UNIVERSAL HORROR COLLECTION: Vol. 2 Blu-ray (Universal/Paramount, 1933 - 1943) Shout! Factory
Without
Universal Studios, the world of cinema would be bereft over the loss of a major
contributor to the horror genre. Those who do not ‘love’ horror movies
likely have never taken the time to properly understand or analyze them. That
there have been far too many ‘bad’ horror movies – or rather, horror
movies, done badly, and, also given the confusion today with the term ‘horror’,
synonymous with salacious ultra-gore (how many ways can we show a human head
being split open with an ax) is likely another reason ‘horror’ continues to
rank among the red-headed stepchildren of the arts, despite its lucrative
appeal at the box office. Horror, in its purest form is not about what is seen,
but what remains unseen – and unknown – thereupon, stirring our eternal
skin-crawling dread. For better or worse, and without psychoanalyzing ‘horror’
to death (pun intended), most of us love a good adrenaline-inducing scare. Boo!
There, made you look! Thrill-seekers are the extreme form of this sort of junkie.
But for the rest of us, an otherwise harmless ‘jolt’ to the system – now and
then – is cleansing for the soul; at the very least, life-affirming from the
relative safety of our armchairs and/or theater seats.
And so, horror,
in its various permutations throughout the decades, endures, despite its
naysayers who continue to consider it mere campy tripe. Universal Studios, at
least, in its heyday, and in the form of Carle Laemmle Jr., positively adored hand-crafting
new ways to make audiences cringe. Those who have dismissed Uni’s unique
fascination with the macabre are truly missing out on one of the finest watershed
epochs in horror’s hallowed history, with an obvious nod to RKO and Val Lewton’s
masterpieces in direct competition for the box office throughout the 1940’s. But
Universal, if nothing else, except for its sheer output from approximately 1920
to 1950, and, for all intent and purposes – was horror incarnate – or as
critics then dubbed it, Hollywood Transylvania. It is far too tempting,
and, a false representation to label the studio’s cycle of these early
supernatural oddities as unsophisticated relics, since far too many teem with
an intuitive, nee religious fervor to hold us spellbound in the dark; wed to intelligence,
innovation and an all-pervading dark ambiance. By now, Uni’s unique legacy has
been well-documented on home video. Indeed, all the greats from its archives
are well represented in hi-def, with the lesser known back catalog now re-emerging
for renewed consideration. In point of fact, it is these ‘lesser’ offerings I
find quite fascinating; without pre-sold marketability or a reputation un-anchored
in Gothic literary masterpieces. Just simple little tales of the beastly,
brooding and barbarous ilk, where mystery abounds and villains with dark and
sinister purpose skulk and stalk their victims with immunity until the hour of
retribution is at hand. Remember, in censor-bound Hollywood, evil always had to
be relinquished before the final fade out, though not before the body count had
exponentially risen.
The movies
culled together for Shout!/Scream Factory’s Universal Horror Collection:
Vol. 2, represent 3 home-grown oddities (1942’s The Strange Case of Dr.
X, and, The Mad Doctor of Market Street, and, 1943’s The Mad
Ghoul), and one, (1933’s Murders in the Zoo) pilfered outright from
MCA’s 1958 acquisition of pre-fifties’ Paramount back catalog. Although Uni’s fascination with horror stayed
fairly close to the Gothic template throughout the 1930’s, by 1940 the fad for cobwebbed
castles and morbid flights into the supernatural had given way to a wickedness more
closely aligned with the warped human psyche. Universal, however, never gave up
on a trend. Alas, in their eagerness to capitalize on what became known as the ‘monster
mash-ups’ (putting 2 or more of their time-honored horror creations into multiple
sequels) the powers that be effectively hastened their diminishing returns at
the box office, before unearthing an even greater insult to their supremacy, by
making them endless figures of fun, played strictly for laughs in their Abbott
and Costello franchise.
