CINEFLIX HD — OFFICIAL TRAILERS, REVIEWS & RATINGS UPDATED DAILY
1933 • Horror / Mystery • 78m

Mystery of the Wax Museum

"The supreme thriller!"

65

CINESCORE

FRESH

151 critic reviews

66%

POPCORN METER

AUDIENCE

Verified ratings

A wax sculptor opens a new museum years after he is severely injured during a fire that destroyed his original collection. The disappearance of both people and corpses coincides with this grand reopening and leads a reporter to start investigating.

IMDb

Top Cast

Lionel Atwill
Lionel Atwill
Ivan Igor
Glenda Farrell
Glenda Farrell
Florence Dempsey
Allen Vincent
Allen Vincent
Ralph Burton
Fay Wray
Fay Wray
Charlotte Duncan
Frank McHugh
Frank McHugh
Jim
Edwin Maxwell
Edwin Maxwell
Worth
Arthur Edmund Carewe
Arthur Edmund Carewe
Professor Darcy
Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
George Winton
Matthew Betz
Matthew Betz
Hugo
Holmes Herbert
Holmes Herbert
Dr. Rasmussen
Claude King
Claude King
Mr. Galatalin
William B. Davidson
William B. Davidson
Detective (Uncredited)
Guy Usher
Guy Usher
Detective (Uncredited)
DeWitt Jennings
DeWitt Jennings
Police Captain, 12th Precinct
Robert Homans
Robert Homans
Desk Sergeant, 12th Precinct
James Donlan
James Donlan
Morgue Attendant (Uncredited)
Thomas E. Jackson
Thomas E. Jackson
Detective at Morgue
Frank Darien
Frank Darien
Autopsy Surgeon (Uncredited)
Director: Michael CurtizScreenplay: Don MullalyScreenplay: Carl EricksonProducer: Henry BlankeProducer: Hal B. Wallis

Photos

Reviews

John Chard
2017-01-09
80%

My dear, why are you so pitifully afraid? London 1921, and brilliant sculptor Ivan Igor struggles to keep his museum open due to lack of interest in his beautiful historical characters. His partner Joe Worth feels it's time to call it quits, a row over finances ensues and a fire breaks out and burns the museum to the ground, almost killing Igor in the process. On to 1933 and New York, where the wheelchair bound Igor has a new museum open, the figures sculpted by others under his guidance due to his horribly disfigured hands preventing him from crafting himself. When a female socialite dies and her body is stolen from the morgue, ballsy reporter Florence Dempsey starts to investigate. Could it be that the stealing of the body is linked to the opening of Igor's new museum? Mystery of the Wax Museum was long thought to have had it's elements lost in a (ironically) fire, so with no Technicolor negative or prints available, it was a cinematic godsend that a used print was discovered in Jack Warner's private vault. The UCLA Film and Television Archive restored the film, and now the film can be seen in all its former glory. Riding in on a high reputation, the restored film was met with less than favourable results by the critics, possibly due in some part to the rightful regard that the remake, House Of Wax 1953, was held. What it is safe to say is that the film is more of a mystery (the clue is in the title!) than an outright horror. Something I don't think many were prepared for. The critics derision back then is now on reflection, stupid. For it's a truly fine film from an interesting era in film making. The sets from Anton Grot are brilliant, Gothic pieces of work. While the performance of Lionel Atwill as Igor is superb, and arguably his best work. The actress' do well enough, Fay Wray (reuniting with Atwill again after their work in Dr X in 1932) as Charlotte Duncan hones her scream queen method, and Glenda Farrell is ebullient and sharp tongued as Dempsey. There's also daring themes involved in the story, necrophilia, drug addiction, insanity and bootlegging. With the horror elements of the piece born out by the grizzly secrets of Igor's museum. It's also not just an important film in the pantheon of colour pictures, but also in that it has a modern city setting. Helping to bring horror to the streets instead of some ye olde village or faraway castle. It's a smashing mystery/horror film that is now thankfully widely available on various DVDs, so see it if you can. 8/10

Audience Reviews(0)

Sign in to share your review of Mystery of the Wax Museum.SIGN IN

Loading reviews…

Keywords

Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English
Studios
The Vitaphone Corporation, Warner Bros. Pictures

Recommended For You

More Like This