MonsterGirl’s 150 Days of Classic Horror #86 The Invisible Ray 1936 & The Walking Dead 1936

THE INVISIBLE RAY 1936

The Invisible Ray (1936) is uncanny science fable of cosmic discovery and human downfall, a film that glows—sometimes literally—with the anxieties and ambitions of its era. Directed by Lambert Hillyer and anchored by Boris Karloff’s haunted intensity, it is a Universal horror that straddles the border between science fiction and Gothic tragedy, its plot pulsing with radioactive energy and the slow, inexorable unraveling of a man who dares to touch the stars.

Karloff is Dr. Janos Rukh, a reclusive scientist in the Carpathian mountains whose castle laboratory is a cathedral of obsession. With wild hair, a brooding gaze, and a touch of Poe in his ancestry, Rukh is a visionary outcast, convinced that a meteorite of unimaginable power—Radium X—fell to Earth millions of years ago. His wife, Diane (Frances Drake), is much younger and increasingly distant, while his blind mother (Violet Kemble Cooper) hovers with a mix of eerie devotion and psychic foreboding. When Rukh invites a group of skeptical colleagues—including the benevolent Dr. Felix Benet (Bela Lugosi, in a rare, warmly sympathetic role), Sir Francis and Lady Arabella Stevens (Walter Kingsford and Beulah Bondi), and the earnest Ronald Drake (Frank Lawton)—to witness his cosmic revelations, the film’s central conflict is set in motion.

The early scenes are a marvel of visual invention, with George Robinson’s (Dracula 1931, Dracula’s Daughter 1936, Son of Frankenstein 1939, Tower of London 1939, Tarantula! 1955) cinematography conjuring a world of towering, shadow-soaked sets and flickering laboratory lights. The planetarium sequence, where Rukh projects the Earth’s ancient past onto a swirling cosmic canvas, is a highlight of 1930s effects work—John P. Fulton’s technical wizardry gives the meteor’s journey a mythic grandeur, while the castle’s vertical lines and endless doorways evoke a sense of Gothic claustrophobia. The film’s score, composed by Franz Waxman, swells with drama and unease, weaving together motifs of wonder and impending doom.

The expedition to Africa, though marred by dated and regrettable depictions of “native” laborers, featured Black characters who are depicted as laborers exploited to carry equipment and supplies for the white scientific expedition into Africa. In real terms, these roles were typically assigned to Black actors, often in minor or uncredited parts. They were written in a way that reflected the racial and colonial attitudes of 1930s Hollywood.

All this shifts the film’s mood from chilly European gloom to feverish adventure. Here, Rukh, driven by a solitary madness, discovers the meteor and exposes himself to its radioactive core. The transformation is both physical and psychological: Karloff’s skin begins to glow with an unearthly light, and his touch becomes instantly lethal. The effect—achieved through painstaking work on the film negative—renders Rukh a living specter, a man marked by his own ambition.

Lugosi’s Dr. Benet, moved by compassion, concocts a daily antidote that keeps the poison at bay, but warns that madness will be the price if Rukh ever falters.

As the party returns to Europe, the narrative tightens into a noose. Rukh’s wife, now in love with Ronald Drake, leaves him, and his scientific triumph is stolen by the very colleagues he invited, at least in his fevered mind. Karloff charts Rukh’s descent with aching subtlety: at first, he is a man wounded by betrayal, then a specter stalking the streets of Paris, his glowing hands leaving death in their wake. The murders are marked by chilling ingenuity: a glowing handprint on the neck, a victim’s terror frozen in the cornea, a city gripped by invisible menace. All the while, Lugosi’s Benet uses Radium X to heal the blind, a counterpoint to Rukh’s spiral into destruction.

The film’s climax is a symphony of Gothic melodrama. Rukh, now a fugitive, fakes his own death and plots revenge against those he believes have wronged him. The statues of the Six Saints, looming over Paris, become his totems of vengeance, each destroyed as another victim falls. In the end, it is his mother, Violet Kemble Cooper, in a performance of otherworldly stateliness, who intervenes, destroying the antidote and forcing her son to confront the full consequences of his actions. Rukh, his body consumed by radiation, bursts into flame and throws himself from a window, a dying star collapsing under the weight of its own ambition.