Universal Horror
Collection: Vol 2, bears witness to one of horror’s unsung
personalities – character actor, Lionel Atwill. There was nothing about Atwill,
who, in his youth, had studied architecture before being bitten by the stage
bug in 1904, to suggest he might go on to have a lucrative career as the perennially
sinister plotter of mayhem in the movies. Indeed, his Broadway pedigree was far
more diverse and beyond reproach, appearing in such legendary productions as The
Lodger (1916), A Doll's House, Hedda Gabler, The Wild
Duck (all in 1917), Tiger! Tiger!, and, Another Man's Shoes (both
in 1918), and, The Outsider, and, Caesar and Cleopatra (both in 1924).
Hollywood never could see past Atwill’s bulbous head and bug-eyed brow,
chronically casting him as the evil un-doer of men and lascivious stalker of
women, in movies like Doctor X (1932), The Vampire Bat, Murders
in the Zoo, and, Mystery of the Wax Museum (all 1933), although
Atwill did get the opportunity to ‘play good’ as the one-armed Inspector
Krogh in Son of Frankenstein (1939), and, as merely one of the suspects
in 2oth Century-Fox’s classy launch of their short-lived Sherlock Holmes
franchise, in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939), only to return to the
Universal reboot of that franchise as the reviled Professor Moriarty when Uni acquired
Arthur Conan Doyle’s back catalog.
In director, A.
Edward Sutherland’s Murder in the Zoo, we are introduced to Atwill’s
stealthy big-game hunter; wealthy zoologist, Eric Gorman, who slithers across the
screen with scarcely a traceable change in his overall demeanor, but nevertheless
reveals his uber-jealousy toward any man who might fancy his much younger wife,
Evelyn (Kathleen Burke). The Seton Miller/Philip Wylie/Milton H. Gropper
screenplay opens with a truly perverse vignette; Gorman, in the deepest, darkest
jungles of Africa, binding the hands and stitching with needle and thread the
mouth of one of his fellow hunters, Bob Taylor (Edward Pawley), just because he
deigned to kiss Evelyn. Later, Gorman feigns casual astonishment while being informed
Taylor was eaten by wild tigers. Returning
to America with a cargo hold full of his latest captured prey, Gorman is eager
to offer his collection to a major zoo. Perhaps instinctively knowing Taylor
met his demise at her husband’s hands, Evelyn now begins a rather promiscuous affair
with Roger Hewitt (John Lodge). Given Gorman’s insane jealousy, Evelyn and
Roger make little effort to conceal their burgeoning romance. So, naturally,
once back home, Gorman plots to do away with this latest paramour.
As the zoo has
run into financial trouble, its Chairman has hired a new press agent, Peter
Yates (Charles Ruggles), to spruce up interest in Gorman’s latest acquisitions.
Aside: Ruggles is this movie’s Achilles' Heel, hamming it up as a newly
reformed alcoholic, petrified of all wild animals, and so utterly/idiotically
frenetic he all but diffuses what little suspense otherwise plays out, after
Yates elects to hold a lavishly appointed fundraising banquet amidst the cages housing
Gorman’s latest acquisitions. Aside again: I can only imagine the smell! Seizing upon this opportunity to exact his
revenge on Roger, Gorman presumably releases a poisonous mamba to strike and kill
Roger with its venom. Actually, she has hand-crafted a rather ingenious
mechanical mamba, borrowing venom extracted earlier at the zoo’s laboratory by
its chief research assistant, Jack Woodford (Randolph Scott), who is feverishly
working on an antitoxin for the snake's fatal bite. Too little/too late for
Roger – who is mortally wounded and almost immediately dies. Suggesting the
real mamba is on the loose, the hoi poloi panic and run from the banquet
staging area. Evelyn accuses Gorman of being the murderer. Outraged, he attacks
her, but not before she discovers the mechanical mamba head hidden in his desk.
Determined to reveal all to Woodford, Evelyn is too late to save herself. Gorman stalks his wife over the narrow
footbridge overlooking the alligator paddock, tossing her over its rickety
wooden guard rails and observing with pleasure as she is dragged under by the
devouring reptiles and torn to pieces.
The zoo is on
lock down. Nevertheless, a group of precocious children manage to sneak in and
discover the tattered remains of Evelyn’s dress floating in the pond. Woodford
becomes suspicious and deduces Gorman is behind the murders of Evelyn and
Rodger. Again, Gorman is too diabolical to be stopped, disposing of Woodford with
the same mechanical snake head.
