Film Review
The third of Universal's great monster icons, the Mummy, made his first
appearance in this atmospheric chiller, magnificently portrayed by
Boris Karloff in what many regard as one of his finest
performances.
Karloff had only recently made a name for himself
as another iconic Gothic horror monster, Frankenstein's monster in
James Whale's legendary 1931 film,
Frankenstein.
Again, the actor was subjected to the make-up wizardry of Universal's
Jack Pierce and convincingly made to resemble someone who has lived way
beyond the usual human lifespan. The brooding intensity that Karloff
brings to this film is what makes it an enduring classic of the fantasy
horror genre.
The film marks the directing debut of Karl Freund, who had previously
made a name for himself as a cinematographer, both in Germany and in
Hollywood. In the 1920s, he collaborated with some of the
greatest German filmmakers of the day - F.W. Murnau, Fritz Lang and
Paul Wegener - on such expressionistic masterpieces as
Der
Golem (1920),
Der Letzte Mann (1924) and
Metropolis
(1927). Prior to making
The
Mummy, Freund had worked on two other Universal horror films,
Dracula
(1931) and
Murders in the Rue Morgue
(1932). Freund's distinctive cinematography was defined by fluid
camera movements and the use of suggestive camera angles, as well as
harsh lighting, to add atmosphere and build tension.
The screenplay was written by John L. Balderston, who had previously
adapted Hamilton Deane's stage production of
Dracula for an American audience,
the play that was to be the basis for Universal's 1931
Dracula film. Prior to being
a screenwriter, Balderston had worked as a journalist and had reported
the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb by Howard Carter in 1922. The
widespread interest in Egyptology that endured throughout the 1920s
inspired Universal executive Carl Laemmle Jr. to make a film relating
to the subject. Balderston responded by incorporating an Egyptian
theme into a horror storyline that had been submitted by another
writer, Nina Wilox Putnam, about a 3000 year-old mystic named
Cagliostro. At about this time, Balderston was also working
on a screen adaptation of H. Rider Haggard's novel
She, and so elements of this story,
as well as his previous
Dracula adaptation,
found their way into his screenplay for
The Mummy.
One of the most surprising aspects of this film is that the monster
(i.e. the Egyptian mummy) only appears briefly at the start of the
film, and then only in a few fleeting shots (the
horror by implication technique
favoured by the German expressionist filmmakers). In the rest of
the film, Karloff plays the character as a recognisable human being,
with makeup applied only to his face and hands. He isn't so much
a monster as a Svengali-like figure (reminiscent of Bela Lugosi's
Dracula), a sinister yet sympathetic villain who is driven by an
uncontrollable need to be reunited with his erstwhile sweetheart.
All this is a far cry from the subsequent Mummy films, in which the
Egyptian revenant is reduced to a shambling monster bent on mindless
revenge.
One of the strengths of
The Mummy
is its focus and narrative economy, making it one of the most compact
and coherent of Universal's classic horror films. Of the various
sequences that were cut was one that showed us several incarnations of
Anck-es-en-Amon at various points in history. Interestingly, an
actor who appeared only in one of these cut scenes was included
(erroneously) in the credits.
The film's one weak point is that the performances of the supporting
cast fail to match up to that of the lead actor, Boris
Karloff. The female lead was played by Zita Johann, a
Hungarian who become a prominent stage actress in America in the 1920s
and '30s. Johann made no secret of the fact that she loathed
making films and had a particularly bad working relationship with
Freund. Her exotic beauty and unusual persona make her a good
casting choice for the role she plays, although many today would judge
her performance to be cold and theatrical. Few of the other
actors manage to distinguish themselves, and the performances are
generally stilted and lacking in emotion - typical of early sound
cinema.
Despite its artistic strengths,
The
Mummy was generally ill-received by the critics of the day and
was far less successful than Universal's previous horror films.
It was not until 1940 that the studio would unearth the bandages for a
second excursion into Egyptian occult, with Tom Tyler playing Mr
A&E (Kharis, to give him his proper name) in
The Mummy's Hand (1940), now the
more familiar monster icon. Lon Chaney Jr. took over the role for
the next three Mummy outings,
The
Mummy's Tomb (1942),
The
Mummy's Ghost (1944) and
The
Mummy's Curse (1944). Universal would give the Mummy a
half-decent burial in the spoof
Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955).
Just to show that you can't keep a good monster down, the Mummy would
return in a series of four films made by the British company Hammer
Film Productions, beginning with
The Mummy (1959) and ending with
Blood from the Mummy's Tomb
(1971). More recently, the over-bandaged fiend would make an
unexpected come back in Stephen Sommers' effects-saturated
The Mummy (1999). None of
these well-intended revivals can hope to compare with Universal's 1932
original which, with its authentic-looking sets and stylish
cinematography, convincingly evokes ancient Egyptian mysticism, whilst
telling a compelling and poignant love story that transcends the
barriers of time and space. Even Mummies have a heart (although,
sadly, it is often removed and put in a jar with all the other internal
organs).
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis
In 1921, a team of British archaeologists led by Joseph Whemple unearth
an ancient Egyptian tomb. Inside, they find a burial casket
containing a well-preserved mummified corpse. The fact that the
body has not had its viscera removed suggests that the unfortunate
occupant of the tomb was buried alive, whilst the deliberate removal of
markings on his casket implies that he was dishonoured in
death. The tomb also contains a small box, inside which is
a papyrus scroll. When one of the team is transcribing these
ancient writings, the mummy suddenly comes to life... Ten years
later, Whemple's son, Frank, is leading another expedition and, like
his father, makes a remarkable discovery. This time, he uncovers
the tomb of an ancient Egyptian princess, Ankh-es-en-amon.
Not long after, Frank Whemple is visited by a strange old man, who
shows a keen interest in his findings. What Frank doesn't know is
that the old man is the reanimated mummy his father discovered, an
Egyptian priest named Im-Ho-Tep. Nearly four thousand years ago,
Im-Ho-Tep was madly in love with the Princess Ankh-es-en-amon.
When the latter was on her deathbed, the priest sought to revive her by
incanting an ancient mystical text. His attempts were thwarted by
the king who, incensed by this sacrilege, decreed that he be buried
alive in an unnamed tomb. For thirty seven centuries, Im-Ho-Tep
has waited, immured in his tomb. Now that he is free, he has one
thought: to find Ankh-es-en-amon through her latest reincarnated
form. Unfortunately, this turns out to be Helen Grosvenor, the
woman whom Frank Whemple has fallen in love with...
© James Travers
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