Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The Climax


(1944)

Dr. Hohner, a theatre physician at the Vienna Royal Theatre, murders his diva soprano mistress when she breaks up with him (she had it coming). He hides her body in a large room abutting his office and the crime is never solved (great forensics, guys). Ten years later a young, attractive singer joins the theatre Dr. Hohner is startled to hear that she sounds remarkably like his ex-girlfriend. This, of course, sends him over the deep end and he decides that he must silence her beautiful voice, which he accomplishes through hypnosis. When his hypnotic suggestions (“You will never sing again”) begin to fail, he concludes that the only way to truly silence her is to snuff her out.


I'm so bored

“Hooray!” I exclaimed when I received this Boris Karloff film in the mail, “More vintage horror with Karloff!” I thought when I settled down to watch it. Boy was I wrong. It only took about 5 minutes before I started having thoughts about aborting it, or slashing my wrists. First, I hate, hate, hate, Technicolor and it has no business being part of any 1940s horror film (apparently this was Karloff’s first film in color). Technicolor makes everything look too bright and fake. I felt like I was in Munchkinland and I was being asked to follow some yellow brick road. I momentarily thought of changing the color to black and white but I honestly have no idea how to do this on my television. Believe it or not, the Technicolor was not the worst part. The worst part is that this film pulls a major bait-and-switch. Sure it has Karloff who plays a murderer, but the film mainly focuses on a half dozen or so lavish musical performances! We are treated to a number of full dress rehearsals and evening performances at the Vienna Royal Theatre. If you cut the music out of this film the non-music portion probably runs about 15 minutes. I was so disgusted but I stuck with it. “Surely it will get better!” I rationalized. Nope. Even Karloff seemed completely bored and was clearly phoning it in with a monotone, tired performance. The actual “climax” comes swiftly and then we get the big, fat, merciful “The End”.

6 comments:

Whirlygirl said...

I'm glad you watched this one without me. You Know I would have made you turn it off the second my eyes hit the technicolor. How did you manage to make it through all the singing? I know that kind of stuff is a nightmare for you.

Catfreeek said...

I've never heard of this film, I guess I know why.

AC said...

whoa, jpx, i dunno if you'll see a worse movie this october. i'm a little bit jealous....

Johnny Sweatpants said...

technicolor = sleeping pill

What is it about those washed out colors that makes me curl up in a fetal position?

DKC said...

Ha! A horror movie that turned into a musical...JPX's worst nightmare!

Octopunk said...

That is pretty good... like it was engineered 65 years ago to piss off JPX specifically.

I had no idea you disliked Technicolor so much. I must confess I've never formed an opinion of it.

Malevolent

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