Mercifully, Woodford’s assistant, Jerry (Gail Patrick) injects him with the
experimental antitoxin he had created from the mamba poison. It saves his life.
Knowing Gorman is responsible for the apparent mamba attack, Jerry sets off the
zoo's alarms, leading to a police chase through the zoo. To distract his
pursuers, Gorman releases the various big cats from the carnivore paddock. Alas,
this decision backfires when a lion turns on Gorman. Trapped inside the cage of
the boa constrictor, Gorman is slowly strangled to death by the serpent. In the
swift epilogue that follows, Jerry attends a convalescing Woodford in hospital.
Consumed by the stresses of the last 24-hrs., Yates falls off the wagon and
fearlessly swats the nose of a lion that is stalking him.
As a brisk pre-code,
hour-long programmer, Murders in the Zoo offers up some weird touches
but never comes off as anything better than an odd, and not terribly engaging ‘spook
show’ with a few innovative bits of business and a lot of junk thrown in, just
to fill run time. Since we already know what monstrous acts Gorman is capable
of only a few moments into our story, there is no surprise thereafter when he
escalates his villainy, simply to preserve and advance his own predatory agenda.
Far too much time is spent beefing up Charles Ruggles as the picture’s ‘comic
relief’. Yet, this just seems an ill fit, minimizing the peril to the point of
making it a jejune diversion at best. Atwill’s Gorman is menacing. And his
madness is clear, concise and bone-chilling at intervals – especially, in the
movie’s opening scene – as he serenely sews up the mouth of his amorous
competitor with cool, calculated satisfaction.
Similarly, Atwill
plays deranged again in director, Joseph H. Lewis’ The Mad Doctor of Market
Street; this time as quack ‘physician’ Ralph Benson, who is actually a
medical scientist willing to murder people in order to test his theories of
suspended animation. Alas, his first victim, William Saunders (Hardie Albright)
firmly believes Benson will be able to restore him to life later on and thus
succumbs to Benson’s experimentation to ensure a sizable stipend for his
cash-strapped wife. Dying on the operating table, Saunders is discovered by his
wife (Anne Nagel) and the police, who thereafter put out an A.P.B. to have
Benson arrested for murder. With considerable stealth, Benson, now assuming the
identity of Graham, is discovered comfortably observing passengers on a cruise
ship bound for New Zealand; the list of potential subjects to include dotty
Margaret Wentworth (Una Merkel) and her forthright niece, Patricia (Claire
Dodd), boxer, Red Hogan (Nate Pendleton), chicken-livered ship’s officer,
Dwight (John Eldridge), and potential ‘leading man’/ship’s mate, Jim (Richard
Davies). When one of the other passengers on board discovers Graham and Benson
are one in the same, he is knocked unconscious by Benson and thrown overboard.
The crime, witnessed at a distance by Jim, Benson now sets fire to the ship’s
boiler room. The fast-spreading inferno engulfs the ship, resulting in chaos
and Benson’s escape to relative safety yet again, in a row boat with Margaret,
Pat, Red, Dwight and Jim.
Stranded on a
remote island, these castaways fend for themselves until they are captured by
natives. Their chief, Elan (Noble Johnson), believes ‘the white devils’ have
brought a curse upon his already ailing wife, Tanao (Rosina Galli). Preparing
to perform their ritual sacrifice, the survivors are spared when Benson
promises Elan, he can resurrect Tanao from the dead, and proves it by injecting
her with a shot of adrenaline that restores her to health. Elan declares Benson
a god and allows him dominion over the tribe. Now, Benson reveals to his
cohorts who he really is and plots a rather sinister itinerary to continue his
experiments; first, to marry Patricia against her will. The last act of The Mad Doctor of Market
Street relies heavily on H.G. Wells’ timeless classic, The Island of
Doctor Moreau, mutating the novel’s notion of selfish gains to present us
with the even more diabolical notion of a serial killer on the loose. Yet, there is something of a fatal betrayal in
the way we discover Benson is actually not really interested in unlocking the
secrets of life and death, but rather heinously obsessed with committing
cold-blooded murder, simply because he can. Once the natives discover his game, Elan put Benson
to the ultimate test of resurrection, or he will be cast into a burning pyre.
