Makes me sad that The Mummy is often overlooked because it's my absolute favorite of all the horror classics. Karloff is mesmerizing and the lead actress gives an understated performance and has great chemistry with him.
Nothing will ever beat the shot of Karloff's Mummy awakening, with that tiny glint of light in his eye. Subtle but chilling at the same time. A lost art with todays movies it seems....
Still would rather watch the universal mummy movies than the CGI mummy movies starting with Brandon Fraser. Love all the lon Chaney movies and the hammer mummy movies also.
@@randyacuna3248 the Lon Chaney and hammer ones seemed too slasher type like Friday The 13th, Halloween, and Freddy Kreuger. This one at least had drama
The scene w/ Karloff awakening w/ Fletcher reading the spell is one of the greatest opening scenes in all of film history. The best of the lot by a long shot.
Bram Fletcher spoke at my high school in the mid 70's. He claimed he was originally supposed to be a strangling victim, but he thought of the idea of hysterical laughter. I am surprised he didn't mention either of his first two wives, Diana Barrymore or Helen Chandler.
@@ThreadBomb It wasn't great but it was entertaining, which is way more than the most recent one can say. And yes, the third one wasn't all that great either, just got too big for its own good.
Considering the mummification process includes embalming and removing the organs in addition to wrapping the body, that's a horrible way to die. On an unrelated note, Karloff really did have a great voice. Nobody will ever forget that.
FYI the Egyptians would also remove the brain by extracting the brain with a hook shaped rod puncturing the ethmoid sinus cavity, because at the time they thought that the human brain was useless and that it was the heart that did everything and it wasn't until the 17th century when a British physician and anatomist by the name is Thomas Willis who discovered that it was the human brain that mostly did everything for the human body
Yes! That was actress Virginia Christine emerging from the mud, later to be known in U.S. television commercials of the '70's as Mrs. Olson for Folgers Coffee ☕.
I've always been a big fan of The Mummy, and think that the 1932 film is extremely underrated in comparison to other Universal classic horror films. It's in my top three favourites, I think the Egyptian storyline of this ancient evil is endlessly fantastic. I also love Hammer's first Mummy film. These two movies are the best Mummy films ever made. Great review, please do more of em'. Bob.G
One scene left out here that really deserves mention is the resurrection of Ananka in The Mummy's Curse. Virginia Christine or whoever it was who actually performed that stunt managed to create a moment of horror and humanity powerful enough to stand with anything from the first wave of Universal classics. Unfortunately, that time was long gone and the movie quickly reverted to the stale formula that characterized basically everything the studio was putting out by the mid-40s.
After Karloff's in the '32 original, I agree that Virginia Christine's scene in 'Curse'('44)is very chilling. People of a certain age came to know Miss Christine in U.S. television commercials of the '70's as Mrs. Olson, for Folgers Coffee ☕.
Karloff's Mummy is incredible. I might even prefer it to his Frankenstein films. I showed it to one of my cousins, a castle films short with my TV recorded & synced soundtrack. She ran out of the room while cursing me.I felt bad at first, but later I felt satisfied.
I LOVE your show! One very important Mummy Movie you forgot is Bubba Ho-Tep, with Bruce Campbell and Ossie Davis made in 2002. Absolutely a GEM of a film, you must see it if you haven't.
The mummy is such an underused monster and i find it tragic as its one of my favourite movie monsters , I would love to see a proper film with the mummy, not "mission embalmable"
Once again you guys have presented us with a fascinating and very well researched video. The original Karloff Mummy has never been equaled, everything that followed it never quite came up to the standard of Bride of Frankenstein or Dracula's Daughter as sequels, but then Karloff the Uncanny is a pretty hard act to follow. This is why I subscribe to you guys, because , be it B movie or classic, you always do your homework, which let's face it, involves sitting through some really terrible films and always present fantastic videos.
try '' The Mummies' Shroud 1967 ..... and Chris Lee as another Hammer Horror Mummy ...... awesome 'mummery'............... ! ...... and yoooo review ' shroud' ........................ Robin
@@diamonddog257 that's a slasher film though. And I personally never liked the idea of the Kharis mummy being controlled by a mortal like some robot instead of having his own free will like imhotep did
The 1959 Mummy is not a slasher film anymore than the original or it's sequels were, it also does not keep Kharis as a slave because he refuses to obey the high priest command to kill his love interest and instead kills him, so he does have free will.
