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Edward Arthur Parker

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Edward Parker

Are We Not Men? – ‘Island of Lost Souls’ and What It Means to Be Human
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After the success of Dracula in early 1931, several studios large and small rushed into production on their own macabre features. With the early thirties being the depths of the Great Depression, these studios were eager to make films on low budgets that could turn large profits. As has continued to be the case even to this day, horror films were the prime candidate. Besides Universal, the studio with one of the strongest track records in the genre during this time was Paramount. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) had been a financial and critical success, winning its star Frederic March an Academy Award for his dual role. The studio decided to return to the well of literature for its follow-up, adapting H.G. Wells’ The Island of Dr. Moreau into Island of Lost Souls (1932), which remains an important and effective example of early science fiction/horror.

The film stars Charles Laughton as Dr.
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 8/18/2022
  • by Brian Keiper
  • bloody-disgusting.com
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