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White Zombie (1932)
Director Victor Halperin's independent
69 minute film was the grand-daddy
of all modern-day zombie films of the sound era - the first 'true'
zombie film, although dated; it was deliberately made with minimal
dialogue, and filmed to be visually atmospheric and expressionistic;
this was Bela Lugosi's follow-up film to Dracula
(1931), and his second most important movie role.
The low-budget
film was the archetype and model for many subsequent zombie movies.
It included the first portrayal of zombies on the screen. Early on
within the setting of a Caribbean island, they were seen as an 'army'
of catatonic, sugar-mill plantation slaves, commanded by a evil voodoo
practitioner (Lugosi), a white sorcerer-master.
Taglines
included: "The Dead Walk Among Us!", "See Them Dug From
the Grave and Put to Work as Slaves to Murder!", and "With
These Zombie Eyes, he rendered her powerless. With This Zombie Grip,
he made her perform his every desire!" It was followed by Halperin's
sequel Revolt of the Zombies (1936):
- an American couple
in Haiti (the West Indies), bank employee Neil Parker (John Harron)
and his fiancee Madeline Short (Madge Bellamy) were on
their way to a plantation; they passed a funeral burial by the
roadside and were informed by their black coachman that the dead
were buried there in anticipation that passers-by would prevent
the body from being exhumed and transformed into a zombie: ("They
are afraid of the men who steal dead bodies. So they dig the grave
in the middle of the road where people pass all the time")
- also by the side of the road, they encountered
the white sorcerer-master of the Haitian sugar mill, evil voodoo
master "Murder" Legendre (Béla
Lugosi), who had stocked the plantation with an army of workers -
hollow-eyed, stiff-walking zombies under his voodoo spell; while
staring at Madeline in the coach, he snatched her scarf as they
drove off
Legendre Staring at Madeline in Coach
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Legendre's Stare (in close-up)
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First View of Legendre's Zombies
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- the coachman described the "zombies" - "They are
not men, Monsieur, they are dead bodies...Zombies. The living dead.
Corpses taken from their graves who are made to work in sugar mills
and fields at nights"
- Neil and Madeline first spoke to missionary preacher
Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn) at the estate, who was skeptical about
reports of zombies: "Haiti is full of nonsense and superstition";
they also met their host - wealthy planter and plantation
owner Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer), who had invited the couple
to hold their wedding at his estate that evening; Madeline
had met him on a ship-voyage from NYC to Port-au-Prince
- Beaumont revealed himself as the lusting admirer
of Madeline: ("You don't seem to realize what this girl means
to me. Why, I'd sacrifice anything I have in the world for her. Nothing
matters if I can't have her"), but his unrequited love was rebuffed
by her plans to marry Neil; with no other alternative, jealous
Beaumont had a dangerous plan
- a zombie coachman drove Beaumont to meet with Legendre;
before meeting Legendre, Beaumont watched in horror as sullen,
'living dead' zombie workers toiled at the sugar mill; Beaumont's
objective was to hire the witch-doctor to use a potion to temporarily
(for a month) turn Madeline into a zombie, and to have Neil unable
to marry her; but Legendre claimed to Beaumont that Madeline would
never love him: "Do you think she will forget her lover in a month?...Not
in a month. Not even a year, Monsieur. I looked into her eyes.
She is deep in love. But not with you!"; however Beaumont insisted,
and was given a potion in a glass vial with specific directions:
"Only a pin point, Monsieur Beaumont, in a glass of wine or perhaps
a flower"
- as Beaumont brought Madeline down the stairs for
her marriage ceremony that evening, he professed his love to her: "I
love you, Madeline, more than anything else in this whole world,
dear. Heaven or hell lies in this little moment for me. You could
raise me up to paradise or you could blast my world into nothingness.
