Film Review
In those gloriously uninhibited days in Hollywood before
self-censorship reared its ugly head and effectively outlawed all but
the tamest depictions of sex and violence for a good twenty years
filmmakers must have felt they could get away with anything, within the
bounds of good taste and common decency. The Production Code was
introduced in 1930 but wasn't actively enforced until 1934, so in the
first few years of the sound era there was an 'anything goes' mentality
which writers and directors took full advantage of. Nowhere is
this more evident than in the horror films produced at this time,
Paramount's
Island of Lost Souls
(1932) being a case in point that shows just how far an American film
of this time could go in exploiting the freedoms available to it.
Within just a few years, a film of this kind - one that dwells on the
possibility of human beings being mated with animals and shows us
vivisection being performed on living animals (whilst fully conscious)
- would have been totally unthinkable. Paramount's gruesome
little shocker may have found its way onto cinema screens in America
but it wouldn't be until 1958 that it was passed by Britain's
Board of Censors.
Island of
Lost Souls is one of the most notorious films of the pre-Code
era and it remains, for pretty obvious reasons, one of the more
disturbing entries in the horror genre.
Paramount was one of a number of studios in Hollywood that leapt aboard
the horror band wagon after the runaway success of Universal Pictures'
Dracula
(1931) and
Frankenstein (1931).
Whereas Universal's early horror offerings had their origins in 19th
century gothic literature, Paramount's
Island of Lost Souls sprang from
the literary roots of science-fiction, specifically H. G. Wells's 1896
novel
The Island of Dr. Moreau,
which had previously been adapted just once, as a silent French short
entitled
L'Île
d'épouvante (1911). Seldom one to be enthused by
cinema's early brushes with science-fiction, Wells was highly critical
of the film and considered it a betrayal of his novel's philosophical
themes. The film may not have impressed Mr Wells, but it is an
intelligent and honest interpretation of his novel, directed with
integrity by Erle C. Kenton, who would subsequently go on to direct
some entries in Universal's popular series of horror films:
The Ghost of Frankenstein
(1942),
House of Frankenstein (1944)
and
House of Dracula (1945).
Bela Lugosi, the Hunagrian actor who had played
Dracula with such sinister
élan for Universal, was given a small but significant role in
the film. The combined effect of an impressive make-up job and
the actor's strong physical presence ensures that Lugosi's appearance
as one of Moreau's Beast People is one of the film's key horror
elements, although the actor who receives top-billing is Charles
Laughton, an inspired casting choice for the part of Dr Moreau.
Laughton had yet to make his name in Hollywood but was persuaded to
take on the choice role during his first tour of America, when he was
busily engaged with his stagework. The actor would later
distinguish himself in another memorable horror film, playing Quasimodo
in RKO's
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
(1939), but his portrayal of Moreau, whilst far less outwardly
monstrous, has a far more sinister quality. Laughton's quietly
underplayed Dr Moreau represents a masterclass in contained villainy -
one of cinema's truest and most chilling depictions of pure evil.
Not that Charles Laughton has any need to stress his character's
monstrous nature - this is more than amply conveyed by the
spine-chilling aura that permeates every inch of his despicable island,
an aura laced with expectant menace and primal fear. You feel it
as soon as the hero Parker (blandly portrayed by Richard Arlen) first
comes ashore, a vague but tangible sense of something unspeakably cruel
and malignant in the air. This the film owes to the atmospheric
cinematography of Karl Struss, who had previously won an Oscar for his
superb work on F.W. Murnau's
Sunrise (1927) and contributed
a similar feeling of background malevolence to Rouben Mamoulian's
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
(1931). With some simple but effective expressionistic touches,
Struss conjures up a mood of oppressive claustrophobia, of the kind you
would expect to feel if you should happen to find yourself trapped on
an island with a mad scientist and the products of his diabolical
experiements on animal evolution, including a biologically augmented
wild cat who has the hots for you.
With Dr Moreau looking every inch the white colonialist, enslaving and
exploiting the creatures he considers his evolutionary inferiors as he
seeks to fashion the world in his image, it's not too difficult to read
an overt anti-colonialist (perhaps even anti-Fascist) subtext into the
film - it's worth noting that it originated the phrase 'The natives are
restless tonight', often used with racial overtones. But what it
is really about is the folly of pursuing any form of scientific
endeavour without moral restraint or awareness of where such endeavour
will lead us. It's a theme that is perhaps even more relevant
today than it was back in 1932, and maybe this is why
Island of Lost Souls still has the
capacity to chill the blood. What we have here isn't just a
fantasy but a nightmare vision of what may ensue if man continues to
play God with nature. Welcome to the House of Pain...
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When the liner he is travelling on is wrecked in the South Pacific,
Edward Parker is picked up by a cargo vessel laden with wild
animals. The ship is bound for an unnamed South Sea island
belonging to an English scientist, Dr Moreau. After falling out
with the captain, Parker ends up being stranded on Moreau's island but
is welcomed as a guest by the seemingly hospitable scientist.
Moreau introduces Parker to an attractive young woman named Lota,
keeping from him the fact that she is the product of one of his
experiments, a human-like female created from a panther. The
scientist reveals that after years of dedicated research he has found a
way to accelerate the evolutionary process, first in plants, then in
animals. The strange creatures that work for Moreau are the
result of an earlier phase of his bio-anthropological research, Beast
People whose sole function is to obey. Lota is Moreau's greatest
achievement yet - she not only looks human, she also exhibits human
emotions, and the fact that she appears to have fallen in love with
Parker is a vindication of his work. The unexpected arrival on
the island of Parker's fiancée Ruth, in the company of Captain
Donahue, threatens Moreau's ambition to see Parker mated with
Lota. The scientist orders Ouran, one of his Beast Men, to kill
the captain, but as he does so Ouran realises that he is no longer
bound by Moreau's laws which forbid violence. It is time for the
evil doctor to get a taste of his own
medicine...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.