REVIEWED BY GEOFF BRADLEY:         


DICK FRANCIS – Shattered (2000). Michael Joseph Ltd., UK, hardcover, 2000; Putnam, US, hc, 2000. Several reprint editions.

DICK FRANCIS Shattered

   I’ve had a hiatus in my reading of Dick Francis’s oeuvre, longer than the one he took after this book. (His next book, Under Orders, didn’t appear until 2006.)

   The narrator, Gerard Logan, has a small but select business blowing glass, small pieces that sell to tourists in his Broadway (that’s the Cotswold village, not the New York theatre — or should that be theatre-district) shop, and larger pieces that sell as high priced art.

   Logan is best friends with a jump jockey who dies in a racing accident but has asked someone to pass a video tape to Logan for safe keeping. The video tape, which goes missing, is the McGuffin sought by a group of crooks who assault Logan in trying to locate it. Logan has to find the tape and identify the thugs and in typical Francis-hero fashion does so by putting his own body on the line.

   I’ve enjoyed Francis over the years but this was one of the least enjoyable books. I like to like my heroes — a weakness, I know — but Logan came over to me as arrogant, and plot was straight from a join-the-dots puzzle.

   Read this if you’re a Francis completist, but if you haven’t read him, seek out his earlier books like Blood Sport or Enquiry. Of course I won’t be able to resist Under Orders and the following three (the third was published in September) written with his son.

   (Department of coincidences: In the final scene of the book Logan goes to the apartment of the policewoman girl-friend he has acquired during the course of the book. There he finds the place stocked with memorabilia from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.)

REVIEWED BY DAN STUMPF:         


H. G. WELLS Invisible Man

   I’m still trying to figure out why H.G. Wells’ The Invisible Man (1898) works so well. Wells spends 30 pages building up to the obvious, radically shifts focus three times, and doesn’t ring in the nominal hero till it’s too late to care much about him.

   Yet somehow we do. The last few chapters of Kemp besieged in his house by the Invisible Man make for good action and genuine suspense, which is agreeably true of the book as a whole. I just can’t figure out why.

   I mean, there are all these words, paragraphs, pages and chapters where a mysterious stranger turns up hiding his face; there are uncanny noises, things move about, and all the while the astute critic ought to be saying, “Y’know the title of the book is like The Invisible Man … Hell-loool”

   That the reader doesn’t say any such thing — this reader didn’t, anyway — tells me Wells may have been a more gifted story-teller than I realized.

***

H. G. WELLS The Island of  Dr. Moreau

   And yup, he was. I’ve just finished reading The Island of Dr. Moreau (1896), and it seems H.G. really knew how to spin a yarn.

   From the initial ship-wreck to the resolution on an Island Hell, this is the kind of writing that deserves to be called Crackerjack: piratical captains, mad doctors, chases, fights, monsters… and an undercurrent of thoughtfulness that reads like Jonathan Swift writing for the Pulps.

   It’s nowhere near as scary as the movie they made from it back in the 30s, but it has stayed on my mind since I read it back in grade school, and I’m glad I revisited it.

         —

Editorial Comment: The spooky cover image for The Invisible Man came from a vintage paperback edition published by Pocket in 1957. The one for Dr. Moreau is a book club edition that contains both Wells’ book and Joseph Silva’s novelization of the American-International film that came out in 1977 (with Burt Lancaster, Michael York, Nigel Davenport, Barbara Carrera and Richard Basehart). Joseph Silva is often better known as Ron Goulart.

A REVIEW BY DAVID L. VINEYARD:         


JOSEPH CONRAD – Victory: An Island Tale. Doubleday Page & Co., 1915. First Edition (shown immediately below). Reprinted many times, in both hardcover and soft.

joseph conrad vICTORY

   Men of a tormented conscience, or of a criminal imagination, are aware of much that minds of a peaceful, resigned cast do not even suspect. It is not poets alone who dare descend into the abyss of infernal regions, or even who dream of such of a descent. The most inexpressive of human beings must have said to himself, at one time or another: “Anything but this.”

   We all have our instants of clairvoyance. They are not very helpful. The character of the scheme does not permit that or anything else to be helpful. Properly speaking the character judged by the standards established by its victims, is infamous. It excuses every violence of protest and at the same time never fails to crush it, just as it crushes the blindest assent. The so-called wickedness must be, like the so called virtue, it’s own reward …

joseph conrad vICTORY

    Victory was the first of Conrad’s great works and his first popular success. It is also in many ways a crime novel that might well have come from Dashiell Hammett or out of Black Mask magazine.