The Mummy is such a difficult character to make for horror films nowadays as we learn more about ancient Egypt and how horrid it's been portrayed in pop culture, much like sharks and dinosaurs.
Still, I was pleasantly surpised how little racism there is in this movie. Sure it's there, but I expected a lot worse from 1932. Maybe a pre-cursor to the 1939 Hunchback?
I like the name of Boris Karloff's Mummy's name Imhotep, and to think that there really was a Imhotep that had lived about 3 to 4 thousand years ago, he was knowledgeable in a lot of different subjects, and he was perhaps the first polymath in history
Very interesting! I didn’t know that the Mummy remake by Hammer in 1959 was based on the original Mummy sequel rather than the Karloff movie. The Hammer Mummy has always been my favorite Hammer film (mostly because of the fantastic casting and the great flashblack sequence)
You said it: "To catch the atmosphere of another world". That's why I love the mummy as a horror character. For me, if a horror movie can't do that, then it fails. Great video. Perhaps you could do this kind of "studies" for other classic horror franchises.
One film critic, Denis Gifford, commented that his effective performance was tragically due to crippling arthritis, all the more tragic when you consider that Tom Tyler had been a great athlete and in spite of his slim build a weightlifting champion. Check out the serial "Captain Marvel" (it's in the Internet Archive) where he is often lifting full-grown men above his head without benefit of trick photography or physical aids.
Another great video guys!!! I believe I've seen every one of the movies. Have you done "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (1951)? - one of my all time favorites.
I think it's safe to say that after the Laemmles left Universal in 1936, the horror films made by the studio just weren't as good, with only a handful of films being anything more than average.
The scene in which princess Ananka rises out of the mud is my favorite Universal horror movie scene.And The Mummy's Curse is also the only mummy movie in which the mummy is seen tot be much stronger than a human being(in the climax) in all the other pictures he simply strangled people who just stood there.
The drop off after that first film is, to be kind, precipitous. But I confess to a soft spot in my heart for Virginia Christine in "The Mummy's Curse," pulling herself out of the grave in that back-lot swamp and staggering back to life. "I'm an actor and I'm taking the money, least I can do is give it what I've got." For your actor footnote file, Virginia Christine was in "Invasion of the Body Snatchers." She's the woman who first tries to explain to Kevin McCarthy and Diana Wynter that her uncle isn't her uncle.
She was also the terrible woman/employee at the Art Gallery that Katharine Hepburn (her boss) sends her packing (along with her hideous sculpture😂)after her racist encounter with Sidney Poitier & her daughter in "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner".
Blood From The Mummy's Tomb is my favorite Hammer Mummy film though the first one is a close 2nd. The others didn't do anything for me. Valerie Leon is a most attractive Mummy. Yum.
@@jmgmarcus808 The fact is I missed the presence of a Lee or Cushing in Curse of the Mummy's Tomb and The Mummy's Shroud though Andre Morrell almost makes up for it in the former. Blood while it would have been great with Cushing doesn't really suffer from his absence.
Edgar Allan Poe also wrote a Mummy story ‘Some Words With A Mummy’ (1845) that has a Mummy being discovered and revived but it’s a satirical story with quite a bit of humor and not a horror story at all, but it’s still a memorable and fun little story.
Years ago, I phoned the local DVD store and asked for "The Mummy" with BORIS KARLOFF. I was assured they had it. Whereupon, I received the Brendan Fraser version instead. Well, not a bad substitution but not what I wanted. Much later, I bought a copy of the Karloff version.
I am probably one of the few that enjoyed Dracula Untold. It took its time to tell the story but was pretty good. I may need to rewatch it to make sure that wasn't a mistake.
