Night of the Ghouls

Night of the Ghouls

Image DVD cover
Directed by Ed Wood
Produced by Ed Wood
Written by Ed Wood
Starring Kenne Duncan
Duke Moore
Tor Johnson
Cinematography William C. Thompson
Edited by Ed Wood
Release dates
1958
Running time
69 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Night of the Ghouls

Night of the Ghouls is a 1958 horror film (not released on video until 1984) written and directed by Ed Wood, and a sequel of sorts to the 1955 film Bride of the Monster. Tor Johnson returned to the role of Lobo, first seen in Bride, Paul Marco plays the familiar character of Kelton, while the Amazing Criswell plays himself in the frame story of the film.[1] Another returning character is Police Captain Robbins of Homicide (although he is played Harvey B. Dunn in Bride, and by Johnny Carpenter in Night. However Dunn does appear in Night, albeit playing a different character).

Plot

The basic plot involves the police investigating a supposed haunted house. The house is discovered to serve as headquarters for a confidence trickster who pretends to be able to contact the dead, and charges naive customers large amounts of money to allow them to speak to their deceased loved ones.[1]

The movie features a prologue and a brief acting role by Criswell, who also narrated Wood's Plan 9 from Outer Space. The prologue has Criswell rising from a coffin, leaving unclear if the "metaphysical" narrator is awaking from a normal sleep, or whether he is actually a corpse returning to life. The latter implication can be seen as foreshadowing the final scenes of the film.[1]

One of the opening scenes features a montage of seemingly unrelated events, which seem to feature Wood's view of the post-war era and its social problems: juvenile delinquency, street fighting, and driving under the influence. A memorable sequence has a car driving off a cliff and crashing. The sequence ends with the bloody corpse of the drunk driver staring blankly at the camera. According to Criswell's narration, this is a rather typical end to "a drunken holiday weekend".[1] The narrative properly begins with a teenaged couple kissing in a convertible, parked at night in what is probably a lovers' lane. When the boy gets too aggressive, the girl ends the embrace with a slap and exits the car. At this point the narrative introduces the Black Ghost which lurks in the woods near them. In short order, first the girl and then the boy are attacked by the undead creature and die. According to Criswell's narration, the two murders received press attention but were thought to be the work of a maniac.[1]

In a police station of East Los Angeles, California, Inspector Robbins is waiting for Detective Bradford at his office. Bradford soon arrives, dressed in a top hat and formal evening wear. He was called to work while on his way to the opera, and he protests the idea of working an unexpected assignment. But Robbins informs him that the case involves the "old house on Willows lake", which played a part in an earlier case investigated by Bradford. (This is a reference to the events of Bride of the Monster). The house was destroyed by lightning, but someone rebuilt it. A flashback scene establishes that the elderly Edwards couple had a terrifying encounter with the White Ghost by this house.[1] Having heard the story, Bradford accepts the assignment to investigate the old house. Robbins assigns Kelton to escort the Detective, despite the protests of the man that "Monsters! Space people! Mad doctors! They didn't teach me about such things in the police academy! And yet that's all I've been assigned to since I became on active duty". The line is used to recall Kelton's experiences in Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 from Outer Space, and to explicitly connect this film to its predecessors.[1]

Bradford drives a Pontiac Bonneville to the house and enters through an open door, to be confronted by the Dr. Acula (played by Kenne Duncan). Dressed in a turban and cryptically mentioning that there many already in the house, both living dead, Acula is a rather strange figure. But Bradford convinces Acula that he is just another prospective client, so his entrance is accepted.[1] The narrator soon establishes that one of "the many" in the house is a remnant of its past, Lobo. A character from Bride, Lobo is depicted as disfigured from the flames which once destroyed this house. Outside the house, Kelton arrives late and has brief encounters with both the Black and the White Ghost. The scene shifts to a strange séance, where Acula and his clients share the table with human skeletons.[1] A subsequent scene both confirms that Dr. Acula is a fake psychic by the name of "Karl", as Bradford suspected earlier, and reveals that the White Ghost is an actress by the name of "Sheila".[1] Her role is to scare away intruders.[2][3] She is concerned by the presence of the Black Ghost which is not part of their hoax, though the cynical Acula dismisses her fears. He doesn't believe in the supernatural.[1]