   We tend to think of Conrad in terms of serious literature and forget that he wrote adventure stories (Lord Jim, The Arrow of Gold, and Nostromo), spy novels (The Secret Agent) political novels (Under Western Eyes), science fiction (The Inheritors with Ford Madox Ford), historical fiction (Romance again with Ford), and even domestic drama (Chance).

joseph conrad vICTORY

    Victory , set in the islands of the Malay Archipelago is the story of Axel Heyst, a mysterious and solitary Swede (“…Heyst, the wanderer of the Archipelago, had a taste for silence …”) who sets the actions of a tragedy in motion when he saves a young English woman from her predatory employer, the German hotelier Schomberg.

   Heyst retreats to his home on remote Samburan with the girl, and Schomberg’s wrath, is brought to a head by the arrival of the mysterious Mr. Jones, his “secretary,” the violent Martin Ricardo, and Pedro the brutish animal like Portuguese half cast alligator hunter from Columbia.

joseph conrad vICTORY

   It is to these three that Schomberg entrusts his mission of revenge against Heyst and the woman with rumors of the riches the mysterious Heyst is alleged to have hidden on his remote island.

   It’s hard to read the novel today without visions of The Maltese Falcon and Gasper Gutman. Joel, Cairo, and Wilbur. There are hints of something unwholesome and perverse between Jones and Ricardo, and a suggestion of crimes unspoken. “Wickedness for it’s own reward.”

   Jones is virtually the model for the suave educated villains we have seen in a thousand books and films, but with something both decadent and perverse in his genteel shabbiness. Ricardo, his violent nature barely repressed, is another familiar figure.

   When Jones and his team arrive on Samburan the events of the tragedy, the plots of the criminals and the personal drama between Heyst and the woman plunge toward a violent bloodbath (“… there are more dead in this affair — more white people, I mean — than have been killed in many of the battles of the last Achin war.”).

joseph conrad vICTORY

   Victory isn’t a thriller by any means, or a crime novel. It is dense and character driven, and by no means a quick or simple read, but it does present a fascinating portrait of evil and in Heyst and the woman he loves almost noirish prototypes.

   And yet though the fate of Heyst and the woman are tragic, the fact that they find love and finally come together makes the novels title true rather than ironic.

   Ultimately they triumph over both the villains and themselves. Their human triumph over the forces of crime and brutality is a victory.

   The 1940 John Cromwell film of Victory is not available on VHS or DVD, but should be. Frederic March and Betty Field play Heyst and the woman, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Jerome Cowan, and Sig Ruman Jones, Ricardo, and Schomberg. Hardwicke and Cowan are especially chilling. It was also filmed in 1919 and 1930 (as Dangerous Passage).

THE BACKWARD REVIEWER
William F. Deeck


ALFRED EICHLER – Alfred Eichler. Death of an Ad Man. Abelard-Schuman, hardcover, 1954; paperback reprint: Berkley #105, 1955. British edition: Hammond, hc, 1956, as A Hearse for the Boss.

ALFRED EICHLER

   It is a rather frantic time at the Malcolm and Reynolds Advertising Agency. Reynolds has retired, and Malcolm has just had what appears to be a heart attack.

   While various officials of the agency are struggling for power in an attempt to replace Malcolm as the agency’s head, someone makes sure that Malcolm won’t be around to protest. A pair of scissors is shoved into his chest while he is in the hospital.

   Kindergarten was never like this advertising agency. Children do have some sense, but precious few employees of this agency have any. The only sensible person is Martin Ames — who appears in several of Eichler’s novels — head of the radio department, which also includes television.

   Even he is erratic. He is at one point firmly convinced that an agency employee is Malcolm’s murderer and a few moments later is brooding because he didn’t stop the murderer from killing the employee.

   Ames has inherited the agency from Malcolm, and he had an opportunity to commit both murders. For this reason, and in a hope to keep the agency from disintegrating, Ames investigates. He spots the killer by discovering a new motive for murder, or what would have been a new motive if it had had anything to do with the murder.

   He also says things like “Holy hatpin!” which I guess is typical advertising talk. And he is one of the few people who have visited a psychiatrist with a “crowded anteroom.” Does this mean a ten-minute hour?

