For this year's Countdown to Halloween, it's all-Universal Monsters, all-the-time, from Dracula (1931) to The Creature Walks Among Us (1956). Join me daily for a fresh perspective on movies you may not have watched in a long time, if ever. Today, a rare snoozer: Son of Dracula!
If there’s anything worse than Lon Chaney Jr. as
Frankenstein’s monster, it’s Lon Chaney Jr. as Dracula. With his pencil mustache and brunette hair,
he’s as American as apple pie, yet in Son of Dracula (1943) he’s meant to
portray a Hungarian count. He’s as
different from Bela Lugosi as an actor could be. However, when he’s off screen, the movie is
even worse without him.
I don’t know why the movie’s called “Son” of Dracula. There’s nothing in the story to indicate
Chaney’s anyone else, although he’s called “Count Alucard” (Dracula
backwards). It could as easily be
called, “Gone With the Count,” as the vampire finds his food supply drying up
overseas and settles on a plantation in the Deep South. Here, he thinks he has an ally in Katherine
Caldwell (Louise Allbritton).
She really wants to double-cross him, though, and steal
eternal life for herself and her lifelong beau, Frank Stanley (Robert
Paige). Her sister, Claire (Evelyn
Ankers), Doctor Brewster (Frank Craven) and Professor Lazlo (J. Edward
Bromberg) are their foils, although they’d rather sit around and rehash vampire
lore than get out and do anything about it.
It had been seven years since the last Dracula movie,
Dracula’s Daughter. That’s the only
reason I can think for the remedial lessons about vampires in Son of
Dracula. There’s not really any
revisionist history or new information.
However, Dracula can now hunch his shoulders, back toward the camera,
and then transform into an animated bat that flies away from the camera.
He and Katherine can also both materialize out of mist, a
trick that she takes advantage of in the movie’s one clever scene. She visits Frank in jail after he’s confessed
to accidentally killing her, then disappears when the guard checks on him. The guard then says that Frank is talking to
himself in two different voices. This
reinforces the idea that he’s gone a little nuts.
I don’t have much more to say about Son of Dracula. I thought it was silly and boring. It can easily be left out of the other
Universal Monsters movies because it doesn’t purposely fit into their ongoing
continuity. I suppose it’s notable for
Chaney, considering that he’d now portrayed all the heavy hitters: the Wolf Man, Frankenstein’s Monster and the
Mummy.
Tomorrow: The Invisible Man's Revenge!
Tomorrow: The Invisible Man's Revenge!
No comments:
Post a Comment