Both Bradford and Kelton have strange and sometimes violent confrontations within the house, and are eventually joined by reinforcements. As their accomplices fall to the police, Karl and Sheila attempt to escape through a mortuary room. There they are confronted by a group of undead men, including one played by Criswell. The latter is the only one of them who speaks, explaining to Karl that the supposedly "fake" psychic does have genuine powers and his necromantic efforts actually worked. These dead men were restored to life, if only for a few hours, but they intend to take Karl with them in their return to the grave.[1] As Karl dies, Sheila escapes the house to meet her own fate. The Black Ghost, genuinely undead, takes control of the impostor and tells her that it is time to join "the others" at the grave. As the police try to understand what happened to the deceased Karl, the narrative ends with a shot of an undead Sheila, now truly a White Ghost.[1]

In a brief epilogue which also closes the frame story, the narrator returns to his coffin. Claiming that it is time for both the old dead and the new to return to their graves, he reminds the viewer that he/she too can soon join them in death.[1]

Cast

Production and analysis

Rob Craig suggests that the film could be in part based on an earlier work, Sucker Money (1933), produced by Willis Kent. The two films have significant similarities in concept. In the earlier film, Swami Yomurda (Mischa Auer) and his minions stage an elaborate scheme to extort money from gullible victims. Yomurda and his group use technological means to convince their victims that they are receiving audiovisual from the otherworld.[1] Craig himself, however, notes that Night cannot be conceived as a straightforward remake, since Wood used the same template to tell a quite different story from the 1930s melodrama.[1]

There are also notable similarities of this film with one of its contemporaries, The Unearthly (1957) by Boris Petroff. In both films: the characters gather at an isolated location far from the city, a charismatic deceiver exploits other humans for his own purposes, promising them extraordinary services, undercover agents of the law manage to expose the conspiracies, and the villains meet their fates at the hands of someone they previously exploited.[4] Tor Johnson also plays a character called "Lobo" in both films, and both characters are working for the main villains.[4] Both films were shot during 1957, though it is unclear if one was intentionally modeled after the other.[4]

The notion of a genuine ghost and a fake one that are active on the same area is not unique to this film. The Ghost Breakers (1940) has a real ghost appear in the end, Spook Chasers (1957) has a real ghost among several fakes, and Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow (1959) has a real ghost residing in a "fake" haunted house.[3]

Craig considers the film to have elements common in absurdist fiction, and also to have much of the pessimism and nihilism of a typical Samuel Beckett play.[1] The opening montage of violence and the death of the drunk driver serve to underscore both the randomness and the lack of meaning of human life and death.[1] The fates of Karl and Sheila are clearly meant to serve as a form of poetic justice, and the finale can also be seen as a triumph of Death over the mortals trying to exploit it.[1] The final words of Crisswell also serve to remind viewers of the truth, that everyone dies and death is destined to triumph over life. Craig finds the film to be Wood's version of a requiem.[1]

The film makes extensive use of static two shot, which David Hogan considered to have contributed to making this an "atypically boring" film by Wood.[2] The film's main setting is the rebuilt house on Willows Lake that burned down in Bride of the Monster. There are frequent references to the mad scientist (Bela Lugosi) and Lobo (Tor Johnson), the latter of whom returns, his face now half-destroyed from the fire.[1] The narrative notion that the house by Willow Lake is a recently constructed building is contradicted by the actual image of the house, which seems to be old and in disrepair. Craig suggests that the House would not look out of place in a Hooverville.[1]