   The novel isn’t well written and the plot isn’t that great, but the insights into advertising agencies may appeal to some.

– From The MYSTERY FANcier, Vol. 9, No. 5, Sept-Oct 1987.



Bio-Bibliographic data: According to the Revised Crime Fiction IV, by Allen J. Hubin, Alfred Eichler, 1908-1995, was a advertising copywriter based (it is to be presumed) in New York City, an easy inference, since that’s where he was born.

    He was the author of nine detective novels, many of which seem to reflect the author’s own occupation in the advertising and radio business, especially the first two, Murder in the Radio Department and Death at the Mike.

    Each of these also have as their leading characters Martin Ames and Inspector Carl Knickman, the latter of whom Bill didn’t happen to mention as being the detective of record in Death of an Ad Man, as well as several other cases told to us by Eichler. See below:

EICHLER, ALFRED. 1908-1995.

      Murder in the Radio Department (n.) Gold Label 1943 [Insp. Carl Knickman; Martin Ames]
      Death at the Mike (n.) Lantern Press 1946 [Insp. Carl Knickman; Martin Ames]
      Election by Murder (n.) Lantern Press 1946 [Martin Ames]

ALFRED EICHLER

      Death of an Ad Man (n.) Abelard-Schuman 1954 [Insp. Carl Knickman; Martin Ames]
      Death of an Artist (n.) Arcadia 1955 [Insp. Carl Knickman; Martin Ames]
      Moment for Murder (n.) Arcadia 1956 [Insp. Carl Knickman]
      Bury in Haste (n.) Arcadia 1957 [Insp. Carl Knickman]
      Pipeline to Death (n.) Hammond 1962 [Martin Ames]

ALFRED EICHLER

      Murder Off Stage (n.) Hammond 1963.

Capsule Reviews by ALLEN J. HUBIN:


   Commentary on books I’ve covered in the New York Times Book Review.   [Reprinted from The Armchair Detective, Vol. 1, No. 4, July 1968.]

    Previously on this blog:
Part 1
— Charlotte Armstrong through Jonathan Burke.
Part 2 — Victor Canning through Manning Coles.
Part 3 — Stephen Coulter through Thomas B. Dewey.
Part 4 — Charles Drummond through William Garner.

RICHARD H. GARVIN & EDMUND G. ADDEO – The FORTEC Conspiracy. Sherbourne, US, hardcover, 1968. Paperback reprint: Signet T3832, 1969. A combination of a science-fictional theme, UFO’s, with the man on a mission suspense story — and it builds toward a shocking and memorable finale.

GARVIN & ADDEO



ROSEMARY GATENBY – Aim to Kill. Morrow, US, hardcover, 1968; Robert Hale, UK, hc, 1969. Paperback reprint: Pyramid X-2094, 1969. Weakened by too leisurely an approach (largely flashback), this second novel describes a small town terrorized by a seemingly random sniper.

Rosemary Gatenby



FRANK GRUBER – The Gold Gap. Dutton, US, hardcover, 1968; Robert Hale, UK, hc, 1968. Paperback reprint: Pyramid N2558, 1971. Commander Sergeant returns a hero from Viet Nam, and accepts a millionaire’s assignment to investigate his fiance — a job which turns out to have international implications. This is a smooth job, though not so deviously plotted as some.

E. RICHARD JOHNSON – Silver Street. Harper & Row, US, hardcover, 1968. British title: The Silver Street Killer. Hale, hc, 1969. Paperback reprints: Dell, 1969; IPL, 1988. This is a powerful first novel by an inmate of the Minnesota State Prison, dealing with the seamier side of a large city slum and harshly carved out in the vernacular of its inhabitants. [Series character: Tony Lonto.]

E. RICHARD JOHNSON



REVIEWED BY WALTER ALBERT:         


THE DARK HORSE. First National, 1932. Warren William, Bette Davis, Guy Kibbee. Vivienne Osborne, Frank McHugh, Sam Hardy, Berton Churchill, Harry Holman, Charles Sellon, Robert Emmett O’Connor, Robert Warwick, Louise Beavers, Wilfred Lucas Photography by Sol Polito; director: Alfred E. Green. Shown at Cinecon 40, Hollywood CA, September 2004.

THE DARK HORSE 1932

   Guy Kibbee, the “dark horse” gubernatorial candidate of this political satire, is described by Warren William, his campaign manager, as “so dumb that every time he opens his mouth, he subtracts from the sum total of human knowledge.”

