The 1940s saw the continuation of the golden age of Universal Monsters, a series of films that literally laid the groundwork for the horror genre, and while iconic monsters like Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster, the Wolf Man and the Mummy reigned supreme during this era, other rivals studios would launch their own thought-provoking entries that would…
Tag: Val Lewton
The Body Snatcher (1945) – Review
Working for RKO, producer Val Lewton brought to screen some startling moments of cinematic horror with such offerings as Cat People and I Walked with a Zombie to his credit, but in the case of The Body Snatcher, he and director Robert Wise were given the keys to the horror kingdom with Boris Karloff in…
I Walked with a Zombie (1943) – Review
The type of zombies found in modern media are a far cry from their early cinematic depictions as you will find no brains being eaten in these early outings and it was more supernatural affliction rather than viral. Thus films like 1932’s White Zombie, which dealt with the voodoo aspect of the affliction, and so…
Cat People (1942) – Review
When one thinks of low-budget horror films, such as I Was a Teenage Werewolf, we imagine movies that were designed to fill the neighbourhood Drive-Ins with their cheap thrills and cheaper production value, but in the early 1940s RKO Pictures had an ace up their slave in the form of producer Val Lewton, a man…