 |
| Horror Hair: Rose Hobart as Lilyan |
THE SOUL OF A MONSTER (1944). Director: Will Jason.
A great doctor and humanitarian, George Winson (George Macready), is dying and no one can save him. His wife, Ann (Jeanne Bates), calls on any power, including the power of darkness, to save him. Along comes a mysterious woman named Lilyan (Rose Hobart) with a severe and hideous hairdo, who somehow manages to save George's life. However, everyone -- including his friends and associates Fred (Erik Rolf) and Dr. Vance (Jim Bannon of The Unknown) -- notice that the good doctor has changed and doesn't especially care about people anymore. Ann is convinced that George is under the control of the evil Lilyan, and the witch even tries to get George to murder Dr. Vance. Then George wakes up ...
 |
| Jeanne Bates and George Macready |
The ending to the pretty terrible
Soul of a Monster will have you groaning. The screenplay by Edward Dein -- who was better known as a director [
The Leech Woman] -- is ludicrous, with stilted dialogue that would have been a challenge to any actor. Despite this, Rose Hobart manages to make a minimal impression and Macready is almost always on target in his performances. The best you can say about Will Jason's direction is that it is fortunate he did no more horror movies. Dein did write a few more scripts in the genre, which were better than this. The basic effect of the movie is that of a filmed old comic book with little logic and very haphazard storytelling. A near-murder sequence where Macready stalks his friend (who never mentions it to anyone) with an icepick in hand is so protracted and slow that it becomes more boring than suspenseful. A scene with a boys' choir singing "Ave Maria" is more interesting.
Verdict: A waste of an interesting idea. *1/4.
No comments:
Post a Comment