   Bette Davis is William’s secretary (and long-time girlfriend), who plays a nondescript role with her usual intelligence, but it’s Vivienne Osborne, as William’s predatory ex-wife, who steals the female acting honors as she lures Kibbee into a tryst, where in a game of strip poker he’s getting down to essentials as the police and reporters close in on their hideaway, with William flying in at the last minute in an attempt to get to the love nest ahead of them.

   Kibbee is a complete buffoon, completely innocent of anything that passes for intelligence, but he has a weak spot, an eye for a shady lady, and this pre-code film makes no bones about the unseemly nature of his relationship with Osborne.

   William is a human weasel, willing to do anything to promote his candidate, with Davis his conscience who rather belatedly manages to salvage William from the eager hands of the law. Kibbee is elected with William and Davis finally united and leaving the state to its new governor and a corrupt crew of supporters.

   I won’t be so crass as to suggest that this was selected as a less-than-discreet commentary on this year’s political slug-fest [2004], but astute observers will note some similarities with the contemporary scene. Sharp dialogue and frank treatment of the racy relationship of Kibbee and Osborne mark this as a pre-code script, and its quick footed pacing (and on the mark performances) made it a late-night favorite of the convention.

IT’S ABOUT CRIME
by Marvin Lachman


JOHN DICKSON CARR – Dark of the Moon.

Harper & Row, 1967. Paperback reprints: Berkley, February 1969; Carroll & Graf, 1987. UK edition: H. Hamilton, hc, 1968.

JOHN DICKSON CARR Dark of the Moon

   John Dickson Carr was living in South Carolina when he died, so it is somewhat fitting that the last Gideon Fell mystery, Dark of the Moon, should be set in that state.

   A deviously plotted mystery, with its roots going back to the Civil War and even two centuries before, is only part of the attraction here. This is a book of many contrasts: ghosts are prominent, yet there is the fair play detection we expect from Carr.

   There is the spooky atmosphere of an old Southern mansion, and yet there is a hilarious baseball game, reminiscent of the time Carr/Dickson gave us Sir Henry Merrivale at bat in A Graveyard to Let.

   Finally, there is Fell, English to the core, having to function in hot weather in the US, after arriving in the South in his typical “shovel hat and a black cloak as big as a tent.”

– Reprinted from The MYSTERY FANcier, Vol. 9, No. 3, May/June 1987
         (very slightly revised).



A REVIEW BY DAVID L. VINEYARD:         


ANDREW VACHSS – Haiku. Pantheon, hardcover. First Edition: November 2009.

ANDREW VACHSS

   Haiku, for anyone who hasn’t been paying attention, is a form or Japanese poetry consisting of three lines, and notable for its beauty, precision, and simplicity. It is also notable for one other thing that far too many western writers seem incapable of understanding. It doesn’t work very well in English.

   English language haiku tends to be pretentious, portentous, and empty. It misses almost entirely the thing that makes actual haiku haunting and viable. You probably can’t do limericks in Japanese. English haiku has the same problem, it neither scans nor fulfills artistically.

   Now, I’m sure there are some fans of English haiku out there, and some who even write it. I have no problem with that, but don’t fool yourself. It isn’t the same anymore than a 16th century Japanese writer could have written Shakespearean English.

   Some forms of writing are language centric. I’ve read that the remarkable thing about Omar Khayyam is that his quatrains read better in English than in the original Arabic — which is why he is a minor poet in his own language, but a major one in ours.

   Which could be a metaphor for Andrew Vachss’s latest novel. He tries to write in the voice of an Asian character foreign to these shores, and instead he sounds as if he ate some bad fortune cookies and watched too many episodes of Kung Fu.

   Far too many.

   Vachss is a good writer. Once in a while he is very close to a fine writer. While I am not a fan of his Burke books over all — for me they there is an element of exploitation to them — I recognize and applaud the white hot passion Vachss brings to his books, the almost Spillane-like conviction and power, but married to a more controlled and carefully crafted prose.

   In addition I will state flatly and offer no defense in saying I think his novel Two Trains Running, a stand-alone novel, is one of the best crime novels of the last thirty years, one of the best since Hammett’s The Glass Key. Find it, read it. Admire it. It is simply a fine crime novel that repays multiple readings.

ANDREW VACHSS

   But skip Haiku unless you are a die-hard Vachss fan. And maybe even if you are.