The Invisible Ray is a film of striking contrasts: Karloff’s performance is both monstrous and mournful, his descent into madness rendered with a tragic inevitability. Lugosi, so often the villain, radiates warmth and decency, his Benet a beacon of hope in a world gone mad. Frances Drake’s Diane is torn between loyalty and love, her anguish palpable as she watches her husband’s transformation. The supporting cast—Bondi, Lawton, Kingsford—bring depth and humanity to roles that could easily have been overshadowed by spectacle.

Yet it is the film’s mood that lingers: the interplay of light and shadow, the pulse of Waxman’s score, the sense of a world trembling on the brink of discovery and disaster. The Invisible Ray is a cautionary tale about the perils of unchecked ambition, the seductive danger of forbidden knowledge, and the thin line between genius and madness. The film unfolds like a hush of horror poetry, its terrors whispered rather than shouted—an elegy of shadows and longing that invites true aficionados of classical horror to lean in closer, to savor the artistry hidden between each haunted frame. In Karloff’s glowing hands, it becomes a story not just of horror, but of heartbreak—a luminous tragedy that still casts its eerie glow across the history of horror/science fiction cinema.

THE WALKING DEAD 1936

Boris Karloff in The Walking Dead (1936): A Resurrection of Pathos and Menace

Michael Curtiz’s The Walking Dead (1936) is a film that hums with the eerie cadence of a funeral dirge—a story where justice, science, and vengeance collide in the shadowy intersection of life and death. At its heart is Boris Karloff, delivering a performance that transcends the macabre trappings of his role, transforming what could have been a simple horror flick into a melancholic meditation on mortality and morality.

The film opens on a web of corruption: John Ellman (Karloff), a wrongfully convicted pianist, is framed for murder by a gangster syndicate led by the slick, sadistic Nolan (Ricardo Cortez). Despite the efforts of Dr. Beaumont (Edmund Gwenn) and his colleague Dr. Evan (Warren Hull) to expose the conspiracy, despite last-minute attempts to clear his name, the witnesses come forward too late, and Ellman is led to the electric chair. Ellman is executed in a chilling, matter-of-fact electrocution sequence. But this is no end—it’s a beginning.

Beaumont, a scientist obsessed with reanimating the dead, revives Ellman’s corpse in a lab crackling with Tesla coils and existential dread. The resurrected Ellman staggers into a half-life, his soul tethered to a body that is neither fully alive nor dead. Haunted by fragmented memories and an uncanny ability to sense guilt, he begins stalking those responsible for his death. Yet this is no mindless monster: Karloff’s Ellman is a tragic avenger, his vengeance tempered by sorrow. The film crescendos in a rain-lashed climax where Ellman confronts his killers, not with violence, but with the unbearable weight of their own sins.

The Poetry of the Undead

Karloff, fresh off Frankenstein (1931) and The Mummy (1932), imbues Ellman with a vulnerability rarely seen in horror icons. His physicality—the slow, deliberate gait; the hands perpetually hovering as if unsure whether to caress or claw—suggests a man unmoored from his own existence. His face, gaunt and etched with sorrow, becomes a canvas for Curtiz’s camera: close-ups linger on Karloff’s eyes, which flicker with confusion, accusation, and a quiet plea for peace.

In the courtroom scene, as Ellman mutters, “I didn’t do it. I didn’t do it. I didn’t do it.” Karloff layers the line with a childlike bewilderment that makes his fate all the more harrowing. Later, resurrected, his voice drops to a hollow rasp, every word sounding dredged from the grave. When he corners Nolan in the film’s climax, his quiet “You know… you know” is less a threat than a lament—a ghost weary of haunting.

Curtiz, better known for Casablanca (1942) and Mildred Pierce (1945), here channels his knack for taut storytelling into Gothic expressionism. The film’s pacing is relentless, its shadows deep and woven like a shadow to the soul and threaded with sorrow. Curtiz frames Ellman’s resurrection not as a triumph of science, but as a violation—a violation underscored by Hal Mohr’s cinematography, which bathes the lab in cold, clinical light, contrasting sharply with the velvety darkness of the outside world.

Curtiz’s use of Dutch angles in Ellman’s post-resurrection scenes amplifies the character’s disorientation, while the recurring motif – Ellman ascending to the execution chamber, descending into the lab- becomes a visual metaphor for his liminal state. The director’s background in pre-Code crime dramas bleeds into the film’s moral ambiguity: the real monsters here are the living, not the undead.