I often go to Red Rock Canyon where the exteriors of the Mummy were filmed. It is quite amazing that there has been so little erosion in nearly 100 years. ( 2 hrs drive from Hollywood in the Mojave desert)
Excellent video. As I stated once before, it's nice to see your franchise venturing off into more educational and historical material, as opposed to the quickie reviews (which are still good in their own right, however). It certainly gives "Dark Corners" more credibility and prominence within the UA-cam horror genre. (although I'm still waiting for "The Wild World of Batwoman" - LoL)
Great video I must admit I've a soft spot for the mummy's hand the two leads are great the Brendan Fraser films seem to follow that more than the Karloff original imo
Great video 🎞 I do find it interesting how so many Universal Studios Monster movies when they bring the monster to America, they end up going to Louisiana. I guess the Bayou State is a Mecca to most monsters coming to the USA. 😅
Fantastic video!! These are my favourite classic horror films, especially ''The Mummy's Ghost'', which I watch every Halloween :) You have an amazing narrative voice and a wonderful presenting presence - consider me subbed!
When that little gleam of light appears in the mummy's eye, indicating that he has been recalled to life by the reading of the Scroll of Thoth, it is one of the most terrifying moments in film history. Bramwell Fletcher was brilliant. In case you didn't know, he had been married to John Barrymore's daughter, Diana; Barrymore didn't like him, referring to BF as "that English quince."
Once again you guys have shown us what geniuses you indeed are. The last part where you showed us the films following Universal series was a great touch. Its strange because tonight I'm going to watch VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA the TV series episode titled The Mummy ( which copies the look of the old Universal movies). There were three movies you failed to cover ( hate being a nit picker ). The very bad Spanish horror film DRACULA VS FRANKENSTEIN , the very good MONSTER SQUAD and the odd man out, MONSTER BRAWL All of these films show the only times The Mummy teaming up with other monsters
My first introduction to the Mummy franchise per se, would've been an episode of Jonny Quest, where the Quest gang are in Egypt, and a Mummy comes alive to seek revenge on some Jonny Quest villains.
Another great overview! I rate the first of the Hammer Mummy films very highly, looks good, great cast, fine direction by Terence Fisher and an incredible physical performance by Christopher Lee as the Mummy, physically volatile and dangerous and truly terrifying.
thank you for this video - I never really got into the Mummy as much as I did the other Universal monsters, but this video will send me back to reconsider.
Zita Johann was so pretty. David Manners did an interview late in life, and said that he NEVER watched any of his horror movies. He thought they were too gruesome.
One of the reasons we see a big difference between old Universal series , the Hammer series and the rest of the pre-1999 films was because of one thing ... Dungeons & Dragons. I was one of the player testers for the third edition of the game and what they did make mummies more the then just the shambling undead killing machine we have seen in movies and television for decades. In D&D Mummies are intelligent undead on par with vampires and sometimes even more powerful. From spreading a disease called Mummy Rot to casting spells and even comanding one , or more then the four elements. Mummies have come long was over the last twenty years.
I watched a number of obscure later Mummy films on UA-cam in recent years. My favorite is probably "O SEGREDO DA MUMIA" (The Secret Of The Mummy), an action-horror-comedy with rock & roll music, from Brazil! Unfortunately, it looks like it's only currently available as a Region 4 disc, and it's next-to-impossible to buy direct from Brazil except with the help of a 3rd-party seller, which greatly increases the cost of what should be a relatively cheap item.
Small nitpick: John Balderston was not the "Dracula screenwriter;" Garret Fort wrote the script, based on the play by John Balderston. Balderston, in turn, based his play on the play by Hamilton Deane -- it was a bound-for-Broadway rewrite of Deane's London production. And Deane, of course, adapted his play -- very loosely -- from Stoker.
"Some Words with a Mummy." by Edgar Allan Poe deserved some mention here. First published in 1845 it resurrects the mummy with electricity (Frankenstein style)
Makes me sad that The Mummy is often overlooked because it's my absolute favorite of all the horror classics. Karloff is mesmerizing and the lead actress gives an understated performance and has great chemistry with him.