The Mad Doctor
of Market Street has some bone-chilling soupçons to admire, but on the
whole is an unremarkable entertainment. Apart from Atwill’s Benson, the
castaways are a nondescript lot who make the least of their mediocrity and
never make us care what happens to them. In place of Charles Ruggles we get Una
Merkel as the dotty madcap, brain already pickled – or rather, scattered – and Nate
Pendleton playing the muscled dumb body without two neurons firing selectively
together. Atwill is convincingly sinister. But he is hampered by a screenplay
that goes nowhere once these unfortunates are marooned. The story really does
come to a screeching halt thereafter, leaving what was supposed to be its interesting
denouement something of an already foregone and ho-hum conclusion. The outlook
for Atwill was not improved by his next venture in director, William Nigh’s The
Strange Case of Doctor Rx, chiefly due to the fact Atwill’s Dr. Fish is literally
the movie’s red herring. It also does not help that Nigh was forced to begin
shooting this claptrap without a finished script, resulting in many sequences
being ad-libbed, but with the ultimate result that a lot of the secondary plot
points never get resolved. The screenplay
from Clarence Upson Young loosely follows the exploits of renown private
investigator, Jerry Church (Patric Knowles), convinced by D.A. Dudley Crispin (Samuel
S. Hinds) to reexamine the clues surrounding a string of murders committed by the
mysterious Dr. Rx, who always leaves his ‘calling card’ with an insignia.
Against the pleas of his new wife, Kit (Anne Gwynne), Jerry begins to
investigate and soon discovers virtually all of Rx’s victims were criminals
acquitted of murder by Crispin. Closely observing Jerry’s progress with great
interest are the ominous Dr. Fish (Lionel Atwill); also, Jerry’s ex-partner,
Captain Hurd (Edmund McDonald) and his new bumbling assistant, Det. Sgt.
Sweeney (Shemp Howard).
After a sixth
murder is committed, the lead detective on the case goes utterly insane. Haunted
by the trauma, Church agrees to drop the case. Alas, he is kidnapped; then,
blackmailed into continuing his investigation by another criminal (Victor Zimmerman)
whom the police suspect as the real killer, but who actually wants his name
cleared by Church, as he too is not the real Dr. Rx. A short while later, Church is abducted by Dr.
Rx – none other than Crispin who, having proven the dexterity of his brilliant,
if sincerely warped, legal mind in getting criminals off, now seeks a more
divine retribution by murdering the killers he set free. Crispin informs Church
he plans to implant Church’s brain into a gorilla to advance its
intelligence. Leaving Church in the same
cage as the gorilla, the next day Church is discovered unconscious and rushed
to hospital where it is now revealed he was actually working with Dr. Fish to
plot Crispin’s capture. When the newly appointed D.A. Mason (William Gould),
already suspicious of Crispin, asks to borrow his pen, Crispin instead reveals
it to be a poison dart gun, fatally shooting himself in the chest to escape
incarceration. Now, Church reveals he was merely ‘faking’ unconsciousness, to
expose Crispin’s unseemly crimes.
The Strange Case
of Doctor Rx would have a lot going for it, except that the story – badly mangled –
never comes together as expected; the movie’s noir-ish tone, superbly realized
by Elwood Bredell’s cinematography, and a cast – comprised of mostly competent
to down-right quality actors – is thoroughly squandered in Young’s idiotic
patchwork of prose. Atwill’s Dr. Fish is such a transient character in this
story he all but disappears into the background. Worse, we are never entirely
certain of the picture’s narrative focus. It’s not a mystery – not really. It’s
something of a suspense, with a dash of comedy, but otherwise pointlessly
strung together and loosely assembled, merely to waste an hour in as much ado
about nothing. The most endearing quality here is the winning – if interspersed
– on-screen chemistry between Patric Knowles and Anne Gwynne, who pull off
newlyweds with a charming effectiveness. Aside: I’ve always though Patric Knowles
was under-appreciated and under-utilized as an actor.