Ricardo Cortez’s Nolan is all smirking malice, a gangster whose charm masks a rot within. His death scene—a frantic, sweaty unraveling—is a masterclass in comeuppance. Dr. Evan Beaumont, played by Edmund Gwenn, is introduced as a brilliant and ambitious scientist, eager to push the boundaries of medical science by experimenting with artificial organs and, ultimately, the reanimation of the dead. His scientific hubris is clear—he intervenes in the natural order by reviving John Ellman after his execution, driven by a desire to unlock the secrets of life and death and even to learn “secrets from beyond the grave.” Gwenn (later famous as Miracle on 34th Street’s Santa) brings gravitas to Dr. Beaumont, whose ambition is tempered by guilt. His final act of mercy toward Ellman adds a flicker of redemption. And finally, Marguerite Churchill as Nancy, the film’s moral compass, radiates a grounded warmth; her loyalty to Ellman anchors the story in empathy, and after reviving Ellman, Beaumont’s attitude shifts. He becomes conflicted and troubled by the moral and spiritual consequences of his actions. He is portrayed as well-meaning but ethically questionable, and a sense of guilt and responsibility increasingly overshadows his pursuit of knowledge for what he has done to Ellman. This is especially evident in the film’s final scenes, where Beaumont presses Ellman for revelations about the afterlife, only to be rebuffed with a warning to “leave the dead to their maker. The Lord our God is a jealous God.”

Hal Mohr, (A Midsummer Night’s Dream 1935, Phantom of the Opera 1943) an Oscar-winning cinematographer, paints the film in chiaroscuro strokes. The execution sequence is a study in starkness: Ellman’s silhouette against the electric chair, his face swallowed by shadows. Later, his resurrection is lit with an unearthly glow, Karloff’s pallid skin gleaming like marble under a full moon. Mohr’s camera lingers on empty corridors and rain-slicked streets, turning the world itself into a character—a silent witness to Ellman’s purgatory.

The Walking Dead is often overshadowed by Karloff’s Universal monster films, yet it remains a gem of 1930s horror. Its themes of wrongful conviction and scientific ethics feel eerily modern, while Karloff’s performance—a blend of tenderness and terror—redefines the zombie archetype decades before Romero. This is not a film about the horror of death, but the horror of being denied rest. In Ellman, Karloff gives us a martyr for the damned, a man whose second life is a curse, not a gift.

To watch The Walking Dead today is to witness a masterclass in how horror can be humane—a reminder that the genre’s greatest power lies not in the monsters we fear, but the corrupted humanity we cannot escape.

#86 Down, 64 to go! Your EverLovin’ Joey formally & affectionately known as MonsterGirl!

MonsterGirl’s Halloween – 2015 special feature! the Heroines, Scream Queens & Sirens of 30s Horror Cinema!

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Horror cinema was at it’s spooky peak in the 1930s~ the era gave birth to some of the most iconic figures of the genre as well as highlighted some of the most beautiful & beloved heroines to ever light up the scream, oops I mean screen!!!!

We all love the corrupted, diabolical, fiendish and menacing men of the 30s who dominated the horror screen- the spectres of evil, the anti-heroes who put those heroines in harms way, women in peril, –Boris, & Bela, Chaney and March… From Frankenstein, to Dracula, from The Black Cat (1934), or wicked Wax Museums to that fella who kept changing his mind…Jekyll or was it Hyde? From the Mummy to that guy you could see right through, thank you Mr. Rains!

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Gloria Stuart The Invisible Man

Last year I featured Scream Queens of 40s Classic Horror! This Halloween – – I felt like paying homage to the lovely ladies of 30s Classic Horror, who squealed up a storm on those stormy dreadful nights, shadowed by sinister figures, besieged by beasts, and taunted with terror in those fabulous frisson-filled fright flicks… but lest not forget that after the screaming stops, those gals show some grand gumption! And… In an era when censorship & conservative framework tried to set the stage for these dark tales, quite often what smoldered underneath the finely veiled surface was a boiling pot of sensuality and provocative suggestion that I find more appealing than most contemporary forays into Modern horror- the lost art of the classical horror genre will always remain Queen… !

Let’s drink a toast to that notion!

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The Scream Queens, Sirens & Heroines of 1930s Classic Horror are here for you to run your eyes over! Let’s give ’em a really big hand, just not a hairy one okay? From A-Z

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Phantom in the Rue Morgue 1954.

