Sunday, October 31, 2021

The Invisible Man and The Wolf Man Double Feature

I enjoyed the double feature of Dracula and Frankenstein so much I decided to see The Invisible Man and The Wolf Man yesterday afternoon.  I had never seen these movies before so it was a lot of fun to watch them for the first time on the big screen.  In The Invisible Man, based on the novel by H.G. Wells,  Claude Rains, one of my favorite actors, plays Dr. Jack Griffin, a scientist who has found the formula to make himself invisible.  At first he searches for a way to become invisible because wants the fame and money such a discovery will bring him but an obscure compound in the formula is slowly driving him mad and now he wants to control the world.  He goes on a killing spree and it is up to his employer Dr. Cranley (Henry Travers), his colleague Dr. Kremp (William Harrigan), and his fiancee Flora (Gloria Stuart) to stop him.  Rains is captivating in the role, even though you only see his face in the final moments, because his voice is so sinister.  The special effects are impressive, even by today's standards, especially the scenes in which Griffin removes his bandages to reveal his invisibility (apparently achieved by having Rains wear a black velvet bodysuit under his costume and then filming against a black velvet backdrop) and when he causes a train derailment.  It is a great blend of horror and science fiction with a message about the dangers of meddling where one should not and I really liked it.  In The Wolf Man, which does not have a literary reference but is based on folklore instead, Lon Chaney is Larry Talbot, the heir to a large estate in Wales who has recently returned to reconcile with his father Sir John Talbot (Claude Rains).  When a large wolf attacks a woman in the forest, Larry kills it with a silver walking stick but not before being bitten.  A gypsy fortuneteller (Maria Ouspenskaya) tells him the the wolf was really her son Bela (Bela Lugosi), a werewolf, and that he will now become a werewolf.  During the full moon he is transformed and goes on a murderous rampage but doesn't remember anything in the morning.  Eventually, he begins to suspect that he is a monster and feels tremendous guilt over what he has done but his father protects him from exposure until forced to take action.  I didn't think the transformation from man to werewolf was that spectacular (although these scenes apparently took hours to film) but the makeup effects (which involve lots of yak hair) are outstanding.  I enjoyed Chaney's emotional performance as a man who is horrified by what he has become and I loved the use of fog in the forest scenes because it so menacing.  As with Dracula and Frankenstein, the portrayal of these characters in popular culture today is influenced more by these movies than by their source material (I kept thinking about Charlie Barber's Invisible Man costume in Marriage Story).  I think these movies featuring the so-called Universal Monsters are iconic and are definitely worth seeking out (even after Halloween).

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