Edward Jekyll, ignorant of how his father had brought forth death and destruction with his experiments, is pursuing a chemist career despite the fact that he has been discharged from school ... Read allEdward Jekyll, ignorant of how his father had brought forth death and destruction with his experiments, is pursuing a chemist career despite the fact that he has been discharged from school or his unorthodox experimentations. When the time comes for his father's estate, which had... Read allEdward Jekyll, ignorant of how his father had brought forth death and destruction with his experiments, is pursuing a chemist career despite the fact that he has been discharged from school or his unorthodox experimentations. When the time comes for his father's estate, which had been put in trust, Edward first learns of his father's actions and rather than ignore the... Read all
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- Tenement Landlord
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- Insp. Grey
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- William Bennett
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- Hazel Sorelle
- (uncredited)
- Magistrate
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- Copy Boy
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- Constable
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- Man in Bar
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- Woman in Window
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Featured reviews
Get your pillow ready for this sure-fire cure for insomnia. Mr. Hyde is nowhere to be found in this dull and tiresome dud that features Louis Hayward as the son of the infamous doctor trying to find out what his old man was up to in that laboratory.
Interest wanes almost immediately as we wait for some kind of attempt at action to develop. It takes a very long time for this possibility to gain ground, but by that time it's too late for those who are still conscious.
As stated, Mr. Hyde is practically a no-show. I don't blame him for not sticking around.
It's easy to see why this film was titled The Son of Dr. Jekyll and not The Son of Mr. Hyde. Other than the opening scene where Hyde (I'm not entirely sure it was Hyde) has about five minutes of screen time, we see him for less than 10 seconds in the rest of the film. Very disappointing. Without Hyde, Dr. Jekyll has a tough time carrying a movie by himself.
The movie is really more of a crime mystery than a horror regardless of how it is listed on IMDb. The "son" spends the majority of the movie tying to figure out who is framing him as mad killer. While it is a decent enough idea for a movie, the killer's true identity is given away so early that there are few dramatic or tense moments later on.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Edward is altered by his father's formula, makeup artist Clay Campbell used colored filters to effect the change. He had applied red makeup to Louis Hayward and then passed a two color filter - red and bluish-green - in front of the camera lens. The makeup looked normal under the red filter, but turned dark and scary as the camera shot through the blue-green one. Makeup artist Wally Westmore used the same technique in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931).
- Goofswhen Edward is writing his notes down, he misspells the word nothing twice: spelling it nothnig.
- Quotes
Lottie Sorelle: The pity of it was - she believed in him, right to the end!
Edward Jekyll: Are you sure?
Lottie Sorelle: Why, I was with her that day, when he came in, murder in his heart - like a beast!
- ConnectionsFeatured in TJ and the All Night Theatre: The Son of Dr. Jekyll (1978)
Details
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- The Son of Dr. Jekyll
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- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1