In one of those ‘always
the bridesmaid, never the bride’ movie careers, Knowles was a most
ambitious and readily exploited supporting players, recognized for his
undeniable good looks and amiable personality, but rather tragically overlooked
for his more than competent acting style – deemed ‘good enough’ by the powers-that-be,
only to play second fiddle. Knowles came
to everyone’s attention in 1932 and never stopped working until 1973; his
emeritus years quietly spent out of the limelight, before dying of a brain hemorrhage
in 1995. In Hollywood, he made the rounds from Warner Bros., to Republic, RKO,
MGM, and 2oth Century-Fox, appearing in some of the highest profile movies from
the period: 1936’s The Charge of the Light Brigade, 1938’s The
Adventures of Robin Hood, 1939’s Another Thin Man and 1941’s
Oscar-winning, How Green Was My Valley. At Universal, Knowles languished
as the pretty boy, and by the late 1950’s, almost exclusively, had migrated to
TV work, tirelessly appearing in anthology series. In the late sixties, he came back to film, but
again, as the guy on the side, intermittently to appear on popular television
dramas too. Knowles really deserved a better – bigger – career. He had the
right stuff, but never quite found his niche.
The final movie
in Vol. 2 is director, James Hogan’s The Mad Ghoul, substituting another
stock baddie-character actor, George Zucco for Lionel Atwill, as the menacing
Doctor Alfred Morris, an academic scientist who unearths an ancient Mayan nerve
gas and is all too eager to experiment with its torturous after effects on live
human subjects. Taking on med student,
Ted Allison (David Bruce) to assist in the gas experiments, Ted’s enthusiasm,
after he and Morris revive a dead pet monkey, Choco, infusing the creature with
fluid extracted from the heart of another, takes on a more sinister appeal, particularly
after Ted’s gal-pal, Isabel Lewis (Evelyn Ankers) attracts Morris’ affections. Secretly,
Isabel confides in Morris; her passion is music – not science. Although she
likes Ted, she is not in love with him. However, unable to bring herself to
break Ted’s heart, Isabel has allowed the relationship to continue with false
hope of an eventual marriage. So, Morris promises to handle the situation for
Isabel. Unbeknownst to her, his wicked plot is to destroy Ted by exposing him
to the lethal Mayan gas, thereby transforming him into a mindless ghoul who,
like Choco, must perpetually rely upon the fluid extracted from newly deceased
human hearts to survive.
Ted accompanies
Morris on a grave-robbing spree through several towns where Isabel is also
performing on tour. Morris attempts to persuade Ted to return home. Alas, when
not in his ghoulish state, Ted is obsessed with remaining at Isabel’s side.
Meanwhile, Morris discovers, Isabel has evolved affections for Eric Iverson
(Turhan Bey); her piano accompanist. Driven mad with jealousy, Morris plots to order
Ted, in his ghoulish permutation, to murder Iverson. The attempt is unsuccessful,
but Ted obtains another human heart to keep himself alive. By now, local police, aided by ace reporter ‘Scoop’
McClure (Robert Armstrong), have managed to link the suspicious ‘ghoul’ murders
to Isabel’s world tour. Determined to expose the killer, McClure sets a trap in
Scranton, the last city on Isabel's itinerary, feigning his own death and
pensively waiting in the casket for the ghoul to strike. Tragically, Scoop has
underestimated the killers. While Morris distracts Scoop, Ted – as the ghoul –
comes into view, murders him and performs another cardiotomy. Police question
Isabel. And although she is innocent, gradually she begins to realize Ted and
Morris are the only two likely to know how to perform these complex fluid
extractions. As she prepares for her
home-coming performance, Morris elects to exploit Ted one last time, allowing
him to lapse into his ghoulish state before hypnotically ordering him to murder
Eric and then commit suicide.
However, before
the spell can completely take hold, Ted manages to write a letter to Isabel. In
it, he explains how Morris tricked him into becoming the ghoul in the first
place, and, how he helplessly must serve his master while under the influence
of the nerve gas. Now, Ted turns the tables on Morris, exposing him to the gas
moments before transforming completely into the ghoul. Unable to help himself,
Ted leaves to fulfill Morris’ prophecy, entering the stage area, but mercifully
dispatched by detectives, seconds before he is about to shoot Eric. Having discovered
the note, Eric now reads it to Isabel, exposing the truth about Morris’ wicked
deeds. Meanwhile, Morris, drained of almost all living by the gas, dies next to
the grave where he was performing an exhumation that might have saved his life;
Ted’s sobering words echoing in his ear: “It's all over, Doctor. There’s
nothing left of it now but you, and me, and... death!” The Mad Ghoul is
a succinctly written, minor masterpiece of the macabre, told with economy and
intelligence. George Zucco and Robert
Armstrong give particularly fine performances. Running barely 66 minutes, the picture
achieves a sort of brooding impiety that permeates almost from the first frame
to the last, with Milton R. Krasner’s B&W cinematography one of the unsung
stars of our program.
