When
everything else fails I just watch a movie by Ed Wood and everything is fine
again. Bride of the Monster is actually one of the few financial successes in
Wood's filmography, at least when it was released. Not a surprise actually,
because it's one of his most even and "normal" films, even if that in
the eternal Edwoodian language means it's completely nuts at times. But like
all good movies it's just over an hour long - which is good, I'm tired of
overlong shitfests - and keeps the pace quite good.
Dr Vornoff
(Bela Lugosi) has one dream in life: to create, with the help of nuclear power,
super humans who can - I guess - take over the world or something. To his help
he has Lobo (Tor Johnson). When yet another man disappears in the swamp, a
brave journalist, Janet Lawton (Loretta King) takes it upon herself to solve
the mystery... and of course she's caught by Lobo and soon realizes she's the
next in line for his horrible experiments!
Wood always
had a good eye for striking visuals, and even if this movie is so cheap it's
hard to build a good atmosphere there's some wonderful shots - for example when
Prof. Vladimir Strowski (George Becwar) is laying in the arms of the giant
octopus, a gorgeous shot that somehow reminded me of what Luigi Cozzi did later
at the end of Contamination. Several of Wood's trademarks is here, including
not-so-fitting stock footage and corny cops trying to solve the mystery, but
the real interesting story is in the mansion, the characters of Dr Vornoff and
Lobo.
It's a
touching little story, a story about two lonely characters trying to survive in
their own ways. The good doctor by trying to creating super soldiers, something
that he obviously never succeeded in doing earlier and his brute butler, Lobo
(an interesting performance by Tor Johnson), a severely retarded fatso who
obviously is kinda nice in real life (he just do what his master says)- and
with a nice healthy fetish for angora! The lack of characterization of the rest
of the cast just enhances the wonderful madness of our baddies and they end up
being the only interesting folks in the whole movie. I rooted for them, because
who cares about a rude female journalist and stupid cops? Not me.
The special
effects is something special here and even if it's not as packed with wacky
effects like Plan 9 it still has the infamous (stolen) octopus without a motor,
a monster poor Bela battles in the end - while its completely unmovable! Some
says it's a stuntman doing the battle, but no... I think it looks like Bela and
it's really not a battle either. He just lays there trying to get the arms of
the octopus to move! The prop itself is nice, it just very... dead.
Bride of
the Monster might not be the best Ed Wood-movie to start with - it's too normal
and too mainstream, but it give it a try after Plan 9 and Glenda and you'll
have a lot more fun and admiration for the unique creative craft of Edward D.
Wood Jr.
3 comments:
With you all the way on this, Ninja. It's a great "Eddie!"
"It's a touching little story, a story about two lonely characters trying to survive in their own ways. The good doctor by trying to creating super soldiers, something that he obviously never succeeded in doing earlier"
Does this film have a little pacifist message like Plane 9..?
"a severely retarded fatso who obviously is kinda nice in real life (he just do what his master says)- and with a nice healthy fetish for angora!"
hahahhahahah....holy crap...only in the Ed Wood universe!
"Bride of the Monster might not be the best Ed Wood-movie to start with - it's too normal and too mainstream, but it give it a try after Plan 9 and Glenda and you'll have a lot more fun and admiration for the unique creative craft of Edward D. Wood Jr."
I might, good review, thanks ninja.
Megatron
"Bride of the Monster" is a fun movie, especially Tor Johnson's performance.
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