan who filled near-identical roles in Dracula as Jonathan Harker and Van Helsing respectively. One gets the impression that after the successes of Dracula and the Karloff Frankenstein, Universal were seeking to create more of the same and came up with a thinly disguised version of Dracula that played on the fascination with Egyptian mummies and the stories of curses that came after Howard Carters party opened the tomb of Tutankhamen in 1922.
While dated in some areas, The Mummy still holds up well today. The surprise to be found here, especially in comparison to the slowly shuffling caricature that the Mummy became in the sequels, is that The Mummy works as a slower and much more psychological a film. There is little in the way of shocks and visceral impact. Instead, it is a film with an atmosphere of slowly accumulating mood. A constant menace of Egyptian esotericism looms in the background. Boris Karloff, using the dull, grating tombstone voice that he perfected in the Frankenstein sequels, is at his most cadaverous. Director Karl Freund, a former cinematographer, frames Karloffs sinisterly glowing eyes in somewhat overwrought closeups, to add a palpable aura of evil. The scene with the mummy slowly opening its eyes at the very start is a classic. One scene with Karloff chanting over the scroll in a flickering, candle-lit museum is genuinely eerie. And the scenes with Zita Johann fighting against Karloffs distant mesmeric influence, using all sorts of persuasion in trying to get people to let her out of bed are excellent.
There are the odd minus points. Sometimes Karl Freund doesnt appear interested in scenes and abruptly curtails them. Theres a certain silliness at times in the images of Zita Johann parading about in traditional Egyptian head-dress and ridiculous curled bangs or David Manners rambling about falling in love with corpses. And there are some odd vagueries to the plot, which cannot decide what type of role it wants Zita Johann to play throughout she seems to waver between a social sophisticate, a seductive vampishness and the end scenes where she is reduced to a typical 1930s open-tonsilled wallflower in distress.
Director Karl Freund was a cinematographer in his native Germany and fled to the US after the Nazis came to power. In Germany, Freund had worked on classics like Fritz Langs The Spiders (1919), The Golem (1920), F.W. Murnaus The Last Laugh (1924) and Langs Metropolis (1927). In the US, Freund had made barely a handful of films as cinematographer, including Dracula, before being snapped up to make his directorial debut with The Mummy. Freund would only go on to make a half-dozen other films the most notable among these being the completely demented possessed hands/mad surgeon film Mad Love (1935). He later returned to cinematography, working on American classics like Camille (1936), The Good Earth (1937), Green Hell (1940), Pride and Prejudice (1940) and A Guy Named Joe (1943).
Universals Mummy sequels are: The Mummys Hand (1940), The Mummys Tomb (1942), The Mummys Ghost (1944), The Mummys Curse (1944) and Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955). In all but the last of these, the mummy is referred to as Kharis instead of Im-ho-tep. In The Mummys Hand, the role was played by stuntman Tom Tyler and was taken up in the subsequent sequels by Lon Chaney Jr, until the overtly comedic Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy where it was played by stuntman Edwin Packer and renamed Klaris. There were two remakes in Hammers The Mummy (1959) with Christopher Lee as the mummy, which essentially wrote its own story unrelated to this; and Stephen Sommers The Mummy (1999) with Arnold Vosloo as the mummy, which reconstructs the basics as a high adventure and has the mummy accompanied by an arsenal of CGI effects. The latter also produced two sequels with The Mummy Returns (2001) and The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008). The Mummy has also made appearances in monster bashes like Mad Monster Party? (1967), Transylvania 6-5000 (1985) and The Monster Squad (1987). One intriguing project was the 60 minute film Kreating Karloff (2006), a mix of documentary and biopic where actor Connor Trimmis restages scenes from Frankenstein and The Mummy with he playing Boris Karloff and takes us behind the making of either film. Last updated: Tuesday, 06 April 2010
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