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Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)
Director Michael Curtiz' and Warner Bros.'
Technicolored (two-strip colors of greens and reds), 79 minute expressionistic
mystery-horror film was the next effort to capitalize on the success
of the similar Doctor X (1932); it was the last significant
feature film to be made with the two-color Technicolor process.
The exciting and frightening gothic horror film again
starred Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray; the initially-lost film was remade
by director Andre De Toth as House of Wax (1953) (in 3-D),
starring Vincent Price. Roger Corman's Bucket of Blood (1959) also
used a similar storyline. The Pre-Code film was noted for its female
leads prancing around in silky underwear or tight outfits, heroin
and drug addiction, sexy double-entendre dialogue, bootlegging and
multiple murders:
- in the crime thriller's opening, set in 1921 London
- brilliant sculptor Mr. Ivan Igor (Lionel Atwill) had set up a
critically-successful Wax Museum, his labor of love, that was filled
with beautiful and artistic wax creations of historical personages
(he called them his "children"); he was proud of his life-like
creatures that he produced with "the
warmth and flesh and blood of life far more better in wax than
in cold stone";
on the other hand, his unscrupulous and sinister business partner
Joe Worth (Edwin Maxwell) was concerned about a 15,000 pounds deficit
and unpaid rent, and was intent on turning the museum (with only
"artistic nonsense") into a morbid and more commercially-successful
"house of horror"
- the spiteful and treacherous Joe betrayed his partner
and set Igor's beloved museum on fire, in an effort to collect
10,000 pounds in fire insurance money; in a striking sequence inside
the museum, as the two fought and struggled amidst the flames,
Igor was trapped and all his lifelike wax images burned and hideously
melted away and were ultimately destroyed; an unconscious Igor
was left to die in the conflagration as the building was collapsing,
but he awakened and watched with anguish as his "children" perished
(statues of Joan of Arc, Voltaire, Marie Antoinette, Queen Victoria
and more)
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Fight Between Joe Worth and Ivan Igor
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Melting Wax Figures in Museum Fire
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Death to Igor ?
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Igor Regained Consciousness - Helpless to Save Wax
Figures
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- twelve
years later in New York City in 1933 on New Years Eve, Igor watched
from his curtained window while the body of a suicidal victim,
model and drug-using socialite Joan Gale (Monica Bannister) was
taken to the morgue in an ambulance; after two attendants left
the morgue after their late shift, a figure sat up on a sheet-covered
morgue table - it was a mysterious, face-scarred man who then lowered
one of the wrapped-up cadavers through a window to his assistants
below in the alley
- wisecracking, spunky, fast-talking and hard-boiled
city reporter Florence Dempsey (Glenda Farrell) for the New York
Express was pressured by her impatient editor Jim (Frank
McHugh) to report a new story by the next edition or he threatened
her firing; in the meantime, a wooden coffin box (marked "Fragile")
was delivered to Joe Worth's remote warehouse; heroin
drug-addicted Professor D'Arcy/Sparrow (Arthur Edmund Carewe) was
apparently being supplied with drugs and working for Joe Worth
- the suicide victim Joan Gale's rich young "millionaire
playboy" boyfriend, George Winton (Gavin Gordon) was arrested for
her murder; Florence became suspicious and began following
the story
- an autopsy was ordered on Joan's body (suspecting
that she had accidentally died of laudanum poisoning), but the
coroner discovered that her corpse was missing - presumably the
one delivered earlier to Joe Worth; Florence visited
Winton in jail at the Tombs and was easily convinced of his innocence
(he was getting "a raw deal"); Florence
told her boss that there was a plague of mysterious suicides, murders
and missing bodies in NYC:
"Eight bodies have been stolen in New York in the last 18 months"
- in midtown NYC on 14th Street, crippled and wheelchair-bound
Ivan Igor opened up a new museum titled: "London Wax Museum";
it was revealed that Professor D'Arcy was
also employed as an assistant by Igor as one of his sculptors;
D'Arcy delivered his newest work, a waxed statue of Joan of Arc,
to the museum (it suspiciously looked like the murdered Joan Gale)
- Florence accompanied her demure and innocent roommate
Charlotte Duncan (Fay Wray) to Igor's new wax museum to visit Charlotte's
fiancée Ralph Burton (Allen Vincent), a sculptor serving
as one of Igor's sculptor-assistants; in the museum, Florence was
shocked to see the clear resemblance between a recently-completed
Joan of Arc wax statue exhibit and the dead Joan Gale
- in addition, Igor
approached Charlotte and told her that she was the long-lost face
of his destroyed masterpiece Marie Antoinette ("I knew you before
you were born. Before this terrible thing happened to me, I made
a very beautiful statue. And my child, you are that figure come to
life"); he requested that she pose for her sculpture to be created
(by Professor D'Arcy); suspicions were raised - were the museum's
statues possibly paraffin-coated bodies of the missing corpses?
