The
Body Snatcher (1945)
Directed by Robert Wise
Starring Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, Henry Daniell
In the debate over who is better, it's not
popular to prefer Boris Karloff over Bela Lugosi. I'm in the minority: I think
Karloff was the better and more interesting actor; Lugosi, even in his best roles, was not up to
the same level. Maybe it was his accent, but I don't find him particularly
sinister (or even erotic) in Dracula. On the other hand, Karloff was
superb as Frankenstein's monster and managed to keep up the good performances
for much of his career (I'm particularly fond of his appearance -- in drag -- in
The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.).
Lugosi's talent was wasted due to his drug
addictions, and that's one reason for his popularity -- it's a much better story
than Karloff's more sedate life (and, of course, the Ed Wood connection is fun). I recognize him as an icon, but, though he did
made a few good movies (including films with Karloff, notably The Black Cat
and Son of Frankenstein), he was never more than a competent character
actor, and just not in Karloff's class.
The Body Snatchers
was Karloff's moment. It was an Oscar-worthy performance as John Gray, the
character who gives the movie its name. Gray supplies corpses for Henry
Daniell's medical school. Of course, Gray does not just snatch corpses from
graves; he will go out and find people and turn them into corpses. (BTW, this
was a real issue in 18th and 19th century medical schools: the book
The Italian Boy gives an account of
the time, when medical schools kept wicker hampers outside their gates for the
convenience of body snatchers.) Karloff dominates every scene he's in, smiling
and gently sinister.
Lugosi has one of his last good roles as
Joseph, a worker at the medical school man, who foolishly tries to blackmail
Gray, with predictable results. Lugosi does a nice job of portraying the
poor man, but it's all Karloff's film.
One nice touch of the film is that Karloff's
Gray is not entirely evil; and Daniell is not entirely good. Both have both
good and evil sides, but Karloff is much more aware of the dichotomy that the
doctor is.
One nice bit of history is that this was
directed by Robert Wise, who went on to direct an even greater horror:
The Sound of Music.
This is a nice, atmospheric horror film (the
final scene in the carriage is quite powerful) with some great performances.
Overlooking Karloff is one of the MPAA's biggest Oscar omission.
6/19/06 |