The ‘Scream’
division of Shout! Factory delivers the goods – mostly – on all four of these quasi-tragi-horror-melodramas.
The weakest presentation here in Murders in the Zoo, looking faded, fuzzy
and careworn. Given what we know about MCA’s acquisition of Paramount’s pre-50’s
catalog and the relative disregard for concerted preservation over the decades
since, it’s a genuine wonder the movie looks even as good as it does. But be
forewarned, contrast here is extremely anemic. The image is also excessively
grainy. Age-related artifacts are everywhere and there is also some digitally
ascribed edge enhancement. If I had to guess, I’d say this is definitely an older
1080p transfer, illustrating Uni’s continued short-sightedness to perform even
the most basic digital clean-up to balance and improve overall image quality.
Regarding the other 3 transfers in this set: well…Uni has apparently been more
proactive with their own catalog. In all fairness, the remaining 3 features hail
from a different epoch, one decade younger than the first movie.
So, The Mad
Doctor of Market Street, The Strange Case of Doctor Rx, and, The
Mad Ghoul look marginally better. The best video presentation of the lot is
‘Mad Doctor’, with very strong and consistent visuals, excellent
grain structure, solid tonality and overall, a very pleasing presentation,
minus a few instances of speckling, but with most of the ravages of time expunged
to ensure a smooth visual presentation. The ‘stock’ footage otherwise shot under
less than ideal conditions remains grainy and excessively damage-riddled. Curiously,
The Strange Case of Doctor Rx appears to have been derived from a flawed
element with untoward DNR smearing background information and obfuscating fine
details. Minor density issues and baked-in flicker also afflict the image. Finally, The Mad Ghoul’s transfer
exhibits adequate crispness with a light smattering of grain looking indigenous
to its source. Detail looks grand in close-up, but somehow manages to
considerably weaken in medium and long shots. Again, minor built-in flicker and
density issues abound with scattered scratches and/or speckling – neither to
distract. The audio for all 4 movies is
2.0 DTS mono; flat, but expunged of mild hiss and pop. Fans expecting the same
bountiful outpouring of extras that accompanied Vol. 1 of this franchise
will likely be very disappointed this time around.
Murders in the
Zoo gets a new audio commentary from author/historian, Greg Mank. It’s not
as good a track as I am used to hearing from Mank – very scene specific and
rather slavishly devoted to Lionel Atwill’s contributions at the expense of
exploring anything else. We also get animated image galleries. The Mad
Doctor of Market Street gets only a trailer and an animated image gallery. The Strange Case of Doctor Rx, includes
Mank’s participation on a 19-min. short: Gloriously Wicked: The Life and Legacy
of Lionel Atwill, plus another image gallery. Finally, The Mad Ghoul
is afforded an audio commentary by author, Thomas Reeder - very comprehensive –
plus, an image gallery. Shout! has also assembled a rather perfunctory 12-page
insert booklet containing glossy photos of the various cast and crew. Ho-hum.
The beat goes on. Bottom line: while the movies in Vol. 2 already suggest
Shout! is scraping the lower half of the proverbial ‘barrel’ where Uni’s
monster mash is concerned, there is much here to enjoy.
Universal Horror Collection Vol. 2 will not win any awards for transfer
quality But, what is here is not terrible. Just not as good as it might
have been with a bit more due diligence applied. Regrets.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
Murders in the Zoo – 2.5
The Mad Doctor of Market Street - 3
The Strange Case of Doctor Rx – 2.5
The Mad Ghoul – 4
VIDEO/AUDIO
Murders in the Zoo – 2.5
The Mad Doctor of Market Street - 4
The Strange Case of Doctor Rx – 3.5
The Mad Ghoul – 3.5
EXTRAS
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