   The incredibly contrived and strained plot of this short novel deals with a group of burned out street people who join together on an epic quest that will reveal and redeem them, if they survive it…

   Ho, the narrator, is a sensei seeking redemption, Michael is a gambling addict, Ranger a spaced out Vietnam vet, Lamont a street gang leader turned poet and burned out on alcohol, and Brewster an obsessive pulp collector who sets them all in motion when the deserted building where he hides his treasures is scheduled for destruction.

   Following a mysterious woman in a white Rolls Royce Michael conceives a plan to blackmail her if he can find her. He recruits the others to track her down and in the meanwhile they also find themselves seeking a new home for Brewster’s beloved collection.

   The plot practically drips with the foreshadowing of depth and importance. Metaphor hangs over it like big city smog.

   Unfortunately none of the people in the book are really characters — they are metaphors for Vachss message about community and heroes, and the nobility of man in even the most desperate of situations.

   All very admirable, but not very entertaining. On top of which he insists on telling us all this in Ho’s strained and false voice, rather than letting any of it develop from his plot or his character’s actions. Rather than trust his readers to get his point he drives every point in like a nail with a nail gun.

   Unsubtle writers really shouldn’t try for subtlety. Vachss is at his best when he is in your face, at his most subtle when he isn’t trying to be subtle at all. Here he seems to be trying to somehow hammer home subtly. As you can imagine that’s not very successful.

   Having a writer virtually shouting at you how important and deep his work is may not be the best strategy for entertainment. It’s not a particularly good one for art either. Art should speak for itself just as entertainment should. It’s never a good idea for your narrator to keep telling the reader how important what he is saying is.

   The problem isn’t the plot, or the characters. They aren’t far from the street people in many of Vachss’s well-drawn books. The problem is the incredibly heavy-handed second-hand Kung Fu narration of Ho, Vachss’s narrator.

   In Michael’s obsessed and possessed consciousness, there is no room for morality, He is capable of highly complex thoughts, but all his thinking is reserved for the computation of odds. He has been waiting for the one bet he can’t lose, that “mortal lock” for many years. With each passing season his connection to reality grows more frayed.

   The unenlightened often confuse insanity with stupidity. Many of us down here see things not visible to others.

   In the military, my physical skills were almost cosmically superior to others.

   I rejected the code of the warrior as I had that of the priest. A true priest. like a true warrior, fears nothing but dishonor.

   214 pages of this is a lot to put up with. It’s like reading a novel length essay by a talented but unenlightened college sophomore who has just discovered Proust or Henry James. You appreciate his finer sensibilities, but you would give anything if he could write a simple declarative sentence.

   Mostly Haiku reads like a really pretentious and slightly self-referential graphic novel without pictures, or a really bad film script. You can almost hear the strained and overdone prose voice over long shots of mean streets. Unfortunately Haiku isn’t a graphic novel or a film, but an actual novel.

ANDREW VACHSS

   Ironically the Batman novel Vachss wrote was considerably better written than this and a much better read.

   This is the kind of book where people have a “lupine grin” rather than a wolfish one, or a “palpable odor of fear” rather than the stench of fear. Ho seems determined to say everything in the most strained and pretentious voice imaginable.

   We would all have been better served if Vachss lost his Thesaurus. Vocabulary is not always a virtue in a writer’s toolbox. Words can get in the way as well as illuminate. In attempting Ho’s voice Vachss divorces himself from everything that gives his work its power and its strength.

   Ho removes Vachss from the street and the street people he writes so well about. It’s as if Raymond Chandler had tried to strain Philip Marlowe’s Los Angeles through Christopher Marlowe’s voice. Ho is so noble and philosophical that he never takes on a human face despite the tragedy and guilt that drives his actions. If you can get past him you might enjoy this. I couldn’t.

   I suppose the business about saving Brewster’s library of pulps and paperbacks is supposed to have some deeper meaning about preserving our culture, and how popular literature sometimes speaks to a truer portrait of the real America than finer literary works, but all I could think was I would rather be reading any one of the books in Brewster’s collection than this.

   Vachss is a much better writer than this. But he is not an artist, he’s a storyteller. He is capable of telling moving and even important stories, but popular literature and literature are not the same thing, and that is not a put down. He is capable of drawing painfully sharp portraits of the streets and the people who haunt them. Even here when he gets away from Ho and his borrowed voice he once in a while taps into that — but not often enough to redeem the book.