ELIZABETH ALLAN

Elizabeth Allan

A British beauty with red hair who according to Gregory Mank in his Women in Horror Films, the 1930s, left England for Hollywood and an MGM contract. She is the consummate gutsy heroine, the anti-damsel Irena Borotyn In Tod Browning’s campy Mark of the Vampire (1935) co-starring with Bela Lugosi as Count Mora (His birthday is coming up on October 20th!) Lionel Atwill and the always cheeky Lionel Barrymore… Later in 1958, she would co-star with Boris Karloff in the ever-atmospheric The Haunted Strangler.

Mark of the Vampire is a moody graveyard chiller scripted by Bernard Schubert & Guy Endore (The Raven, Mad Love (1935) & The Devil Doll (1936) and the terrific noir thriller Tomorrow is Another Day (1951) with sexy Steve Cochran & one of my favs Ruth Roman!)

The film is Tod Browning’s retake of his silent Lon Chaney Sr. classic London After Midnight (1927).

The story goes like this: Sir Karell Borotin (Holmes Herbert) is murdered, left drained of his blood, and Professor Zelin (Lionel Barrymore) believes it’s the work of vampires. Lionel Atwill once again plays well as the inquiring but skeptical police Inspector Neumann.

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Irena (Elizabeth Allan) and Professor Zelen (Lionel Barrymore) hatch an intricate plot to trap the murderers!

Once Sir Karell’s daughter Irena ( our heroine Elizabeth Allan) is assailed, left with strange bite marks on her neck, the case becomes active again. Neumann consults Professor Zelin the leading expert on Vampires. This horror whodunit includes frightened locals who believe that Count Mora (Bela in iconic cape and saturnine mannerism) and his creepy daughter Luna  (Carroll Borland) who trails after him through crypt and foggy woods, are behind the strange going’s on. But is all that it seems?

Mark of the Vampire (1935)

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Elizabeth Allan (below center) and Carroll Borland as Luna in Tod Browning’s Mark of the Vampire (1935).
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Elizabeth Allan and Carroll Borland in Mark of the Vampire (1935).

The Phantom Fiend (1932)

Directed by the ever-interesting director Maurice Elvey (Mr. Wu 1919, The Sign of Four, 1923, The Clairvoyant 1935, The Man in the Mirror 1936, The Obsessed 1952) Elizabeth Allan stars as Daisy Bunting the beautiful but mesmerized by the strange yet sensual and seemingly tragic brooding figure- boarder Ivor Novello as Michel Angeloff in The Phantom Fiend! A remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s first film about Jack the Ripper… The Lodger (1927) starring Novello once again.

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Ivor Novello is the strange & disturbing Michel Angeloff. Elizabeth Allan is the daughter of the landlords who rent a room to this mysterious fellow who might just be a serial killer. Daisy Bunyon falls captivated by this tormented and intense young man…
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A.W. Baskcomb plays Daisy’s (Elizabeth Allan)father George Bunting and Jack Hawkins is Joe Martin the regular guy in love with Daisy.
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Michel Angeloff (Ivor Novello) to Daisy Bunting (Elizabeth Allan) “Stay away from me… don’t ever be alone with me…{…} -You trust me, no matter whatever I’ve done?”

The Mystery of Mr. X (1934)

There is a murderer loose in London who writes the police before he strikes with a sword cane, he signs his name X. It happens that his latest crime occurs on the same night that the Drayton Diamond is stolen. Robert Montgomery as charming as ever, is Nick Revel the jewel thief responsible for the diamond heist, but he’s not a crazed murderer. The co-incidence of the two crimes has put him in a fix as he’s now unable to unload the gem until the police solve the murders.

Elizabeth Allan is the lovely Jane Frensham, Sir Christopher Marche’s (Ralph Forbes) fiancé and Police Commissioner Sir Herbert Frensham’s daughter. Sir Christopher is arrested for the X murders, and Nick and Jane band together, fall madly in love, and try to figure out a way to help the police find the real killer!

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HEATHER ANGEL

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Heather Angel is a British actress who started out on stage at the Old Vic theatre but left for Hollywood and became known for the Bulldog Drummond series. While not appearing in lead roles, she did land parts in successful films such as Kitty Foyle, Pride and Prejudice (1940), Cry ‘Havoc’ (1943), and Lifeboat (1944). IMDb notes -Angel tested for the part of Melanie in Gone with the Wind (1939), the role was given to Olivia de Havilland.

Heather Angel possessed a sublime beauty and truly deserved to be a leading lady rather than relegated to supporting roles and guilty but pleasurable B movie status.

