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Horror

The Raven

- The uncanny master of make-up in a new amazing shocker

A brilliant but deranged neurosurgeon becomes obsessively fixated on a judge's daughter. With the help of an escaped criminal whose face he has surgically deformed, the mad man lures her, her father, and her fiancé to his isolated castle-like home, where he has created a torture chamber with the intent of torturing them for having 'tortured' him.

Release Date : 1935-07-08

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Universal Pictures

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Boris Karloff

Character Name : Edmond Bateman

Original Name : Boris Karloff

Gender : Male

Bela Lugosi

Character Name : Dr. Richard Vollin

Original Name : Bela Lugosi

Gender : Male

Lester Matthews

Character Name : Dr. Jerry Holden

Original Name : Lester Matthews

Gender : Male

Irene Ware

Character Name : Jean Thatcher

Original Name : Irene Ware

Gender : Female

Samuel S. Hinds

Character Name : Judge Thatcher

Original Name : Samuel S. Hinds

Gender : Male

Spencer Charters

Character Name : Col. Bertram Grant

Original Name : Spencer Charters

Gender : Male

Inez Courtney

Character Name : Mary Burns

Original Name : Inez Courtney

Gender : Female

Ian Wolfe

Character Name : Geoffrey 'Pinky' Burns

Original Name : Ian Wolfe

Gender : Male

Maidel Turner

Character Name : Mrs. Grant

Original Name : Maidel Turner

Gender : Female

Raine Bennett

Character Name : Poe (uncredited)

Original Name : Raine Bennett

Gender : Male

Al Ferguson

Character Name : The Crook (uncredited)

Original Name : Al Ferguson

Gender : Male

Nina Golden

Character Name : Dancer (uncredited)

Original Name : Nina Golden

Gender : Male

Jonathan Hale

Character Name : Bedside Dr. at Jerry's Right (uncredited)

Original Name : Jonathan Hale

Gender : Male

Arthur Hoyt

Character Name : Chapman - Buyer of Poe Memorabilia (uncredited)

Original Name : Arthur Hoyt

Gender : Male

Walter Miller

Character Name : Bedside Dr. at Judge's Right (uncredited)

Original Name : Walter Miller

Gender : Male

Bud Osborne

Character Name : Policeman (uncredited)

Original Name : Bud Osborne

Gender : Male

Madeline Talcott

Character Name : Bedside Nurse (uncredited)

Original Name : Madeline Talcott

Gender : Male

Cyril Thornton

Character Name : Dr. Vollin's Butler (uncredited)

Original Name : Cyril Thornton

Gender : Male

Anne Darling

Character Name : Autograph Hound

Original Name : Anne Darling

Gender : Female

Reviews

T

tmdb28039023

@tmdb28039023

2022-09-03

The Raven succeeded in 1935 where Roger Corman and Vincent Price failed 28 years later. The 1963 version of The Raven was written by Richard Matheson, who is quoted by Wikipedia as saying, "After hearing that they wanted to make a movie out of a poem, I felt it was a total joke, so comedy was the only way to do it." Matheson's mistake was precisely that he approached the material lightly, though; it's because Raven '35 takes itself deathly seriously — director Lew Landerss and screenwriter David Boehm are more popish than the Pope (or, in this case, more Poe-pish than Poe) — that the film transcends the horror genre and enters, albeit unwittingly, the realm of (self) parody. Consider this: early in the film the characters attend a dance recital entitled "The Spirit of Poe," in which a dancer performs a choreography while we listen to the titular poem over a musical background and see, on one side of the stage, the author in the process of capturing his masterpiece on paper. "The Spirit of Poe" would not be out of place in The Tall Guy, in which Jeff Goldblum had the title role in a satirical musical about the Elephant Man called "Elephant!" Among the spectators is the morbid Dr. Vollin (Bela Lugosi), who is not only obsessed with Edgar Allan, but also has a personal interest in ballerina Jean Thatcher (Irene Ware); Vollin reluctantly operated on Jean after a car accident, and only after her father, Judge Thatcher (Samuel S. Hinds), assured him that all other doctors agreed that he was the only one who can save her — and save her he does, falling in love with her in the process. The Judge is grateful but not that grateful, and understandably not wanting the saturnine Vollin for a son-in-law, tries to put a stop to the matter, in turn leading Vollin to hatch a nefarious plot against the Thatchers, with the unexpected but timely help of the fugitive murderer Edmond Bateman (Boris Karloff). This Bateman is, to borrow Grampa Simpson’s expression, dumb as a mule and twice as ugly. Bateman bursts into Vollin's office demanding that the former surgically readjust his face so he can live in anonymity. Perhaps knowing that the doctor likes to play hard to get, Bateman threatens him with a firearm. I’m reminded of Eminem's song "Stan," wherein the title character records a message to Slim just before he drives off into a river, logically but belatedly wondering, "Shit, I forgot, how am I supposed to send this shit out?" Similarly, Bateman's plan to force the doctor to operate on him at gunpoint has only one small flaw known as 'anesthesia' — and sure enough, Vollin not only relieves Bateman of the gun, but also paralyzes the right side of his face, promising to fix the stroke victim look he's given him if Bateman does the doctor’s bidding (to say that Karloff's makeup is crude is an understatement; rather than made-up, his face looks drawn on. Vollin invites, among others, Jean, her fiancee, Jerry, and the Judge to a soirée at his mansion — furnished with so many trapdoors, secret passageways, and dungeons that it could have been designed by H. H. Holmes —, introducing Bateman as his servant; although not exactly what he expected, Bateman's new features do serve the purpose of making him unrecognizable (if only the doctor didn't insist on calling him by his real name out loud). To make a long story short, Bateman subdues the Judge, whom Vollin attaches to a replica of the pendulum from "The Pit and the Pendulum"; additionally, he locks Jean and Jerry in "the room where the walls meet." For someone with an "extraordinary interest in Poe," Vollin's knowledge of the Bostonian author comes too close to what Lovecraft called "secondhand erudition." The doctor knows The Raven by heart, but he recites it like a schoolboy who has learned his lesson without understanding it; moreover, his interpretation of the poem is literal: according to him, Poe fell in love with a certain Lenore and lost his mind when “someone took her from him” (if the Lenore of the poem had a real-life counterpart, it was most likely Poe's mother or his wife Virginia; the consensus is that he had a more brotherly than romantic relationship with the latter). As for the pendulum, if Vollin had bothered to read Poe’s tale all the way through, he would know the device is more trouble than it’s worth (to be fair, it’s pretty much a given that the good doctor is a few cards short of a full deck, and in that sense it would be a little too much to ask for a method to his madness).