
The Bela Lugosi Franchise Collection
Reviewed by Neon Maniac
DVD released by Universal Pictures

The Mixers:

Filling the Jigger:
Hot on the heels of their Classic Monsters collections, Universal
brings us the Bela Lugosi Franchise Collection. The five films
presented here represent some of the best of Lugosi's work for
Universal outside of Dracula. The hidden treat
here is that while all five films star Lugosi, four of them
co-star another Universal legend, Boris Karloff.

The Clink of the Ice Cubes:
The audio on these movies has been restored and is now in great
condition. All are a 2.0 mono
mix, and while there is the occasional pop and hiss, that just adds to
the atmosphere of these old movies. Otherwise they sounds
fantastic. Dialogue is clear and crisp, and the music is
undistorted.

Pouring
Out the Shaker:
While some of these films have been
available on various inexpensive public domain collections, they've
never looked better. They've been cleaned up and remastered as
well as possible. There are no 'rough edit' abrupt scene changes,
and
these are definitely not the VHS dubs you've seen in the cheap-o 20
movies for $10 collections. They do show their age, but they are
a very healthy 70.

The
First Sip:
All five films in this collection are worth viewing, but
Murders In The Rue Morgue and Black Friday are easily the
weakest. Rue Morgue is an entertaining film, with
Lugosi at his hammiest best. Besides, it co-stars a
gorilla, which in
and of itself deems it a classic in my book. Black Friday is
equally good, but when it was made Karloff refused to work with
Lugosi, so Lugosi's role was changed and the two greats had no scenes
together. The other three films in the collection are quite
strong and will keep you coming back for more.
Lugosi and Karloff are each at their best
when facing off against one another; and The Black Cat, The Raven, and
The Invisible Ray all showcases the tension between and talent of, the
two
actors. Always at eachothers throats, sometimes Lugosi
gains the upperhand, sometimes Karloff does.
Knowing now how the two giants felt about eachother adds a subtle
undertone to their scenes, and sometimes the tension is so thick it
makes the viewer uncomfortable — in a good way. Karloff is at his
gentlemanlike, smoothly-evil best as the Satanist in The Black
Cat.
It's a subtle, menacing style that he perfected and others have
imitated,
but never matched. Lugosi's calm, maniacal doctor in
The Raven is creepy and malevolent. Both men do an excellent job
of portraying a sadistic evil that has rarely been seen since.
Universal
Pictures has done an outstanding job with their recent collections, and
they've continued bringing the quality when it comes to the Bela Lugosi
collection. All films are must-sees for the fan of classical
cinema, and especially so for the fans of classic horror.
Paying the Tab:
Movie - 5/5
Audio - 5/5 for restoration
DVD - 5/5
(Neon's Movie Lounge contains a Zenith 42" Plasma EDTV, Oppo DV971H DVD player using a DVI connection, JVC 5.1 DD/DTS receiver and JBL Northridge E Series speakers.)
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