I personally think The Mummy is Karloff at his best.
It was my hubby's favorite as we loved Halloween and this was always on the list of our Universal favorites.
My favorite
Nothing will ever beat the shot of Karloff's Mummy awakening, with that tiny glint of light in his eye. Subtle but chilling at the same time. A lost art with todays movies it seems....
Yes! That sent shivers down my spine. SO eerie. Virginia Christine's resurrection scene in "The Mummy's Curse"('44) is my second favorite.
He's gone for a little walk...use to crack my husband up.
The 1932 Mummy was a visual masterpiece. Watching it in remastered blu-ray is breathtaking.
Still would rather watch the universal mummy movies than the CGI mummy movies starting with Brandon Fraser. Love all the lon Chaney movies and the hammer mummy movies also.
@@randyacuna3248 the Lon Chaney and hammer ones seemed too slasher type like Friday The 13th, Halloween, and Freddy Kreuger. This one at least had drama
The 1932 film will never be topped, it is a horror classic.
The 1940 the mummy's hand is also a very good solid adventure film. Light comedy in the first half, and it does delivers the horrors the second half.
My favorite movie!❤
The scene w/ Karloff awakening w/ Fletcher reading the spell is one of the greatest opening scenes in all of film history. The best of the lot by a long shot.
Bram Fletcher spoke at my high school in the mid 70's. He claimed he was originally supposed to be a strangling victim, but he thought of the idea of hysterical laughter.
I am surprised he didn't mention either of his first two wives, Diana Barrymore or Helen Chandler.
That scene is absolutely terrifying.
Great video. Personally I am more inclined to re-watch all those old mummy films instead of wasting my hard earned money on the Tom Cruise remake.
Besides the 1932 film with Karloff, I think the best Mummy film is the 1959 Hammer film with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee as the titular monster.
The best are the ones from the hammer ones from the 60s.
Calm down, Francis. Cruise one is not bad.
Fuck cruise.
@@CaptainSpalding72 You are right it's not bad it's absolutely terrible.
"Universal would return with Brendan Fraser for a pair of entertaining outings and a third one."
Shots fired.
The third one is still somehow better than the tom cruise one.
The second one was pretty poor too.
@@ThreadBomb I have many fond memories of the second one. It's what I expect a sequel to be.
@@ThreadBomb It wasn't great but it was entertaining, which is way more than the most recent one can say.
And yes, the third one wasn't all that great either, just got too big for its own good.
@@ThreadBomb Whenever they start with the reincarnation stuff....
Considering the mummification process includes embalming and removing the organs in addition to wrapping the body, that's a horrible way to die.
On an unrelated note, Karloff really did have a great voice. Nobody will ever forget that.
FYI the Egyptians would also remove the brain by extracting the brain with a hook shaped rod puncturing the ethmoid sinus cavity, because at the time they thought that the human brain was useless and that it was the heart that did everything and it wasn't until the 17th century when a British physician and anatomist by the name is Thomas Willis who discovered that it was the human brain that mostly did everything for the human body
Not as bad as Arnold Vosloo getting slowly eaten by scarab bugs in addition to the process
As the character says of the mummy in the movie "the
eviscera were not removed..."
I adore Karloff ❤️
Just starting the Mummy portion of my Universal Legacy Collection.
Never get tired of the Universal classics
Watch out for that Princess Ananka resurrection scene out of the mud.
Yes! That was actress Virginia Christine emerging from the mud, later to be known in U.S. television commercials of the '70's as Mrs. Olson for Folgers Coffee ☕.
The original The Mummy with Karloff is by far the best movie in this franchise.
I've always been a big fan of The Mummy, and think that the 1932 film is extremely underrated in comparison to other Universal classic horror films. It's in my top three favourites, I think the Egyptian storyline of this ancient evil is endlessly fantastic. I also love Hammer's first Mummy film. These two movies are the best Mummy films ever made. Great review, please do more of em'. Bob.G
Karloff and Lugosi are my absolute favorites. Amazing actors.
