"Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff star in Shock's full-length feature film THE INVISIBLE RAY. Tune in and see the man who had death in his finger tips. It's a shocker!"
It's not often you get to say of a Karloff-Lugosi movie that Karloff over-acts and Lugosi really reins it in, but I think that is the case in THE INVISIBLE RAY.
I really like Lugosi's rather restrained, thoughtful performance in this movie. I'm surprised that more Lugosi fans don't mention THE INVISIBLE RAY as a favorite.
Another Realart trailer, it seems there aren't any originals from the 30s. As a Lugosi fan/buff, I would personally count his performance in THE INVISIBLE RAY as my favorite opposite Karloff, even more so than THE BLACK CAT.
DWRAYGER DUNGEON - "R.I.P." (2007 - 2022)
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Well, here we are the end of Countdown to Halloween, and it's with a heavy
heart, I have to tell you that Tabonga and I have made the collective
decisi...
Williamson, Frazetta & Krenkel: The One Who Waits
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"The One Who Waits" originally appeared in the E.C. comic *Weird Science*
#19, (may-June 1953). It is an adaptation of a Ray Bradbury. The art is by
Al Wi...
200
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Mary Shelley’s *Frankenstein; or, the Modern **Prometheus* was first
published on January 1, 1818.
200 years ago.
On, now, to Frankenstein’s third cent...
We are back! EL VAMPIRO trailer
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It's been a while since the last posting on this blog, but now comes the
return!
The original trailer for EL VAMPIRO, it seems....
In honor of Carmen Mo...
Last year's Christmas
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Above: Jane asks Zombie Santa about returning a severed head, while watching out
for the grabby hands of Hermie the Horny Undead Elf.
I have a few last...
Put Me Back In My Tomb
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I have retired MCB but just wanted to let ya'll know I've fired up a Musick
Blog and will be spending time over there from now on. Please check it
out, it...
1st Horror Comic?
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EERIE COMICS No. 1, published by Avon and released for January 1947, holds
the distinction of being the first stand-alone horror comic published in
the ...
3 comments:
I love the way Lugosi intones: "They die."
It's not often you get to say of a Karloff-Lugosi movie that Karloff over-acts and Lugosi really reins it in, but I think that is the case in THE INVISIBLE RAY.
I really like Lugosi's rather restrained, thoughtful performance in this movie. I'm surprised that more Lugosi fans don't mention THE INVISIBLE RAY as a favorite.
Another Realart trailer, it seems there aren't any originals from the 30s. As a Lugosi fan/buff, I would personally count his performance in THE INVISIBLE RAY as my favorite opposite Karloff, even more so than THE BLACK CAT.
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