- after the museum's evening opening, Winton (released
from prison on bail) drove Florence, while they were following
D'Arcy, to Joe Worth's remote warehouse; she learned
that Winton was deeply in debt to Joe Worth; in the cellar,
she hid from the scarred-faced man and found a wooden
box; she reported her find to police (hypothesizing
it held Joan Gale's body); she described the man's looks: "He made
Frankenstein look like a lily"; the box was found
to only hold illegal whiskey (Worth was a bootlegger)
- shortly
later at the police station, while suffering drug withdrawal, the
arrested junkie D'Arcy was forced to confess to the police (after
they found missing Judge Ramsey's watch in his possession) that
Igor was having him collect bodies that resembled historical figures,
including Ramsey: "All right, I'll talk. I'll
tell you all I know! Ramsey was murdered because he looked like
Voltaire...He's a statue, a silly wax statue....It was Igor at the
Wax Museum.... You'll find your Judge embalmed in wax. He's a statue
of Voltaire, together with the other corpses. I tell you, the whole
place is a morgue"
- meanwhile, back in the
museum, Igor (filmed from a high angle) confronted Charlotte
trapped in his locked basement laboratory (with a prominent vat of
bubbling wax); the insane Igor rose from his wheel chair (he had
been faking being crippled with crutches) and grabbed her with
an insane look - he promised her immortality by being reborn into
a Marie Antoinette effigy: "You'll help me to give back to the
world - my masterpiece. My Marie Antoinette." She screamed as he
continued: "Immortality has been the dream, the inspiration of
mankind through the ages. And I am going to give you immortality....I
have no desire to hurt you. You will always be beautiful. Think,
my child, in a thousand years, you will be as lovely as you are
now"
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Igor Rising From His Wheelchair (Without Crutches)
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- in the famous "unmasking" sequence, Charlotte began
screaming: "Let me go!", punching with her fists and clawing
at Igor's face; his waxy face-mask cracked to reveal his scarred,
hideous, loathesome and burned facial features underneath; she
screamed again: (Charlotte: "Your face was of wax! You fiend!");
he responded by calling her "My Marie Antoinette" - and showing
her the waxed body of his real mortal "fiend" and enemy Joe Worth
in an upright coffin box ("There
was a fiend and this is what he did to me")
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Climactic "Unmasking" Sequence of Igor
(Similar to the "Unmasking" Scene in
Phantom of the Opera (1924))
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- Igor confessed
that his damaged hands 12 years earlier (because of Joe Worth) had
prevented him from sculpting; he had finally found the "fiend"
and settled their account - he opened the coffin to reveal the
mummified, stiff corpse of Joe Worth - the body fell face forward
to the floor; to stock his new museum, Igor had been forced
to find corpses or kill people (who resembled his burned statues),
dip or permanently encase them in wax, and then display them
- in the climactic ending, Ralph heard her screams
and came to her rescue but after a brief fight he was knocked unconscious;
Charlotte had fainted and was strapped down by her wrists on a
gurney beneath a nozzle of molten wax, ready to be encased: ("Your
beauty will be preserved forever"); as he prepared to inject a
lethal dose via a hypodermic needle into Charlotte, the police
arrived; Igor struggled with officers and fled onto a catwalk,
where he was gunned down and fell into his own giant cauldron of
boiling-hot wax and perished; Charlotte was saved in the nick of
time by a revived Ralph from being covered in hot wax on the table
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Igor Preparing Charlotte For Waxing - A Death Injection
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- in the short epilogue at her desk, Florence
wrote up her exclusive scoop on the story, and also received a surprise
proposal from her hard-nosed editor Jim in his office: "Cut out
this crazy business, act like a lady. Marry me"; she thought about
her other option, Winton, but then decisively responded: "I'm gonna
get even with you, ya dirty stiff. I'll do it" - and they kissed
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Igor Survived Fire - Reappeared in NY in 1933
Joan Gale Suicide
Mysterious Figure with Scarred Face Rising Up From Under Sheet in Morgue
Plucky Reporter Florence Dempsey (Glenda Farrell) with Editor Jim (Frank
McHugh)
New Museum Opening in NYC in 1933
New Statue of Joan of Arc
Charlotte (Fay Wray) - Told By Igor That She Looked Like
His Marie Antoinette Waxed Statue
D'Arcy Confessing to Police: "It was Igor at the Wax Museum...The whole
place is a morgue!"
Igor Revealing to Charlotte the Mummified Body of "Fiendish" Joe Worth
in a Coffin Box
The Museum's Giant Bubbling Vat of Wax
Shot on Catwalk - Death of Igor in Hot Wax Cauldron
Final Image: Marriage Proposal For Florence
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