They ruled and later we loved Vincent Price.
One scene left out here that really deserves mention is the resurrection of Ananka in The Mummy's Curse. Virginia Christine or whoever it was who actually performed that stunt managed to create a moment of horror and humanity powerful enough to stand with anything from the first wave of Universal classics. Unfortunately, that time was long gone and the movie quickly reverted to the stale formula that characterized basically everything the studio was putting out by the mid-40s.
After Karloff's in the '32 original, I agree that Virginia Christine's scene in 'Curse'('44)is very chilling. People of a certain age came to know Miss Christine in U.S. television commercials of the '70's as Mrs. Olson, for Folgers Coffee ☕.
The Boris Karloff Mummy 1932 movie is one of my favorite movies that i play every Halloween!!!
Another great review. Really in-depth with gems of information.
The fez: the most evil of hats:)
Actual LOL.
fezes are cool
They are all rogue Shriners and have a parade every year.
Don't go to it.
You forgot to mention the visually beautiful Christopher Lee Hammer re-incarnation.
Karloff's Mummy is incredible. I might even prefer it to his Frankenstein films. I showed it to one of my cousins, a castle films short with my TV recorded & synced soundtrack. She ran out of the room while cursing me.I felt bad at first, but later I felt satisfied.
Zucco needs a revival. He was immensely successful as a horror and mystery actor but today he is largely unknown.
Today---Everything is largely unknown.
He elevates every film he is in. A truly unappreciated actor.
Very true.
I LOVE your show! One very important Mummy Movie you forgot is Bubba Ho-Tep, with Bruce Campbell and Ossie Davis made in 2002. Absolutely a GEM of a film, you must see it if you haven't.
Great movie!!!
The makeup in the original mummy was incredible...
The mummy is such an underused monster and i find it tragic as its one of my favourite movie monsters , I would love to see a proper film with the mummy, not "mission embalmable"
I love the 1999 one but your right, we need a return to the mummy as a sympathetic monster
The Mummy was never teamed up with the other Universal monsters.
Which meant that it still had enough power to carry a movie by his undead self.
Dan D Doty he's sort of the unloved middle child of the universal monsters
Dan D Doty there. is the Monster Squad. it wasn't made by Universal Studios. but it was closest thing .
try the hammer horror...'the mummies shroud' 1967
Once again you guys have presented us with a fascinating and very well researched video. The original Karloff Mummy has never been equaled, everything that followed it never quite came up to the standard of Bride of Frankenstein or Dracula's Daughter as sequels, but then Karloff the Uncanny is a pretty hard act to follow. This is why I subscribe to you guys, because , be it B movie or classic, you always do your homework, which let's face it, involves sitting through some really terrible films and always present fantastic videos.
Thanks, its a lot of work, but comments like this make it worthwhile.
try '' The Mummies' Shroud 1967 ..... and Chris Lee as another Hammer Horror
Mummy ...... awesome 'mummery'............... !
...... and yoooo review ' shroud' ........................ Robin
@@diamonddog257 that's a slasher film though. And I personally never liked the idea of the Kharis mummy being controlled by a mortal like some robot instead of having his own free will like imhotep did
The 1959 Mummy is not a slasher film anymore than the original or it's sequels were, it also does not keep Kharis as a slave because he refuses to obey the high priest command to kill his love interest and instead kills him, so he does have free will.
The Mummy is such a difficult character to make for horror films nowadays as we learn more about ancient Egypt and how horrid it's been portrayed in pop culture, much like sharks and dinosaurs.
Still, I was pleasantly surpised how little racism there is in this movie. Sure it's there, but I expected a lot worse from 1932. Maybe a pre-cursor to the 1939 Hunchback?
One of the films that haunted my childhood. Karloff was so , so good. The sequels were disposable silliness.
I love this DC classics series it shows a lot of passion and knowledge into films I have a lot of love for.
"For a pair of entertaining outings, and a third one" 😂
Karloff was the best. At 10 I was studying Egyptian history.
