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Son of Ingagi

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
4.3/10
363
YOUR RATING
Son of Ingagi (1940)
DramaHorrorMysteryThriller

A newlywed couple is visited by a strange old woman who harbors a secret about the young girl's father.A newlywed couple is visited by a strange old woman who harbors a secret about the young girl's father.A newlywed couple is visited by a strange old woman who harbors a secret about the young girl's father.

  • Director
    • Richard C. Kahn
  • Writer
    • Spencer Williams
  • Stars
    • Zack Williams
    • Laura Bowman
    • Alfred Grant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.3/10
    363
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard C. Kahn
    • Writer
      • Spencer Williams
    • Stars
      • Zack Williams
      • Laura Bowman
      • Alfred Grant
    • 24User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast10

    Edit
    Zack Williams
    • N'Gina
    Laura Bowman
    • Dr. Helen Jackson
    Alfred Grant
    • Robert Lindsay
    Daisy Bufford
    Daisy Bufford
    • Eleanor Lindsay
    Arthur Ray
    • Zeno Jackson
    Spencer Williams
    Spencer Williams
    • Detective Nelson
    • (as Spencer Williams Jr.)
    Earle Morris
    • Bradshaw
    • (as Earl J. Morris)
    Jesse Graves
    Jesse Graves
    • Chief of Detectives
    The Four Toppers
    • Singing Quartet
    • (as The Toppers)
    Maggie Hathaway
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard C. Kahn
    • Writer
      • Spencer Williams
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    4.3363
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    Featured reviews

    Dethcharm

    They should've Gone To Niagara Falls...

    SON OF INGAGI is about a man and his new bride trying to enjoy their wedding night. Instead, a series of disasters -an explosion at the groom's workplace, a mad scientist and her go-rilla henchman on a rampage- threatens to derail the honeymoon.

    A fun movie featuring an all-African American cast...
    boris-26

    You keep a big Brute Man in the Basement? What happens?

    SON OF INGAGI (1940) is a rare horror film. One of the films by Zack Williams, a black film artist who made films with an all black cast, for the black audiences. (This was in the days before Denzel washington, Sidney Portier, James Earl Jones, the days you never saw a black man in the heroic lead in a film.) The real treat of the movie is the nasty old witch that lives in a little house. All she has to do is bang a low-toned gong and the big giant, who sleeps on hay, wakes up and beats the old woman's enemies to a frazzle. A rare piece of film history, and a lot of fun.
    Michael_Elliott

    Decent Horror Film

    Son of Ingagi (1940)

    ** (out of 4)

    A female doctor lives in a large castle where she brought a few things back from Africa. One is a large sum of gold and the other is a half-man, half-ape creature. One day the doctor is killed by the creature and her home is left to a newlywed couple. It doesn't take long for the couple to run into the creature.

    SON OF INGAGI is best remembered today for featuring an all black cast, which certainly wasn't the norm for 1940 and especially in the horror genre. I've seen a lot of the race pictures from this era and all of them suffer from having very small budgets and often time not having that much talent in front or behind the camera. This film here is actually pretty entertaining for what it is even with the limitations.

    What I enjoyed most about this picture was the monster itself. If you're familiar with the horror films from this period then you know gorillas and killer apes were quite popular and they'd continue to be throughout the decade. If you've seen Bela Lugosi's THE APE MAN then you'll see a few similarities to this picture but I'd argue that the ape creature here is even better since the actor's entire face is covered here (unlike Lugosi who the studio obviously still wanted you to see).

    Of course, there are several flaws in the movie, which is to be expected including some pretty fair to bad performances. I would argue that none of the performances are all that good but they had to work with what was available at the time. It should also go without saying that there wasn't too much suspense in the film and as a horror movie it's really not all that horrifying. Still, SON OF INGAGI makes for a decent way to kill a hour.
    6springfieldrental

    Rare Horror Film from Jim Crow Era Geared Towards African-Americans

    Before the mid-1950s, movies geared towards African-American audiences, which for the most part were shown in segregated theaters, avoided horror-themed flicks. That was until Sack Amusement Enterprises produced the first, and some film historians say the only black horror film of that era in February 1940's "Son of Ingagi." The low-budget film, written and starring Spencer Williams, who went on to play Andy on television's 'The Amos 'n Andy Show,' has no relation to the classic 1931 exploitation film "Ingagi." The 1940 movie does contain a 'missing link' monster transported from Africa who is kept in the basement of a doctor's home.

    Although "Son of Ingagi's" production values were a far cry from the slick films the major Hollywood studios created during the Golden era, the picture does reflect the comfort level of African-Americans' integration within the fabric of American society, unlike most roles blacks found themselves in the A-listed movies. Film critic Mark Welsh notes, "it's really nice to see black people on the screen at this time in history as normal, ordinary men and women, rather than as mugging, idiotic stereotypes used for comic effect." In "Son of Ingagi", newlyweds Eleanor (Daisy Bufford ) and Robert Lindsay (Alfred Grant) are approached by Dr. Jackson (Laura Bowman), who says she knew Eleanor's father intimately and plans to leave her personal inheritance with the couple when she dies. Dr. Jackson has transported a 'missing link' animal similar to a gorilla caged in her house to study. Unfortunately, the monster gets loose, murdering the doctor. The Lindsays inherit her house as promised and move in, not realizing the monster is still lurking around the premises.

    "Son of Ingagi" was one of many "race films," a genre popular between 1915 and the early 1950s. These movies, produced outside the Hollywood system, consisted primarily of African-American actors and shown mostly in theaters for black audiences. More than 500 movies were produced during that span, yet only 100 have survived. Alfred Sack, producer for "Son of Ingagi," was a white owner of a small studio that was part of 150 minor film production studios focused on all-black cast pictures for African-American audiences. In the segregated South these films were shown in exclusive black filmgoers' theaters. In the more integrated North, the 'race films' rarely attracted white audiences, and were shown either at matinee times during the day or late at night in regular movie theaters.

    Film historian Todd Stadtman points out, "As the products of a segregated America, the Race Films ironically present us with a vision of America that can't be seen anywhere in the commercial cinema of the time. This is an America where blacks are doctors. Lawyers, police detectives, scientists. There is not a white face in sight, and so the black actors are free from having to react to the oh-so-important doings of Caucasians and can instead relate to each other as equals."
    5gavin6942

    Quality Aside...

    A newlywed couple is visited by a strange old woman who harbors a secret about the young girl's father.

    "Son of Ingagi" is allegedly the first science fiction-horror film to feature an all-black cast. Even if the film had no merit (which it does), this alone would make it worthwhile as a historic film.

    This is really the brainchild of Spencer Williams (1893-1969), who wrote, acted and helped behind the camera. While today perhaps best remembered as the latter half of Amos and Andy, he was a true talent and a pioneer in the category of "race films".

    I would love to see this film properly released. Maybe it has been, but the public domain copy I saw was pretty unbearable and ruined what should have been a lost classic.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The character of the rich Dr. Helen Jackson (played by Laura Bowman) is inspired by real-life millionaire miser Hettie Green(1834-1916)
    • Quotes

      Nelson: They tell me that lady has enough money to burn up a wet mule.

    • Connections
      Edited into SanKofa Theater: Son of Ingagi (2023)
    • Soundtracks
      So Long, Pal
      (uncredited)

      Performed by The Four Toppers

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 4, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • House of Horror
    • Production company
      • Hollywood Pictures Corporation (I)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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