History of mummy films and history of the infamous curse.History of mummy films and history of the infamous curse.History of mummy films and history of the infamous curse.
Photos
John Balderston Jr.
- Self
- (as John Balderston)
Bud Abbott
- Peter
- (archive footage)
Ramsay Ames
- Amina Mansouri
- (archive footage)
John L. Balderston
- Self (Screenwriter)
- (archive footage)
Leon Belasco
- Ali
- (archive footage)
Paul E. Burns
- Banning Caretaker
- (archive footage)
John Carradine
- Yousef Bey
- (archive footage)
Lon Chaney Jr.
- Kharis
- (archive footage)
Virginia Christine
- Princess Ananka
- (archive footage)
Eduardo Ciannelli
- High Priest
- (archive footage)
Lou Costello
- Freddie
- (archive footage)
James Crane
- Egyptian High Priest
- (archive footage)
Bramwell Fletcher
- Ralph Norton
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis documentary is featured on both the Classic Monster Collection and Monster Legacy Collection DVDs for The Mummy (1932).
- ConnectionsEdited from Dracula (1931)
Featured review
This is an interesting documentary about Universal's classic Mummy series of movies. It concentrates the most on the first one, providing information on how it came to be, about its director Karl Freud, its main stars Boris Karloff and Zita Johann, and makeup man (or sadist?) Jack Pierce.
There are interviews with film historians, and relatives of some of the people involved with the film, such as Karloff's daughter. Relatively little attention is paid to the sequels, but they are covered.
I found it interesting how The Mummy started off as being about the Italian historical character Cagliostro! Also interesting to see was how The Mummy copies certain formulas and scenes from the Universal Dracula film, which they illustrated by showing some of these scenes one after another. A similar thing happened with The Invisible Man copying Frankenstein, as the documentary for The Invisible Man notes.
There are interviews with film historians, and relatives of some of the people involved with the film, such as Karloff's daughter. Relatively little attention is paid to the sequels, but they are covered.
I found it interesting how The Mummy started off as being about the Italian historical character Cagliostro! Also interesting to see was how The Mummy copies certain formulas and scenes from the Universal Dracula film, which they illustrated by showing some of these scenes one after another. A similar thing happened with The Invisible Man copying Frankenstein, as the documentary for The Invisible Man notes.
Details
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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