Saturday, April 11, 2026

SORDID DEPRAVITY OF THE LIVING DEATH!


In today's installment from the wild side of Hollywood we've got hot rods, motorcycles, bad girls (and really bad girls) and much more titillating trash from the cinematic gutters of Tinseltown. Don't miss the loony blurb for ONE MILLION YEARS AC/DC.




















Friday, April 10, 2026

LUGOSI'S PRIVATE PHOTOS


Bela Lugosi saved a considerable amount of memorabilia from his career and even amassed at least three large scrapbooks which sold at auction on August 10, 2013 for $5,000.

The two photographs below were sold separately last week by Heritage Auctions headquartered in Dallas, Texas. The WHITE ZOMBIE photo sold for $275.00 and THE MYSTERIOUS MR. WONG photo sold for $154.00. Lugosi's Mr. Wong (a villain) was a different character than Karloff's Mr. Wong (a detective).




The stamp on the back indicates they were given to Lugosi by the Don Marlowe Agency. Marlowe had the reputation as an unscrupulous and downright flaky talent agent. For example, in September 1970 he placed an ad in CLASSIC FILM COLLECTOR that read:
Bela Lugosi – For Sale: Screen test Bela Lugosi made for the original Frankenstein. 35mm sound, running time 21 minutes; same scene is shown twice with change in lighting, etc. Between scenes camera was left running and Carl Laemmle Junior, James Whale, Colin Clive and Lugosi can be seen and heard discussing test and wardrobe Lugosi was wearing. Film can be examined and screened before purchase is made. Price: $4,000. Don Marlowe. Hollywood, Calif. 90028
What really makes this stand out as specious is that James Whale was out of the picture when this test shot is made under the direction of Robert Florey. One wonders if this was a flim-flam on the part of Marlowe.


Marlowe is nevertheless is credited with reviving Lugosi's career in the late 1940s. Among other jobs, in one roadshow, before a screening of DRACULA, Lugosi would perform a live reading of Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart".

Thursday, April 9, 2026

THE MANY FACES OF KARLOFF



Between THE INVISIBLE RAY and SON OF FRANKENSTEIN, Boris Karloff played a Chinese warlord in the Warner Bros. adventure film WEST OF SHANGHAI in 1937. He would also play the Chinese detective Mr. Wong in a number of films beginning in 1938. While unfavorable sentiment regarding white actors playing Asian characters from yesteryear exists today, it shows Karloff's versatility as an actor.

This issue of BOY'S CINEMA from April 2, 1938 includes the text/photo adaptation of WEST OF SHANGHAI.


Read more "The Many Faces of Boris Karloff" HERE.

Read the BOY'S CINEMA photo story of DR. X HERE.