Daily Archives: December 10, 2014

The Climax (1944)

The Climax
Directed by George Waggner
Written by Curt Siodmak and Lynn Starling from a play by Edward Locke
1944/USA
Universal Pictures
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Dr. Hohner: You don’t want to ruin that voice, do you? It isn’t yours, remember? Now tell me, whose voice is it?… Tell me!

Angela: Marcellina’s![/box]

In 1944 as now, a sequel seemed to be the quickest shortcut to success.  Universal must have thought, “Well, we still have all those expensive Oscar-winning sets from Phantom of the Opera, let’s do it again!”  But the story got watered down with much too much lame opera despite a chilling performance by Boris Karloff.

Dr. Friedrich Hohner (Karloff) is medical doctor to the singers at the Vienna Opera.  Earlier, he became obsessed with keeping the voice of his mistress Marcellina to himself.  After she defied him, he killed her but has been able to maintain the facade of mourning her “disappearance” for many years.  Then he hears of the voice of Angela (Susanna Foster), a young soprano under the tutelage of her fiancé, Franz Muzner (Turhan Bey).  Angela’s voice is so uncannily like that of Marcellina that Hohner is triggered to try the same scheme over again.  This time, he decides to hypnotize her so that she is under his complete control and unable to sing a note.  His hypnotism skills are only so-so however and most of the story deals with her repeated attempts to sing and Franz’s efforts to wrest her away from Hohner.  With Gail Sondergaard as Niemann’s faintly creepy housekeeper.

If we had stuck more closely to the Hohner story, this might have been fairly effective. Certainly Karloff is in top form.  However, this film can’t quite decide whether it wants to be a horror movie or a musical.  Unfortunately, it opts for the later and some of the opera scenes are almost laughable in their badness.

The Climax was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color.

Trailer

House of Frankenstein (1944)

House of Frankenstein
Directed by Erle C. Kenton
Written by Edward T. Lowe Jr. from a story by Curt Siodmak
1944/USA
Universal Pictures
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] [last lines] Dr. Gustav Niemann: Quicksand![/box]

This all-Monster sequel to The Wolf Man Meets Frankenstein was only further proof that Universal had jumped the shark in its horror franchise.

The film more or less takes up with the situation at the Frankenstein castle as at the end of its predecessor.  Criminially insane Dr. Gustav Niemann (Boris Karloff) escapes with his assistant the hunchback Daniel (J. Carroll Naish) following a prison fire.  The doctor, who had been jailed for attempting to put a dog’s brain in the body of a man, is bent on revenge on the village authorities who locked him up.  On the road, the two run into a carny who is exhibiting the skeleton of Dracula.  Knowing that he need only remove the stake to revive the vampire, Niemann has Daniel murder the carny, revives the Count (John Carradine), and takes the show into town.

Niemann is determined to continue his experiments, this time with the brains of the village leaders.  He thinks he will receive instruction from Dr. Frankenstein’s records and goes to the castle to search for them.  There he finds Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr.) and Frankenstein’s Monster (Glenn Strange) encased in ice.  He revives Talbot, who shows him to the documents in exchange for his promise to free him of the Wolf Man curse.  In the meantime, we get a love triangle between the hunchback, Talbot, and a gypsy girl (shades of The Hunchback of Notre Dame).  Mayhem ensues.  With Lionel Atwill and Sig Rumann in their old roles as village fathers.

I can just imagine the story conference at Universal.  Somebody said “why not throw in all our monsters?” We can promise the public five times the thrills!  But it just doesn’t work that way.  Instead we get a incoherent, confusing story with snippets of horror action.  Karloff is always effective but it was a mistake to put the Frankenstein monster in the same movie with his originator.  This just highlights the pathetic lameness of Glenn Strange’s creature.  Fortunately, he is only in the film for a very few minutes at the end.  Still an improvement over Lugosi in the same role in The Wolfman meets Frankenstein.

Trailer