Thirty
years after an American archaeological expedition led by Professor
Stephen Banning (Dick Foran) broke into the ancient tomb of Princess
Ananka, the High Priests of Karnak finally get around to exacting their
terrible revenge. They dispatch Mehmet Bey (Turhan Bey at his
swarthiest) and his shuffling, loping, one-armed undead killing machine
Kharis (Lon Chaney, Jr., Tom Tyler, or Eddie Parker, depending on which
scene you're looking at) to the provincial New England town where
Banning and his family live. Sacred vengeance is derailed, however, when
Mehmet starts lusting after a blond white woman (Elyse Knox) who is
engaged to Banning's smug physician-son, John (John Hubbard) and diverts
the mummy from his murderous mission by assigning him the job of
abducting virgins.
This
is a silly, poorly-written movie that relies heavily on recycled
footage from THE MUMMY'S HAND and a series of trite newspaper front-page
montages for exposition. And John Banning is an annoying hero--- his
rapid emotional recovery from the horrific deaths of his father and his
aunt in their own house seems particularly callous, and it only gets
worse when he threatens Mehmet with torture (Hippocratic Oath be
damned!) and encourages the club-and-torch-wielding mob of local yokels
to burn down his ancestral home. Aside from the wonderful
night-for-night photography, the film's direction is flat,
unimaginative, and overly literal, all of which makes for rather dull
viewing.
But I am being way too rough on THE MUMMY'S TOMB. It's
an hour-long and has a kind of pulp/comic-book action pace that doesn't
skimp on the monster quotient. There's no need for me to be such a snob
about it--- it was fun when I first saw it on TV in the early 1970s and I
would go across town in a heartbeat to see it projected onto a movie
screen tonight. But I am such an avid fan of the 1932 THE MUMMY that I
unfairly want a little more out of this one, that's all...
Apparently,
the movie put up good box-office numbers in 1942 and enjoyed a
prosperous re-release afterlife. By the time THE MUMMY'S TOMB hit the TV
screens in the late 1950s, viewers who had missed the movie in earlier
days may had at least seen 1955's ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET THE MUMMY---
a tedious farce featuring a mummy named Klaris (Eddie Parker again) who
defends the tomb of an Egyptian princess from treasure hunters ---so
the mummy-as-monster idea was a familiar one. The World War II-era
references in THE MUMMY'S TOMB (there's a mention of bandleader Jan
Garber and the Russian Front, while John Banning's draft notice is a
plot point that kicks the kidnapping plan into high gear) may have dated
the film when it appeared on TV as part of SHOCK!. So, too, did the
billing of Lon Chaney, Jr. as the mute mummy, as the actor was at that
time appearing as Chingachgook in the half-hour Western TV series
"Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans." But despite all that, I would
wager that THE MUMMY'S TOMB did a lot to haul viewers in and grow the
reputation of SHOCK! on TV.
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