The formal-wearing police investigator seems as a rather anachronistic figure, more reminiscent of a figure from a gothic fiction work or a costume drama.[1] Valda Hansen, who plays the White Ghost, was seen as Wood's ingenue. She had reportedly impressed him with her vivacity and allure.[1] David Hogan considered the spookiest scenes to be the ones featuring either Hansen or Jeannie Stevens playing the film's ghostly femmes fatales.[2]

Wood, his face hidden by a dark veil, doubles for the Black Ghost in several shots. According to Paul Marco, Wood could not get Jeannie Stevens to film these scenes. So he wore the costume and acted as a replacement.[1][5] Also, a publicity photo of Wood is seen on a wanted poster on the wall of the police station.[1]

The séances featured in the film have some atypical elements. Skulls are set on the séance table and skeletons are sitting around it. The sound effects and floating trumpet would not be out of place in 19th-century séance, though the electronically altered voice of the deceased is a far more recent element.[3]

A fight scene from the unfinished Hellborn was edited in the film; additional scenes from that project appeared in Wood's The Sinister Urge.

Most of Lieutenant Bradford's exploration of Dr. Acula's house was lifted from Wood's short film Final Curtain and given a voice-over by Criswell to integrate it into the current story.

The finale, with the ghouls reduced to skeletons and Criswell's epilogue, were used again in Wood's Orgy of the Dead.

This film is the third part of what Wood aficionados refer to as "The Kelton Trilogy", a trio of films featuring Paul Marco as "Officer Kelton", a whining, reluctant policeman. The other two films are Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 from Outer Space.[1] Although claimed to be a follow up to Bride of the Monster, Night of the Ghouls featured only two characters from that film (Kelton and Lobo), and, in a retcon, it is claimed that Lt. Bradford had worked on the earlier case when he in fact appeared nowhere in Bride. His exploration of Dr. Acula's house was borrowed from Wood's short film Final Curtain and given a voice-over to integrate it into the current story. As a result, there was no room for Harvey B. Dunn, who played Captain Tom Robbins in Bride, to reprise his earlier role. Instead, he was given a small supporting role as a frightened motorist who encounters one of the "ghouls".[1]

Wood turned to his stock cast for the picture. Tom Mason, who Wood used to replace Bela Lugosi in Plan 9 from Outer Space, is credited as "Thomas R. Mason"; this was his only other feature film appearance. Kenne Duncan had previously worked for Wood in a TV on trick shooting and in Wood's 1953 TV pilot Crossroad Avenger.

The character of Dr. Acula also appeared in an unrealized Wood film project of the same name. The role was originally intended for Bela Lugosi.

Release

Ed Wood finished the principal photography and rough cut of the film by late 1957, but could not financially afford paying for the post-production work. In 1958, the film laboratory opted to keep the negative film footage until the bill could be paid, and it remained unpaid for nearly three decades. By the 1980s film historians either considered Night a lost film or suspected that the film never existed to begin with. Kansas CIty film hobbyist-entrepreneur and Ed Wood fan Wade Williams managed to locate the film, however, paid the long overdue bills to the lab, and claimed full ownership of it. He also gave it its first release via home video in 1984.[1][2]

According to the recollections of Paul Marco, Night may have had a theatrical preview showing in 1959. But Wood was not satisfied with the result and felt it needed further editorial changes. A letter of Wood to Anthony Cardoza, the film's associate producer, records some of his plans for the film. He wanted to edit out part of Criswell's scenes and replace them with footage of Bela Lugosi. He was also considering a title change.[1] Wood was never able to make his intended changes and there is no evidence it was ever actually available for theatrical bookings while under the control of the lab.[1][2]

The film was produced under the title Revenge of the Dead. Wade Williams renamed it to Night of the Ghouls for its 1980s release,[1] although it was generally known by that title by 1960, when it received extensive preview coverage in an early issue of "Famous Monsters of Filmland" magazine.

Bibliography

Sources

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Craig (2009), p. 178-199
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Hogan (1997), p. 233
  3. 1 2 3 Ruffles (2004), p. 211
  4. 1 2 3 Craig (2013), p. 135-137
  5. Weaver (2000), p. 257

External links

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