CAST:
Basil Rathbone (Sir Joel Cadman), Herbert Rudley (Dr Gordon Ramsay),
Akim Tamiroff (Odo), Patricia Blake (Laurie Monroe), Lon Chaney [Jr]
(Mungo), Bela Lugosi (Casimir), Phyllis Stanley (Daphne), John
Carradine (Borg), Claire Carleton (Carmona Daily), Tor Johnson (Curry),
George Sawaya (K6)
PRODUCTION:
Director – Reginald LeBorg, Screenplay – John C. Higgins, Story – George
Drayson Adams, Producer – Howard W. Koch, Photography (b&w) –
Gordon Avil, Music – Les Baxter, Photographic Effects – Louis DeWitt
& Jack Rabin, Makeup Created by George Bau, Set Design – Bob
Kinoshita. Production Company – Bel-Air Productions/Prospect Productions
Inc
SYNOPSIS:
London, 1872. At Newgate Prison, Dr Gordon Ramsay is about to be
executed for the murder of a man but swears he is innocent. The night
before he is due to go to the gallows, he is visited by his old mentor,
the distinguished physician Sir Joel Cadman. Cadman leaves Ramsay with a
dose of the Indian drug mindantera, which will place him into a
death-like coma. Ramsay takes it, is certified as dead and is revived at
Cadman’s home. Cadman explains that he has saved Ramsay because he
needs an assistant for his research. Cadman shows Ramsay his
experimental work using mindantera to place patients under while he cuts
open and explores their brain, trying to work out which areas control
which actions. As he assists, Ramsay becomes horrified to discover that
Cadman’s ruthless quest for knowledge has turned all of his subjects
into deformed and mindless vegetables that he keeps imprisoned in the
basement.
COMMENTARY:
The Black Sleep could be considered the last gasp of the classic genre of the mad scientist film that began with Frankenstein
(1931) and reached its peak during the 1940s amid a host of cheap
efforts churned out at low-budget studios like Monogram and PRC, usually
starring Bela Lugosi. After around 1947, the mad scientist film began
to die off with the exception of a few stragglers and the genre instead
became preoccupied with alien invaders and atomic monster films. The Black Sleep
can be considered a swansong to the era. It brings together some of the
most famous genre actors of the 1940s – Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney Jr and
John Carradine. There are also a couple of others who are associated
with the genre but didn’t so much belong to that decade – Basil Rathbone
who was most famous during the 1940s as Sherlock Holmes in the series
of films made at Universal and appeared in a number of B horror films at
AIP during the 1960s, and wrestler Tor Johnson who was part of the
Edward D. Wood Jr stock company in the 1950s.
The Black Sleep feels like a
Monogram/PRC mad scientist film made with a slightly better budget.
There are times it seems to almost be taking a more serious minded, less
schlocky approach and setting everything amongst the frontier of
medical research in 19th Century England – it initially has more in
common with a film like Corridors of Blood
(1962) than it does with a typical Bela Lugosi film of the last decade.
The early sections create a (relative) sense of medically grounded
realism, although it is not long before typical tropes of the genre kick
in – the ethically challenged scientist; a madman (Lon Chaney Jr) in
the house; a mute retainer (Bela Lugosi); deformities of failed
experiments kept in the cellar; a scientist’s innocent daughter needing
saving; laboratories improbably hidden beneath swivelling fireplaces in
the library. Some of this has a modest effect. The main problem is that The Black Sleep
is still a low-budgeted film and director Reginald LeBorg lets it take
place amid limited sets, which leads to a film that is talky and static
at best. Nevertheless, the film stands out mildly because of its better
production values and passable direction that elevates what otherwise
might have been hackneyed material.
The name cast are employed with mixed effect. Basil Rathbone gives a
wonderfully autocratic performance in the lead – he reminds very much of
the role that Peter Cushing solidified as his own in The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and sequels the following year. Akim Tamiroff proves a
scene-stealer in a wonderfully oily and obsequious role as Rathbone’s
Gypsy fixer. Lon Chaney Jr and Bela Lugosi were at best limited actors
who only gained the status they had by appearing in hits at early points
in their careers and becoming typecast in the horror genre thereafter.
Here Chaney has a role that requires him to do one of the two things he
did best – play either simple-minded or hulking. Lugosi never gets to do
much in what would be his last ever completed role – the only other
work he appeared in subsequent to this was the unfinished fragments that
were posthumously incorporated into Plan 9 from Outer Space
(1959). Disappointingly, for what was his last real performance, it is
one where he gets no lines and is rarely on screen. Both John Carradine
and Tor Johnson get even less screen time in their roles as failed
experimental subjects who are discovered in the cellar near the end
Director Reginald LeBorg (or frequently credited as Reginald Le Borg)
was an Austrian immigrant who worked as a B-budget director in Hollywood
between the 1920s to the 1970s, mostly being known for a number of the
entries in the Joe Palooka series. His other genre films include:- the Inner Sanctum thrillers Calling Dr Death (1944) and Dead Man’s Eyes (1944); the clairvoyance film Destiny (1944); Jungle Woman (1944), the second in Universal’s series starring Acquanetta as a were-ape woman; The Mummy’s Ghost (1944), the fourth of Universal’s Mummy series; the voodoo film Weird Woman (1944); Voodoo Island (1957); The Flight That Disappeared (1961), an anti-nuclear film about a planeload of people being abducted in mid-flight; the possession film Diary of a Madman (1962); the psychic thriller The Eyes of Annie Jones (1964); and the psycho-thriller So Evil, My Sister (1974).
No comments:
Post a Comment
WE ENCOURAGE YOUR COMMENTS AND OPINIONS ABOUT OUR POSTS. FEEL FREE TO LEAVE A COMMENT.