Superb homage to the classic Universal Mummy films. I still have my Aurora Glow in the Dark Mummy Model👍😃👍
I like the name of Boris Karloff's Mummy's name Imhotep, and to think that there really was a Imhotep that had lived about 3 to 4 thousand years ago, he was knowledgeable in a lot of different subjects, and he was perhaps the first polymath in history
The Karloff mummy's the best
my dad is now a fan of this channel. this video retrospective is phenomenal. had to.show it to my dad since the mummy remains his favorite
Thanks for helping spread the word.
+Dark Corners Reviews no worries. I will.continue to do so. Quality work combined with a love for the genre deserves recognition
Very interesting! I didn’t know that the Mummy remake by Hammer in 1959 was based on the original Mummy sequel rather than the Karloff movie. The Hammer Mummy has always been my favorite Hammer film (mostly because of the fantastic casting and the great flashblack sequence)
The first Hammer Mummy is probably the best Mummy film ever made after the Karloff film.
Brilliant. Must watch 'The Mummy' again. Karloff Rules!
THIS IS A PHENOMENAL VIDEO, THANKS
You said it: "To catch the atmosphere of another world". That's why I love the mummy as a horror character. For me, if a horror movie can't do that, then it fails.
Great video. Perhaps you could do this kind of "studies" for other classic horror franchises.
That's the plan. We are already working on a Hammer one...
If it's Dark Corners, it's got to be good. The mixing of dialogue and clips is always masterful and hilarious.
"He makes a decent mummy, despite the arthritis."
Wouldn't that help his performance, if anything?
Didn't even notice any arthritis. Dude is boss level
One film critic, Denis Gifford, commented that his effective performance was tragically due to crippling arthritis, all the more tragic when you consider that Tom Tyler had been a great athlete and in spite of his slim build a weightlifting champion. Check out the serial "Captain Marvel" (it's in the Internet Archive) where he is often lifting full-grown men above his head without benefit of trick photography or physical aids.
Another great video guys!!! I believe I've seen every one of the movies.
Have you done "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (1951)? - one of my all time favorites.
I think it's safe to say that after the Laemmles left Universal in 1936, the horror films made by the studio just weren't as good, with only a handful of films being anything more than average.
I actually laughed out loud at that joke about the third Fraser _Mummy_ movie.
Tom Tyler’s mummy frightened me the most as a child.
Pleased do more or all of the universal monsters series even the obscure ones. I love this series so much. 🧛🏻
The scene in which princess Ananka rises out of the mud is my favorite Universal horror movie scene.And The Mummy's Curse is also the only mummy movie in which the mummy is seen tot be much stronger than a human being(in the climax) in all the other pictures he simply strangled people who just stood there.
i came for Kingdom of Spiders, stayed during the swarm , subbed halfway through this video.
The drop off after that first film is, to be kind, precipitous. But I confess to a soft spot in my heart for Virginia Christine in "The Mummy's Curse," pulling herself out of the grave in that back-lot swamp and staggering back to life. "I'm an actor and I'm taking the money, least I can do is give it what I've got." For your actor footnote file, Virginia Christine was in "Invasion of the Body Snatchers." She's the woman who first tries to explain to Kevin McCarthy and Diana Wynter that her uncle isn't her uncle.
I think these great movies series slipped from great cinema to Saturday movies that were meant to entertain little kids and teenage boys.
She's very good, but i preferred Ramsey Ames, before she degenerated then regenerated.:)
Joseph Dougherty Virginia was also famous for playing mrs. Olsen in coffee commercials.
Dan D Doty still a good reason to watch them because we loved them when we were children. Nothing has change.
She was also the terrible woman/employee at the Art Gallery that Katharine Hepburn (her boss) sends her packing (along with her hideous sculpture😂)after her racist encounter with Sidney Poitier & her daughter in "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner".
Do a Hammer Mummy series vid. I friggin love all the Hammer Mummy movies, even...."Blood From the Mummy's Tomb"
Blood From The Mummy's Tomb is my favorite Hammer Mummy film though the first one is a close 2nd. The others didn't do anything for me. Valerie Leon is a most attractive Mummy. Yum.