The L.A Times noted about her death in 1986 at age 77 “Fox and Universal ignored her classic training and used her in such low-budget features as “Charlie Chans Greatest Case and “Springtime for Henry.”

Her performances in Berkeley Square and The Mystery of Edwin Drood were critically acclaimed… More gruesome than the story-lines involving her roles in Edwin Drood, Hound of the Baskervilles or Lifeboat put together is the fact that she witnessed her husband, stage and film directer Robert B. Sinclair’s vicious stabbing murder by an intruder in their California home in 1970.

Heather Grace Angel was born in Oxford, England, on February 9, 1909.
Heather Angel in Berkeley Square (1933) Image courtesy Dr. Macro

The Hound of the Baskervilles (1932)

Heather Angel is Beryl Stapleton in this lost (found negatives and soundtracks were found and donated to the British Film Institute archives) adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes thriller Originally serialized in The Strand magazine between 1901 and 1902.

In this first filmed talkie of Doyle’s more horror-oriented story, it calls for the great detective to investigate the death of Sir Charles Baskerville and solve the strange killing that takes place on the moors, feared that there is a supernatural force, a monstrous dog like a fiend that is menacing the Baskerville family ripping the throats from its victims. The remaining heir Sir Henry is now threatened by the curse.

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Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935).

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Douglass Montgomery as Neville Landless and Heather Angel as Rosa Bud in the intensely superior rare gem The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935)

Mystery of Edwin Drood (played by David Manners) is a dark and nightmarish Gothic tale of mad obsession, drug addiction, and heartless murder! Heather Angel plays the beautiful and kindly young student at a Victorian finishing school, Rosa Bud engaged to John Jasper’s nephew Edwin Drood. The opium-chasing, choir master John Jasper (Claude Rains) becomes driven to mad fixation over Rosa, who is quite aware of his intense gaze, she becomes frightened and repulsed by him.

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The brooding & malevolent Rains frequents a bizarre opium den run by a menacing crone (Zeffie Tilbury), a creepy & outre moody whisper in the melody of this Gothic horror/suspense tale!

Angel and Hobson

Valerie Hobson plays twin sister Helena Landless, the hapless Neville’s sister. (We’ll get to one of my favorites, the exquisite Valerie Hobson in just a bit…) When Neville and Helena arrive at the school, both Edwin and he vies for Rosa’s affection. When Edwin vanishes, naturally Neville is the one suspected in his mysterious disappearance.

OLGA BACLANOVA

Olga Baclanova

Though I’ll always be distracted by Baclanova’s icy performance as the vicious Cleopatra in Tod Browning’s masterpiece Freaks which blew the doors off social morays and became a cultural profane cult film, Baclanova started out as a singer with the Moscow Art Theater. Appearing in several silent films, she eventually co-starred as Duchess Josiana with Conrad Veidt as the tragic Gwynplaine, in another off-beat artistic masterpiece based on the Victor Hugo story The Man Who Laughs (1928)

Freaks (1932)

Tod Browning produced & directed this eternally disturbing & joyful portrait of behind-the-scenes melodrama and at times the Gothic violence of carnival life… based on the story ‘Spurs’ by Tod Robbins. It’s also been known as Nature’s Mistress and The Monster Show.

It was essential for Browning to attain realism. He hired actual circus freaks to bring to life this quirky Grand Guignol, a beautifully grotesque & macabre tale of greed, betrayal, and loyalty.

Cleopatra (Baclanova) and Hercules (Henry Victor) plan to swindle the owner of the circus Hans, (Harry Earles starring with wife Frieda as Daisy) out of his ‘small’ fortune by poisoning him on their wedding night. The close family of side show performers exact poetic yet monstrous revenge! The film also features many memorable circus folks. Siamese conjoined twins Daisy & Violet Hilton, also saluted in American Horror Story (Sarah Paulson another incredible actress, doing a dual role) Schlitze the pinhead, and more!

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Anyone riveted to the television screen to watch Jessica Lange’s mind-blowing performance as Elsa Mars in American Horror Story’s: Freak Show (2014) will not only recognize her superb nod to Marlene Dietrich, but also much reverence paid toward Tod Browning’s classic and Baclanova’s cunning coldness.

