Film Review
The phenomenal success of Universal's series of horror films in the
late 1920s, early 1930s set in motion a band wagon that other film
production companies were not slow to leap onto. The Halperin
brothers, Edward and Victor, were independent filmmakers who enjoyed
some success in the horror genre with their low budget films made very
much in the Universal mould (often employing sets borrowed from
Universal and filmed on the company's premises). The best of the
Halperin's horror offerings is
White
Zombie, which was inspired by Kenneth Webb's Broadway play
Zombie. The film has the
distinction of being the first feature-length Zombie film, although the
walking dead it depicts are positively tame compared with what we find
in later Zombie movies, with none of the nasty cannibalistic habits we
now associate with the living dead.
White Zombie owes much of its
spine-tingling impact to its lead actor, Bela Lugosi. Now a
worldwide star after the success of Universal's
Dracula
(1931), Lugosi was cinema's perfect incarnation of pure evil and is
ideally suited for the role of the Svengali-like voodoo master who has
the power to turn anyone into a Zombie. This is Lugosi at his
monstrous best and it is to director Victor Halperin's credit that he
makes the actor appear a genuinely terrifying personality, far more so
than he ever was in Tod Browning's
Dracula
and a million miles from the sad, self-parodying figure he would become
in later years. There is a mesmeric, almost erotic allure to
Lugosi in this film and yet, at the same time, he is manifestly the
quintessence of evil, a true prince of darkness. No other actor
evokes the supernatural so convincingly as Lugosi does in this film.
How sad then that the rest of the cast have so little to offer.
Mostly faded stars of the silent era, there is not an actor among them
who can give anything even vaguely appoximating to a credible
performance. The magnificent Lugosi excluded, the quality of
acting is poor beyond belief, although John Harron's performance is
particularly dire - you have to cringe whenever he opens his
mouth. It's a strange state of affairs when the supposed living
appear more unnaturally undead than the Zombies.
It has to be said that the acting is the only thing that lets
White Zombie down. In every
other respect, it is on a par with Universal's better horror films,
although it does have a very distinct atmosphere of its own.
There is a haunting dreamlike feel to this film that makes it more than
vaguely reminiscent of RKO's subsequent
I Walked with a Zombie (1943),
and you can't help wondering to what extent producer Val Lewton may
have been influenced by the Halperins' groundbreaking Zombie
film. In common with Lewton's run of horror films,
White Zombie has very little in the
way of explicit horror but still manages to chill the blood with its
fluid succession of nightmarish images, beautifully rendered in hazy
black-and-white.
The film's underlying concepts are far more terrifying than anything in
Universal's Gothic horror output of this era - what could be more
frightening than the prospect of being reduced to a walking corpse?
The scene set in Lugosi's sugar cane mill, in which hoards of
Zombies are gainfully employed in hard labour without any awareness of
the fact is surely one of cinema's most memorably chilling images - and
the bleakest of metaphors for the capitalist system for those who are
inclined to read a political subtext into the film.
White Zombie has its flaws but,
inspite of that, it is still a supremely effective, deliciously creepy
horror film. Lugosi's eyebrows alone are enough to give you nightmares.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
On the eve of their wedding in Haiti, Madeleine Short and Neil Parker
stay at the home of a wealthy plantation owner, Charles Beaumont.
Unbeknown to either of his guests, Beaumont is passionately in love
with Madeleine and consults the voodoo master Murder Legendre as to how
he can take her from his rival. Legendre has discovered how to
wake the dead and employs zombies at his sugar cane mill. He
tells Beaumont that he can have Madeleine if she is transformed into a
Zombie with a special potion he has concocted. Beaumont agrees
and, immediately after the wedding, he gives Madeleine a small dose of
the potion. The young woman collapses and appears to be
dead. Once her body has been entombed, Beaumont collects her and
takes her to Legendre's castle by the sea. Revived as a zombie,
Madeleine has none of her former vitality and resembles a walking
cadaver. Beaumont pleads with Legendre to return her to life but
the voodoo master refuses. The latter now intends that Beaumont
should suffer the same fate as his beloved...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.