@@SirKevinH Yep, both are very different. But, good. I have to admit, I like all of them.
@@jmgmarcus808 The fact is I missed the presence of a Lee or Cushing in Curse of the Mummy's Tomb and The Mummy's Shroud though Andre Morrell almost makes up for it in the former. Blood while it would have been great with Cushing doesn't really suffer from his absence.
Edgar Allan Poe also wrote a Mummy story ‘Some Words With A Mummy’ (1845) that has a Mummy being discovered and revived but it’s a satirical story with quite a bit of humor and not a horror story at all, but it’s still a memorable and fun little story.
"And a third one" That is mighty shady, and I love it!
Years ago, I phoned the local DVD store and asked for "The Mummy" with BORIS KARLOFF. I was assured they had it.
Whereupon, I received the Brendan Fraser version instead.
Well, not a bad substitution but not what I wanted. Much later, I bought a copy of the Karloff version.
I would have liked it if CAGLIOSTRO were made as well; it would probably have been a lot like CHANDU THE MAGICIAN
Great look back at the Universal Mummy films. Look forward to more retrospective videos.
I am probably one of the few that enjoyed Dracula Untold. It took its time to tell the story but was pretty good. I may need to rewatch it to make sure that wasn't a mistake.
It’s okay. Certainly a unique take to make Dracula a heroic type of character. I would have liked to see what he was like in modern day
I often go to Red Rock Canyon where the exteriors of the Mummy were filmed. It is quite amazing that there has been so little erosion in nearly 100 years. ( 2 hrs drive from Hollywood in the Mojave desert)
Excellent video. As I stated once before, it's nice to see your franchise venturing off into more educational and historical material, as opposed to the quickie reviews (which are still good in their own right, however). It certainly gives "Dark Corners" more credibility and prominence within the UA-cam horror genre. (although I'm still waiting for "The Wild World of Batwoman" - LoL)
Thanks, we came so close this week with Mars needs Women feature bat girl.
I enjoyed every second of this. Thank you for all your hard work.
Great video
I must admit I've a soft spot for the mummy's hand the two leads are great the Brendan Fraser films seem to follow that more than the Karloff original imo
The Mummy may be slow moving, but remember: you have to sleep sometime, and he doesn’t.
Great video as always. 👍
Well researched, well written, well narrated, Excellent. Many thanks.
Great video 🎞
I do find it interesting how so many Universal Studios Monster movies when they bring the monster to America, they end up going to Louisiana. I guess the Bayou State is a Mecca to most monsters coming to the USA. 😅
Excellent documentary as always. I'm totally in love with your channel...
The Mummy, Mummy's Hand, Tomb, and Ghost we're enjoyable. Not to mention The Mummy from 1959.
these deserve way more views
Excellent review & critique. You could write a book on these films! Thanks for posting!
I just have to subscribe to this channel! Been binge-watching for 2 days.... You guys are fabulous!
The music is adapted perfectly. to create perfect terror!
You make very good in depth essays,documentaries and great reviews
Fantastic video!! These are my favourite classic horror films, especially ''The Mummy's Ghost'', which I watch every Halloween :) You have an amazing narrative voice and a wonderful presenting presence - consider me subbed!
When that little gleam of light appears in the mummy's eye, indicating that he has been recalled to life by the reading of the Scroll of Thoth, it is one of the most terrifying moments in film history. Bramwell Fletcher was brilliant. In case you didn't know, he had been married to John Barrymore's daughter, Diana; Barrymore didn't like him, referring to BF as "that English quince."
Once again you guys have shown us what geniuses you indeed are.
The last part where you showed us the films following Universal series was a great touch. Its strange because tonight I'm going to watch VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA the TV series episode titled The Mummy ( which copies the look of the old Universal movies).
There were three movies you failed to cover ( hate being a nit picker ). The very bad Spanish horror film DRACULA VS FRANKENSTEIN , the very good MONSTER SQUAD and the odd man out, MONSTER BRAWL
All of these films show the only times The Mummy teaming up with other monsters
Really should have had monster squad in there!