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( BTW as much as I adore Frances McDormand, Lange should have walked away with the Emmy this year! I’ve rarely seen a performance that balances like a tightrope walker, the subtle choreography between gut-wrenching pathos & ruthless sinister vitriol. Her rendition of Bowie’s song Life on Mars…will be a Film Score Freak feature this Halloween season! No, I can’t wait… here’s a peak! it fits the mood of this post…)

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Baclanova and Earles

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“You Freaks!!!!”
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Gooba Gabba… I guess she isn’t one of us after all!

here she is as the evil Countess/duchess luring poor Gwynplain into her clutches The Man Who Laughs (1928).

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Flicker Alley and Universal Pictures Present Paul Leni’s The Man Who Laughs (1928) The Tortured Smile “Hear how they laugh at me. Nothing but a clown!”

Continue reading “MonsterGirl’s Halloween – 2015 special feature! the Heroines, Scream Queens & Sirens of 30s Horror Cinema!”

Postcards From Shadowland: Huge Halloween Edition! 2013

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Metropolis 1927
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Earth vs the Flying Saucers 1956
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The Uninvited 1944
Bedlam
Bedlam 1946
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The Mad Monster 1942
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Black Sunday 1960
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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 1920
Tales From the Crypt
Tales from the Crypt 1972
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The Wolf Man 1941
a NightMonster2
Night Monster 1942
Bela Island of Lost Souls
Island of Lost Souls 1932
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Carnival of Souls 1962
Annex - Chaney Jr., Lon (Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man)_05
Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man 1943
Annex - Chaney Sr., Lon (Hunchback of Notre Dame, The)_01
The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1939
Annex - Chaney Sr., Lon (London After Midnight)_05
London After Midnight  1927
Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein
Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein 1948
Annex - Chaney Sr., Lon (West of Zanzibar)_02
West of Zanzibar 1928
una O'Connor
The Invisible Man 1933
Annex - Cushing, Peter (Daleks' Invasion Earth - 2150 A.D.)_02
Daleks’ Invasion Earth -2150 A.D. (1966)
The Man from Planet X
The Man from Planet X (1951)
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The Bride of Frankenstein 1935
Chaney in the unknown
The Unknown 1927
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The Amityville Horror 1979
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The Man They Could Not Hang 1939
Corridors of Blood
Corridors of Blood 1958
Annex - Krauss, Werner (Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The)_01
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 1920
Annex - Lugosi, Bela (Ape Man, The)_01
The Ape Man 1943
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Chandu the Magician 1932
time-of-their-lives
The Time of Their Lives 1946
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The Ghost of Frankenstein 1942
Invisible-Man
The Invisible Man 1933
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The Raven 1935
Annex - Churchill, Marguerite (Dracula's Daughter)_02
Dracula’s Daughter 1936
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Bloody Mama 1970
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Son of Frankenstein 1939
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White Zombie 1932
Annex - Marshall, Tully (Cat and the Canary, The)_01
The Cat and the Canary 1927
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Dr. Renault’s Secret 1942
black sunday
Black Sunday 1960
Kill Baby Kill
Kill Baby Kill 1966
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The Abominable Dr. Phibes 1971
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Dracula 1931
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Dragonwyck 1946
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House of Wax 1953
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The Raven 1963
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Dracula’s Daughter 1936
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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1939
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the Bride of Frankenstein 1935
Beauty and Beast
Beauty and the Beast 1946
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The Incredible Shrinking Man 1957
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Invasion of the Body Snatchers 1956
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Tarantula 1955
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Village of the Damned 1960
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Cat and the Canary 1927

