Island of Lost Souls (1933 film)
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Island of Lost Souls | |
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Directed by | Erle C. Kenton |
Written by | Philip Wylie Waldemar Young |
Starring | Charles Laughton Bela Lugosi Richard Arlen Leila Hyams Kathleen Burke |
Music by | Arthur Johnston Sigmund Krumgold |
Cinematography | Karl Struss |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | January 12, 1933 |
Running time | 71 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Island of Lost Souls is a sci-fi/horror film starring Charles Laughton and Bela Lugosi. Produced by Paramount Pictures in 1933 from a script co-written by science fiction legend Philip Wylie, the movie was an early film adaptation of the H. G. Wells novel The Island of Dr. Moreau, which Wells published in the 1890s. The film was directed by Erle C. Kenton.
Both book and movie were about a remote island that was run by an obsessed scientist who is secretly conducting surgical experiments on animals. The goal of these experiments is to try to transform the animals into human beings. The result of the experiments is a race of half-human, half-animal creatures that lives in the island's jungles, only tentatively under Moreau's control.
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[edit] Plot Summary
When a shipwreck sets ocean traveler Edward Parker (Richard Arlen) adrift, he gets picked up by a freighter that is delivering supplies to an isolated South Seas island owned by Dr. Moreau. The only thing Parker can find out about the doctor is that he likes his privacy.
When Parker and the freighter's captain get into a fight, he ends up stranded on the island. Dr. Moreau (Charles Laughton) takes him in and it is then he begins to learn why Moreau is so secretive. At first he hears the strange noises at night suggesting the presence of unseen island natives. Later, when he tries to leave the house where he has been staying, Parker for the first time runs into the animal-men. Saved from them by Moreau and his assistants, Parker observes the island's strange social structure. Moreau cracks a whip and orders an animal-man known as the Sayer of the Law (Bela Lugosi) to repeat the rule against violence. Once that happens, the animal-men return to the jungle.
Moreau and his men return Parker to the main house. Once they are back inside, the doctor explains his experiments. The operations were done on the animals in a place he refers to as "the house of pain". Moreau also introduces Parker to his most successful experiment, a panther that now looks like an attractive human female. The panther-woman called Lota (Kathleen Burke) is in fact so human that Moreau hopes that she and Parker will mate. The unexpected arrival of Parker's fiancee Ruth (Leila Hyams) ends that idea.
Parker realizes that he has to escape the island with his fiancee but is unsure how to do this. His opportunity comes when Moreau is caught in an act of violence by the animal-men and they make the decision to revolt. They carry Moreau away to his own house of pain where he meets a grisly demise -- they eviscerate him with his own surgical instruments. Although this is not explicitly shown, Moreau's ghastly screams leave no doubt as to what is happening. Eventually the entire island goes up in flames. Parker and his fiancee then make their escape.
[edit] UK Censorship Ban
The film was examined and refused a certificate three times by the British Board of Film Censors, in 1933, 1951 and 1957. While the reason for the initial ban is not clear, it is likely that the Cinematograph Films (Animals) Act 1937, which forbade the portrayal of cruelty to animals in feature films released in Britain, was a significant factor in the BBFC's subsequent rejections. The film was eventually passed with an 'X' certificate on 9 July 1958.[1]
[edit] Influence
Members of the new wave band Devo were fans of the film. The "What is the law?" sequence formed part of the lyrics to Devo's song Jocko Homo.
The band Oingo Boingo's song "No Spill Blood" on their album Good for Your Soul is based on the book and this movie.
The film has been remade twice. Both the later versions used the title from the H. G. Wells novel. The first remake was released in 1977 and stars Burt Lancaster as the doctor (Lancaster perfectly matched Wells' description of the way Moreau physically looked). The second remake was released in 1996 and stars a flamboyant Marlon Brando as Moreau. In the very similar Twilight People (1973), actress Pam Grier plays the role of the panther woman.
[edit] References
- ^ James C. Robertson, The Hidden Cinema: British Film Censorship in Action, 1913-1975, London, Routledge (1989), pp. 55-57.
[edit] Sources
- Island of Lost Souls VHS tape, Universal Home Video Monsters Classic Collection
- IMDb profile: Island of Lost Souls
- Classics of the Horror Film: From the Days of the Silent Film to the Exorcist, by Willam K. Everson