I keep hearing people talking about doing a remake of MONSTER SQUAD.
My first introduction to the Mummy franchise per se, would've been an episode of Jonny Quest, where the Quest gang are in Egypt, and a Mummy comes alive to seek revenge on some Jonny Quest villains.
Excellent! Especially when you credit your source! Exceptional for YT! TYVM! Enjoyed!
Another great overview! I rate the first of the Hammer Mummy films very highly, looks good, great cast, fine direction by Terence Fisher and an incredible physical performance by Christopher Lee as the Mummy, physically volatile and dangerous and truly terrifying.
We will be covering hammer mummy films soon
This is a very small detail but thank you for pronouncing golem correctly.
i never saw the sequels so it's good seeing what they were all about
thank you for this video - I never really got into the Mummy as much as I did the other Universal monsters, but this video will send me back to reconsider.
Zita Johann was so pretty. David Manners did an interview late in life, and said that he NEVER watched any of his horror movies. He thought they were too gruesome.
I recommend these for people who are just discovering the genre.A good,concise overview,strong on detail.
Really well done, thanks!
These videos are amazing!
Thank you very much .
"Limping slowly from strangling to strangling is not what an actor dreams of." 😆
Thanks a lot for this most enjoyable introduction! ;)
Great review, it Scared me so much that now I want my Mummy!!😊
My favorite mummy movie is a 3 Stooges short called We Want our Mummy. Every time they talk about Rootin' Tootin's tomb I giggle like a four year old.
The Mummy movies of the 40's they blacked out the eyes on the negative to make them more scarier, the original is a masterpiece.
The best Mummy film is easily Bubba Ho Tep :)
Smacksalad Productions that's my favorite mummy movie
Guess I'm in the minority that didn't much care for that Don Coscarelli flick, though I savor his Phantasm films (yes, even all 5 of 'em)
One of the reasons we see a big difference between old Universal series , the Hammer series and the rest of the pre-1999 films was because of one thing ... Dungeons & Dragons.
I was one of the player testers for the third edition of the game and what they did make mummies more the then just the shambling undead killing machine we have seen in movies and television for decades. In D&D Mummies are intelligent undead on par with vampires and sometimes even more powerful. From spreading a disease called Mummy Rot to casting spells and even comanding one , or more then the four elements.
Mummies have come long was over the last twenty years.
As always interesting and fact filled.Much Thanks
Two best horror movies ever made.
I ment three.
The Mummy 1999 is 🔥
Learning so much
You must see Gaumont's 1912 THE VENGEANCE OF EGYPT if you want to see a great Mummy film. That is, if you can locate the film.
The mummy hammer films absolutely 💯 👌 and the universal mummy's as well...happy Halloween 🎃
I watched a number of obscure later Mummy films on UA-cam in recent years. My favorite is probably "O SEGREDO DA MUMIA" (The Secret Of The Mummy), an action-horror-comedy with rock & roll music, from Brazil! Unfortunately, it looks like it's only currently available as a Region 4 disc, and it's next-to-impossible to buy direct from Brazil except with the help of a 3rd-party seller, which greatly increases the cost of what should be a relatively cheap item.
Small nitpick:
John Balderston was not the "Dracula screenwriter;" Garret Fort wrote the script, based on the play by John Balderston. Balderston, in turn, based his play on the play by Hamilton Deane -- it was a bound-for-Broadway rewrite of Deane's London production. And Deane, of course, adapted his play -- very loosely -- from Stoker.
"Some Words with a Mummy." by Edgar Allan Poe deserved some mention here.
First published in 1845 it resurrects the mummy with electricity (Frankenstein style)
Very Well Done, thank you !
I'm convinced that Jim Hart's screenplay for "Bram Stoker's Dracula" owes as much to John Balderston's script for "The Mummy" as it does to Stoker.
I really wish more of Karloff in the Mummy makeup had been shown
It would be good to review the Hammer Studio’s mummy movie with Cushing and Lee.
+Donald Petkus We will be doing Hammer Frankenatein first... fingers crossed out thus week.