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Silent Night, Bloody Night 1972
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Freaks 1932
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West of Zanzibar
Chaney He Who Gets Slapped
He Who Gets Slapped 1924
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Family Plot 1976  (rip Karen Black)
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Curse of the Demon 1957
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Devil Girl From Mars 1954
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Dr Cyclops 1940
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Double Door 1934
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Rosemary’s Baby 1968
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Pit and the Pendulum 1961
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Experiment in Terror 1962
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Eyes Without a Face 1960
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Curse of the Demon 1957
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The Giant Behemoth 1959
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The Bride of Frankenstein 1935
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The Ghost of Frankenstein 1942
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The Haunted Palace 1963
night of the demon true believers
Curse of the Demon 1957
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He Who Gets Slapped 1924
Hitchcock's Blackmail
Blackmail 1929
House on Haunted HIll -Nora-Mrs.Slydes
House on Haunted Hill 1959
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House of Frankenstein 1944
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The Haunting 1963
Night of the Living Dead
Night of the Living Dead 1968
Island of Lost Souls
Island of Lost Souls 1932
Metrópolis
Metrópolis 1927
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It Came From Beneath the Sea 1955
The-Crawling-Eye
The Crawling Eye 1958
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It Came from Outer Space 1953
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It Came from Outer Space 1953
Lifeboat
Lifeboat 1944
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Man Made Monster 1941
Lon Chaney in The Monster
The Monster 1925
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Faust 1926
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Curse of the Demon 1957
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Night Monster 1942
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The Day the Earth Stood Still 1951
r2 d2  4The Thing-0
The Thing from Another World 1951
The Devil Commands
The Devil Commands 1941
stepford wives
The Stepford Wives 1975
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The Screaming Skull 1958
Smoking Frankenstein friends are good
the Bride of Frankenstein 1935
Swimming with Julie
The Creature from the Black Lagoon 1954
The Black Cat Karloff and dead wife
The Black Cat 1934
The Black Cat Ulmer Karloff & Lugosi
The Black Cat 1934
fly
The Fly 1958
The Ghost Ship Lewton
The Ghost Ship 1943
The Invisible Ray
The Invisible Ray 1936
the leopard man
The Leopard Man 1943
freaks
Freaks 1932
The Man They Could Not Hang Karloff in Lab
The Man They Could Not Hang 1939
The Man They Could Not Hang
The Man They Could Not Hang 1939
The Mummy Karloff
The Mummy 1932
psycho
Psycho 1960
The Thing From Another World
The Thing from Another World 1951
The-Mummys-Ghost
The Mummy’s’ Ghost 1944
the undying monster
The Undying Monster 1942
jane_eyre-
Jane Eyre 1943
The Woman Who Came Back
The Woman Who Came Back 1945
the-amazing-colossal-man-pic-4
the Amazing Colossal Man 1957
the-incredible-shrinking-man
The Incredible Shrinking Man 1957
the-seventh-seal-
The Seventh Seal 1957
The+Haunting
The Haunting 1963
The Devil Commands
The Devil Commands
thing-from-another-world-pic-3
The Thing From Another World 1951
UndyingMonster+%2836%29
The Undying Monster 1942
Unholy 3 Lon Chaney
The Unholy 3 (1925)
Vampyr
Vampyr 1932
I walk with a zombie
I Walked with a Zombie 1943
the exorcist
The Exorcist 1973
carnival-of-souls-
Carnival of Souls 1962
White Zombie
White Zombie 1932
Zita JohannIsland-of-Lost-Souls-3
Island of Lost Souls 1932
Zounds-Herman Munster
Munster, Go Home! 1966

Special appreciation for several of the fabulous images courtesy of Dr. Macros High Quality photos!

HAVE A VERY SAFE & HAPPY HALLOWEEN FROM YOUR EVERLOVIN’ MONSTERGIRL!!!!!!

MonsterGirl’s Saturday Morning Some Men Doing Science In Their Laboratories!

Saturday mornings are for MEN WHO DO SCIENCE… BEWARE…!!!!!!!

THE 4D MAN

PETER CUSHING- The Curse of Frankenstein 1957

BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE 1958

DR. PHIBES

DR FRANKENSTEIN

ATOM AGE VAMPIRE


Leo G Carroll playing with the forces of nature

TARANTULA

BEN TURPIN

THE BRAIN FROM PLANET AROUS

IT CONQUERED THE WORLD

THE INVISIBLE RAY

THE BRAIN THAT WOULDN’T DIE

EYES WITHOUT A FACE

BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN

JOHN CARRADINE

MONSTER ON CAMPUS 1958

ATTACK OF THE PUPPET PEOPLE 1958

THE DEVIL BAT

THE DEVIL COMMANDS 1941

DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE

DONOVAN’S BRAIN 1953

DR. CYCLOPS 1940

THE FACE OF MARBLE

DR MORBIUS – FORBIDDEN PLANET 1956

CORRIDORS OF BLOOD

HELP ME HELP ME ….THE FLY 1958

METROPOLIS

THE UNEARTHLY

THE INDESTRUCTIBLE MAN 1956

DR MOREAU THE ISLAND OF LOST SOULS

THE INVISIBLE MAN – CLAUDE RAINS

THE THING -HOWARD HAWKS

THE MAD GHOUL

THE MAD DOCTOR OF MARKET STREET

THE TINGLER