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, yet another mummy movie: The Mummy's Ghost!
Although they’re not great, the movies in the Universal
Monsters mummy series at least had a consistent recipe.
Beginning with The Mummy’s Hand (1940), each installment added a
slightly different twist to the set-up, yet always managed to tell the exact
same story:
- An aging Egyptian high priest recaps the original story of Kharis, the mummy, for a younger protégé, then sends him on a mission.
- Kharis is summoned with tana leaves and used as a lackey to help complete the mission, which always involves a beautiful young woman.
- The younger protégé decides he wants to be immortal with the beautiful young woman and Kharis must ultimately stop him.
- Along the way, Kharis shuffles to and fro across the desert or countryside, terrorizing the locals.
The Mummy’s Ghost (1944) is the third in the series. This time, the aging Egyptian high priest,
Andoheb (George Zucco) recaps the original story of Kharis, the mummy, for
Yousef Bey (John Carradine), then sends him on mission to bring Kharis and the
body of Princess Ananka back to Egypt from the United States. Last time, the mission was to take Kharis TO
the United States.
The twist is that the beautiful young woman who is involved,
Amina Mansouri (Ramsay Ames), is the Egyptian girlfriend of Tom Hervey (Robert
Lowery) and becomes the physical reincarnation of Ananka when Kharis touches
his old love’s body. The realization
that Bey wants to be with her is particularly forced in this version as a voice
in his head convinces him of it.
There are two clever things about The Mummy’s Ghost. First is that the longer Amina
lives as Ananka, the older she gets. A
white streak in her hair from her first encounter with Kharis soon becomes a full
head of silver. By the end of the movie,
she’s completely wrinkled. Second is the end of the movie. It’s not a happy ending. Spoiler alert: Kharis and Amina/Ananka sink
to the bottom of a swamp.
I guess there’s another thing I like about The Mummy’s
Ghost, and it’s a plus for the others in the series, as well. It’s only an hour long. At least the familiar story, and questionable
threat of the mummy, clips along at a quick pace. Yes, these movies are faster than the mummy
itself. It takes less time to watch one
of them than it does for poor Kharis to cross a field.
Tomorrow: House of Frankenstein!
Tomorrow: House of Frankenstein!
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