Dr. Vollin ist ein brillanter, aber instabiler Chirurg. Er rettet das Leben von Jean Thatcher, einer schönen jungen Sozialitin, die bei einem Autounfall verletzt wurde und sich zunehmend zu ... Alles lesenDr. Vollin ist ein brillanter, aber instabiler Chirurg. Er rettet das Leben von Jean Thatcher, einer schönen jungen Sozialitin, die bei einem Autounfall verletzt wurde und sich zunehmend zu ihr hingezogen fühlt.Dr. Vollin ist ein brillanter, aber instabiler Chirurg. Er rettet das Leben von Jean Thatcher, einer schönen jungen Sozialitin, die bei einem Autounfall verletzt wurde und sich zunehmend zu ihr hingezogen fühlt.
- Edmond Bateman
- (as Karloff)
- Dr. Richard Vollin
- (as Lugosi, Bela Lugosi)
- Autograph Hound
- (Gelöschte Szenen)
- Autograph Hound
- (Gelöschte Szenen)
- Drug Clerk
- (Gelöschte Szenen)
- Autograph Hound
- (Gelöschte Szenen)
- Actor reading 'The Raven'
- (Nicht genannt)
- The Crook
- (Nicht genannt)
- Dancer
- (Nicht genannt)
- Bedside Dr. at Jerry's Right
- (Nicht genannt)
- Chapman - Buyer of Poe Memorabilia
- (Nicht genannt)
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I have always loved this strange little film, even as a kid. Bela Lugosi has one of his greatest roles as the insane Dr. Vollin, a part which ranks right up there with Dracula and Ygor. It's also one of those rare times where he actually upstages Boris Karloff.
At only 60 or so minutes, the 1935 version of THE RAVEN is brisk entertainment with all the golden elements of a fine horror movie: a crazed doctor, his misshapen assistant (Karloff), secret rooms and lots of thunder and lightning. There are trap doors, a creepy dungeon, and a torture chamber. This film doesn't pretend to be profound or a literary rendition of Poe's works... it's just Bela and Boris - the two greatest horror stars of all time - doing what they do best.
The comedy in the film is rare, and doesn't detract from it. The main issue at hand is Dr. Vollin's jealous need for revenge to satisfy his own tortured soul...by inflicting horror on those he feels have caused his misery. The moment where Bela blackmails Karloff and cackles maniacally has no equal.
A perfect companion to THE BLACK CAT, it's not cinematically as good, but I have always had much more fun with it. Highly recommended for fans of "classic" horror!
Lugosi's role in this one is much larger than Karloff's, and Bela carries most of the story. His theatrical style is quite appropriate in the role of Dr. Vollin, making for an entertaining yet genuinely dangerous foe. When Lugosi is in good form, he can make the most ridiculous dialogue come out right. Both the story and dialogue here would indeed collapse under the most basic logical analysis, and Lugosi's showmanship is one of the reasons why much of it works anyway.
While Karloff has a smaller role, he also does a good job, and indeed the movie would not have worked very well without Karloff's efforts in making Bateman pathetic and unheroic, yet human and understandable. The rest of the cast have fewer opportunities, yet the roles are filled by good character players who all do their jobs well.
The consensus, namely that "The Raven" is a cut below the previous year's Boris/Bela collaboration "The Black Cat", seems accurate. Yet "The Raven" in itself is a solid and usually entertaining feature.
What has brought that about was Judge Samuel S. Hinds who has begged and persuaded Bela Lugosi to come out of research and do a delicate bit of neurosurgery to save daughter Irene Ware's life. Not only does he save her life, but she's back and better than ever at her modern dance gig.
Irene Ware was a beautiful girl, in real life a beauty contest winner. No wonder Dr. Lugosi starts confusing her with the famous Lenore in Poe's The Raven. But she doesn't want anything to do with him. Never mind that, Lugosi invites several people over including Hinds and Ware and he's going to settle accounts with all of them Edgar Allan Poe style.
To help him Lugosi has Boris Karloff who is a criminal on the run who has been made truly hideous by some of Bela's surgery. Bela keeps Boris on a short lease saying he'll fix him if he'll aid and abet his mad scheme.
The Raven is strictly an actor's vehicle and if it weren't for the presence of those masters of Gothic horror Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi in the cast, this film would not fly. But with them leading the cast The Raven moves up a few notches in ratings. The two of them work hard to sell this film and they succeed admirably.
Bela and Boris, Forevermore.
Running at just over one hour, The Raven simmers nicely as the characters form, and then boils to the surface for the furious last quarter. In the build up we have been royally treated to some truly excellent scenes as Vollin steadily grows more deranged. The unmasking of Bateman post surgery is unnerving, and thanks to Karloff's ability at making a criminal sympathetic, heartfelt. This is followed by a mirror sequence that is a horror highlight of the 30s and puts us in no doubt that Vollin is a terrifying creation. The creepy house setting is naturally a horror staple but one can't help wondering what a better director than Lew Landers could have made with the simple but effective premise? It's solid enough from Landers, some nice shadow play etc, but what stops it breaking out into genre classic status is its lack of a creeping menace type atmosphere. Which is a shame as it has a potent score from Clifford Vaughan. Still, The Raven is a fine genre piece showcasing two genuine icons, and in spite of its obvious simplicity and little flaws, ends triumphantly in a blaze of insanity and ironic cruelty. 8/10
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAccording to Greg Mank's book "Karloff and Lugosi, Karloff received $10,000 for his work, Lugosi $5000, Irene Ware $625, Lester Matthews $1153.76, and Samuel S. Hinds $1333.35.
- PatzerAfter Dr. Vollin regales his house guests on the subject of Edgar Allan Poe, all rise to retire. Jean Thatcher stops, returns to her former place on the couch, and has to free her gown from the cushion. This action causes her to be the last guest to leave the room, allowing her to have a private moment with Bateman. In their subsequent two-shot, she apologizes to him for having been startled earlier when he'd entered the room where she was fixing her hair.
- Zitate
Edmond Bateman: I'm saying, Doc, maybe because I look ugly... maybe if a man looks ugly, he does ugly things.
Dr. Richard Vollin: You are saying something profound.
- Crazy CreditsThe names of Spencer Charters and Ian Wolfe were accidentally reversed in the credits.
- VerbindungenFeatured in House of Horror: The Raven 1935 (1958)
- SoundtracksMusic
(uncredited)
from Die schwarze Katze (1934)
Original Music and Classical Music Arrangements by Heinz Roemheld
Played as background music
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- The Raven
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 115.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 1 Minute
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1