I can make you the envy of every woman. I'd give my life to make
you happy!" - but she refused to elope with him ("Don't spoil everything
now"); he gave her one "last gift" - a red rose (she unsuspectingly
smelled the 'zombie' voodoo potion sprinkled onto it)
- after the ceremony was performed, newly-wed Madeline
offered a toast; as she looked into her goblet, she saw the
image of Legendre reflected in the liquid: "I see Death"; then,
she apparently fell faint in Neil's arms, was pronounced dead,
and was buried in a tomb; Beaumont's hope was that after she was
declared legally dead, Neil would return to the
US as Beaumont's NY bank agent
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Madeline's "Death"
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Madeline Giving a Toast: "I see Death"
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Drunken Neil's Ghostly Apparition of Madeline
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Madeline's Half-Open Coffin Removed From Tomb
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Neil at the Open and Empty Tomb
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- in a bar, drunken, depressed and grief-stricken,
Neil experienced ghostly apparitions of Madeleine; meanwhile, Charles
and Legendre secretly removed Madeline's coffin from her tomb
- shortly later, Neil went to the tomb, where he found
it both open and empty; he assumed the body was stolen; according
to Dr. Bruner, there were two possible explanations: "Either the
body was stolen by the members of a death cult that use human bones
in their ceremonies, or else... She's not dead" - she was possibly
still alive, and that Beaumont and/or Legendre had plotted her
'death': "The use of drugs or other practices which produce lethargic
coma, or lifeless sleep"; he suspected something very sinister:
"Before we get through with this thing, we may uncover sins that
even the devil would be ashamed of"
- at his fortified, cliff-side castle, Legendre had
revived Madeline as a lifeless, unresponsive, dead-eyed zombie,
so that Charles could romance her; however, Charles soon became regretful
of his evil deed: ("I was mad to do this, but if you had smiled
on me, I'd have done anything for you. Given you anything. I thought
that beauty alone would satisfy, but the soul is gone. I cant
bear those empty staring eyes. Oh, forgive me. Madeline. Forgive
me! I can't bear it any longer. I must take you back")
- due to Legendre's own dark plans, Beaumont was also transformed into
a semi-zombie figure after drinking a drugged glass of wine; Legendre
explained his motives: "I have other plans for Mademoiselle. And
I am afraid you might not agree"; Beaumont was then made a mute
captive in Legendre's castle
- Neil joined with Dr. Bruner
to help him rescue Madeline from the castle; they camped out on the
beach below Legendre's fortress where it was feared because "a
cloud of vultures always hovers over the house of the living dead"
- after Bruner and Neil entered the castle separately,
an entranced Madeline (after a long panning shot into a closeup
of Legendre's face) was summoned from her quarters to silently
kill Neil; she approached Neil's collapsed body with a knife to
stab him to death, but was saved by Bruner; she dropped the knife
and approached the cliffside, where the revived Neil saved her
from suicidally throwing herself off; he then asked her: "It's
I, Neil. Oh my darling, what have they done to you?" - but she
didn't recognize him
Entranced Madeline About to Stab Neil
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Madeline Saved From Suicide by Neil
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Neil Confronting Zombies With A Gun
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- Bruner and Neil battled Legendre and his threatening
zombie guards - although Neil's gunshots didn't stop them; during
the violent confrontation, a repentant Charles broke through the
voodoo spell he was under and knocked out Legendre from behind,
thereby weakening the zombie horde; one by one, the zombies staggered
over to the cliffside and walked off to their deaths far below
on the beach
- Legendre revived and regained his supernatural
powers, but as he struggled against Charles, Charles was able to
push him off the fortress to his death below - and then fell to
his own death after him
- after
their deaths, Madeline was released from her zombie state,
recognized her loving husband Neil, and returned to his arms
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Madeline and Neil Reunited
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Neil Parker and Madeline Short in a Carriage On Their Way
to a Plantation To Be Married
Missionary preacher Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn)
Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer)
Legendre's Zombie Coachman
Zombies Working at Legendre's Sugar Mill
Legendre at Mill With Beaumont
Madeline in Underwear Preparing for Wedding - Pre-Code
Beaumont Professing His Love For Madeline Before Marriage Ceremony
Madeline Smelling the Evil Potion Before Her Marriage
Madeline as a Revived Zombie
Legendre With Zombified Madeline
Long Panning Shot into Legendre's Face As He Entranced and Commanded Madeline
to Stab Neil to Death
Charles' Push To Send Legendre To His Death Off The Side of the Castle
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