   Why Vachss felt he had to write this I can only guess, and won’t speculate here. He had enough sense to keep it short though, and I suspect he must know this isn’t his best work.

   At one point he describes a character: “If anything he looked like a man standing in the shade of a tree who could not understand why this gave him no relief from the sun.” The reader can surely sympathize, wondering why this novel is giving him no entertainment and no relief from Ho’s strained narration.

   Vachss can write well, powerfully, but here he proves he can also overreach. It won’t hurt his reputation. His loyal and passionate fans will praise it, and he’ll go back to what he does so well with no harm done, save to readers who expect a certain level of competence and entertainment from his work.

   But unless you are one of those die hard fans give this one a pass. Rent the first season of Kung Fu on DVD instead. At least the overdone pseudo Taoism of Caine and his Master has the charm of a certain camp sensibility. Vachss is all too obviously sincere, which is a shame, because this same plot would have worked as a comic novel ala Donald Westlake or much of Elmore Leonard.

   God only knows, this one could use a few laughs.

   Skip this one and spend the money on his Two Trains Running, a book that really is a work of genuine art and skill, a top flight crime writer at the very height of his ability and craft. That’s the real McCoy. That’s Vachss at his best and most representative.

   Listening to Ho’s false and pretentious voice isn’t a good deal more comfortable than being cornered by an actual street person. Instead of pity and compassion, all you feel is the need to escape. Luckily that can be done by simply closing the book. Or not picking it up in the first place.

   As I usually do before heading out of town, I’ve been busy packing up and getting some reviews posted that I wanted to squeeze in before I go. Rich Harvey’s Pulp Adventurecon #10 is an all-day show on Saturday in Bordentown NJ, and I’ll be there:

DATE:
Saturday, November 7, 2009
10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

LOCATION:
Ramada Inn of Bordentown
1083 Route 206, Bordentown NJ
(Just off NJ Turnpike Exit 7)

   I’ll be leaving tomorrow morning with Paul Herman. We’re planning on doing some bookhunting along the way, then staying tomorrow night with noted paperback collector Dan Roberts over in nearby PA. (What’s really neat about Dan’s collection is that it’s all out on shelves where you can actually see it, and he has a lot of shelves. Unlike having four do-it-yourself storage areas that you can’t get into all four of, since right now the door on one is busted, and even for the other three, it has to be during regular business hours. Sometimes I feel as though I have to make an appointment several days in advance to see my own stuff.)

   As for the Bordentown show, I always have a great time, and I’m looking forward to it.

THE APE. Monogram, 1940. Boris Karloff, Maris Wrixon, Gene O’Donnell, Dorothy Vaughan, Gertrude Hoffman, Henry Hall. Based on a play by Adam Shirk, adapted by Curt Siodmak. Screenwriters: Siodmak and Robert Carroll. Director: William Nigh.

THE APE Boris Karloff

   This low-budget horror film was among those shown on TCM as part of a day-long festival of Boris Karloff movies just before Halloween.

   In David Vineyard’s rundown of the list of titles (see the comments following), he gave rather short shrift to this one, and I’m sure rightfully so.

   It’s short on thrills, imagination and budget, not necessarily in that order, but the presence of Mr. Karloff in it makes it worth a look-see, as it almost always does.

   He plays one of his patented, well-recognized characters in this one, the more than slightly befuddled Dr. Bernard Adrian, whose dream is find a cure for polio in his backroom laboratory, first for crippled Frances Clifford (Maris Wrixon), who lives only a short distance away, and then for all mankind.

THE APE Boris Karloff

   He’s a kindly old man, rather feeble-looking, but slightly scary with that glaring intensity that’s always in his eyes – the sort of old man whose house small kids dare each other to throw rocks at, which they do.

   To obtain the serum for Miss Clifford’s recovery – well, that’s where the escaped ape from a circus traveling nearby comes in. Dr. Adrian finds he needs what seem to be spinal taps from dead men to continue his work, and somehow it appears that he has the ape doing his stealthy, late-at-night tasks for him.

   Here are the key words in the review so far: befuddled, kindly, scary, intensity, stealthy. Without Boris Karloff in this movie, you could also call it ludicrous. But with him in it, it’s transformed into another dimension altogether.

   It’s still not a very good movie, but I think there are parts of it, if I can convince you to watch it, that you may not forget — and no, I don’t mean the scary parts.

« Previous PageNext Page »