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poster of The Black Cat
Rating: 6.7/10 by 267 users

The Black Cat (1934)

After a road accident in Hungary, the American honeymooners Joan and Peter and the enigmatic Dr. Werdegast find refuge in the house of the famed architect Hjalmar Poelzig, who shares a dark past with the doctor.

Directing:
  • Edgar G. Ulmer
  • William J. Reiter
  • Sam Weisenthal
Writing:
  • Peter Ruric
  • Peter Ruric
  • Edgar G. Ulmer
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Tom Kilpatrick
Stars:
Release Date: Mon, May 07, 1934

Rating: 6.7/10 by 267 users

Alternative Title:
The Vanishing Body - US
O gato preto - BR
Den sorte kat - DK
The House of Doom - GB
O gato negro - PT
Den svarta katten - SE
El gato negro - AR
Kara Kedi - TR
Satanás (el gato negro) - ES

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Français
Magyar
Latin
Runtime: 01 hour 05 minutes
Budget: $95,745
Revenue: $236,000

Plot Keyword: chess, prisoner of war, hungary, black and white, train, storm, psychiatrist, black cat, spiral staircase, high priest, newlywed, pre-code, based on short story, satanic ritual, satanic cult, psychotronic, preserved corpse, female corpse, devil worship, mystery writer, wife murderer, woman in peril, bus crash, europe honeymoon, flaying, glass display cases, gun turret, married to stepdaughter
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Boris Karloff
Hjalmar Poelzig
Bela Lugosi
Dr. Vitus Werdegast
David Manners
Peter Alison
Julie Bishop
Joan Alison
Egon Brecher
The Majordomo
Henry Armetta
The Sergeant
Albert Conti
The Lieutenant
John Carradine
Cult Organist
John George
Cultist (uncredited)
Albert Pollet
Waiter (uncredited)

John Chard

Weird and hypnotic creeper. The first, and arguably in terms of their dual performances, best teaming of Horror legends Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi is this almost bizarre Edgar G. Ulmer directed piece. Based around a story by Edgar Allan Poe, The Black Cat sees a young couple, Peter & Joan Allison (David Manners & Julie Bishop), who while on their honeymoon in Budapest meet the mysterious scientist Dr. Vitus Verdegast (Lugosi). When the bus taking them to the hotel crashes and Joan is injured, the trio wind up at the home of Verdegast's old acquaintance Hjalmar Poelzig (Karloff). Where the troubled history between Verdegast and Poelzig comes to light and thus spells immense danger for the newly married Allison's. Excellently directed by Ulmer, The Black Cat still today has the ability to genuinely unnerve the viewer. Filled with an overwhelming sense of dread throughout, Ulmer and his on form leading men have crafted a superb study of character evil. Flanked by a magnificent set design and with a script that does Poe proud, the piece pot boils until its brutal and frenzied climax. Karloff and Lugosi are particularly impressive (check out the chess match sequences), lending the film its timeless quality, with Karloff's Poelzig apparently being based on real life occultist Aleister Crowley. While the music, featuring some of the biggest names of classical composition, is an extra haunting character all by itself. It's a far from flawless picture, but it remains a unique, literate and important film in the pantheon of classic horror. 7/10

CinemaSerf

This great pairing of Messrs. Karloff and Lugosi make for a fun, if not particularly scary, horror movie from Universal. An honeymoon couple are travelling through Hungary when their bus is involved in an accident near the castle of "Hjalmar Poelzig" (Karloff). Together with fellow traveller "Vitus Werdegast" (a slightly theatrical Lugosi) they seek refuge and find themselves caught up in a tale of retribution between the two men that results in a game of chess not seen since the "Seventh Seal". It doesn't hang about - only just over an hour of creepily shot, tautly directed drama that makes for a spookily engaging watch with quite a bit of jeopardy right to the end...


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