Mother Riley Meets the Vampire

Mother Riley Meets the Vampire
Directed by John Gilling
Produced by John Gilling
Stanley Couzins
Starring Arthur Lucan
Bela Lugosi
Music by Lindo Southworth
Cinematography Stanley Pavey
Production
company
Fernwood Productions
Distributed by Renown Pictures (UK)
Blue Chip Films (US)
Release dates
July 1952 (UK)
September 1952 (US)
1963 (US re-release)
Running time
74 minutes
Country UK
Language English

Mother Riley Meets the Vampire, also known as Vampire Over London or My Son the Vampire is a 1952 British comedy horror film directed by John Gilling, starring Arthur Lucan and Bela Lugosi that was filmed at Nettlefold Studios.[1]

This was the final film of the Old Mother Riley film series and did not feature Lucan's former wife and business partner Kitty McShane whom he had divorced in 1951.

In 1963, an recut American version called My Son, the Vampire was released, featuring an introductory segment with a song by American comedian Allen Sherman.

Plot

Von Housen seeks to dominate the world from his headquarters in London with an army of 50,000 radar controlled robots powered by uranium. He believes himself to be a vampire and has several young women abducted, most recently Julia Loretti who has a map to a uranium mine that he needs for his army.

At the moment, Van Housen only has one functional robot which is shipped to him and through a mistake is shipped to Old Mother Riley's store with Mother Riley's package sent to Van Housen. Seeing Mother Riley's address in the label, Van Housen sends his robot to abduct Mother Riley to his headquarters.

Cast

Production

On the suggestion of producer Richard Gordon, Bela Lugosi had travelled to England to appear in a stage play of Dracula which failed. He needed money to return to the US. Gordon persuaded fellow producer George Minter to use Lugosi in a movie in London. Arthur Lucan had made a number of Old Mother Riley movies and it was felt that Lugosi's presence in the cast might give it a chance of success outside England.[2]

Lugosi was paid $5,000 for his role. The plot was taken from Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein.[3]

Gordon says that although John Gilling was credited as producer, George Minter was the real producer. Filming took four weeks.[3]

Richard Gordon recalled that there were plans to shoot additional scenes with Lugosi and without Arthur Lucan for the American market but the idea was never put into place.

Gordon also stated that the film emphasised that Lugosi's character was not a real vampire so it would get a U certificate allowing children, who were Old Mother Riley's biggest audience, to see it.[3]

Lucan's understudy Roy Rolland stood-in for him in the more physical stunts in the film.

Release

The film was not a success in the box office and was not released in the US until 1963.[2]

It was to have been titled Carry On, Vampire for its later American early 1960s release but Anglo-Amalgamated successfully sued with the title changed to My Son, the Vampire as a tie in to Allen Sherman's My Son, the Folksinger hit comedy record.[4]

Notes

  1. "Mother Riley Meets the Vampire". British Film Institute. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  2. 1 2 John Hamilton, The British Independent Horror Film 1951-70 Hemlock Books 2013 p 16-21
  3. 1 2 3 Tom Weaver, "My Son the Vampire", The Astounding B Monster accessed 18 March 2014
  4. pp.150-151 Weaver, Tom Richard Gordon Interview in Science Fiction Confidential: Interviews with 23 Monster Stars and Filmmakers McFarland, 01/01/2002

Reference

External links

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