Das Haus des Grauens (1932)

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Das Haus des Grauens: Directed by James Whale. With Boris Karloff, Melvyn Douglas, Charles Laughton, Lilian Bond. Seeking shelter from a storm, five travelers are in for a bizarre and terrifying night when they stumble upon the Femm family estate.

“While perfectly enjoyable as a camp comedy of manners (that element comes courtesy of director James Whale) and as an elegant, low-key horror, The Old Dark House can best be appreciated when you know a little about JB Priestley, author of the source play Benighted. (Or was it originally a novel? It definitely exists as a stage play, at any rate.)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003ePriestley was an English playwright, novelist, radio broadcaster and journalist who became very well known in Britain in the 1930s and 1940s for presenting a kindly, commonsensical version of socialism and community spirit to a nation battling through the Great Depression, the Second World War and its aftermath. Several of his plays combine a supernatural or at least mysterious strain with an allegorical message about the importance of unselfishness and people working together to help one another. If you watch The Old Dark House with these points in mind you may see it in a more moving and profound light. Dangerous Corner and An Inspector Calls are similar examples of his work, still popular in Britain with amateur drama groups and touring theatre companies.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIf you can, see Old Dark House and Whaleu0026#39;s later Bride of Frankenstein as a home video double bill and compare Ernest Thesigeru0026#39;s delightfully feline and remarkably similar performances as Horace Femm and Dr Praetorius. u0026quot;Have a potatou0026quot; and u0026quot;Have some ginu0026quot; may well become part of your private family language for ever after.”

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