Karloff, examining his illustrious 60-year career in the entertainment industry and his enduring legacy as one of the icons of 20th century popular culture.Karloff, examining his illustrious 60-year career in the entertainment industry and his enduring legacy as one of the icons of 20th century popular culture.Karloff, examining his illustrious 60-year career in the entertainment industry and his enduring legacy as one of the icons of 20th century popular culture.
John Carradine
- Count Dracula
- (archive footage)
Vincent Price
- Dr. Erasmus Craven
- (archive footage)
Peter Lorre
- Dr. Adolphus Bedlo
- (archive footage)
Basil Rathbone
- Baron Wolf von Frankenstein
- (archive footage)
Boris Karloff
- Self - Interviewee
- (archive sound)
Lon Chaney Jr.
- Larry Talbot
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Did you know
- TriviaNote re credited Interviewees. Although all the named interviewees are credited in Boris Karloff The Man Behind the Monster (some of them under an apologetic Thank you credit) only about half are actually seen or heard in The Man Behind the Monster. This was because the film was originally planned as a 4 hour piece but was subsequently finished as a 98minute doc, Interviewees appearing in "Boris Karloff The Man Behind the Monster" are Guillermo Del Toro, Roger Corman, Sara Karloff, John Landis, Kevin Brownlow, Sir Christopher Frayling, Stephen Jacobs, Joe Dante, Dick Miller, Stefanie Powers, Jack Hill, Leonard Maltin, Ian Ogilvy, Peter Asher, Orson Bean, Sharyn Moffett, Peter Bogdanovich, Christopher Plummer, Gregory W. Mank, David J Skal, Valerie Yaros, Ron Perlman, Ron Simon, Donald F. Glut, Jaymz Bee, Cortlandt Hull, Mark Voger, Neil Pettigrew, Thomas Hamilton, Ron MacCloskey.
Having filmed 100+ hours of interviews, many who didn't make it to Boris KArloff: The Man Behind the Monster were included in "Boris Karloff: The Rest of the Story" - available on the Blu-Ray & DVD only. In addition to the above, it features: Caroline Munro, Lee Grant, Renée Glynne, Virginia Bates (aka Wetherell), Derek Malcolm, Diane Aubrey, Jack Diamond, Miles Kreuger, Donnie Dunagen, Norman Jewison, Nehemia Persoff, H.M Wynant, Bernard Coleman, Daniel Haller, Gord Shriver, Ruth Shiel, John Elliot.
Interviews which were filmed or recorded and didn't make it into either film for various reasons included - Stuart Hersh, Rick Goldschmidt, Linda Clough Jones & Craig Causten, Kevin Clement, John Waxman, Kirk Hammett (Zoom interview) & Gudrun Ure.
The DVD & Blu-ray included additional interviews with Kevin Brownlow, Anthony Pratt (BK's great nephew) & Tony Bilbow (who filmed Karloff's last interview)
- GoofsUniversal did not "buy" the rights to "Frankenstein"--the novel had long since been in the public domain.
NB - While the above note is correct, in April 1931 Universal did buy the film production rights to the 1927 PLAY of Frankenstein by Peggy Webling and this was a key source of inspiration for the film released later that year. In the documentary this was originally elaborated on at some length, including Hamilton Deane's connection to the role - but the need to shorten the running time to a workable length led to the removal of most of the sequence - hence a mistake by omission.
- ConnectionsFeatures His Majesty, the American (1919)
Featured review
Documentary examining Karloff's life from his extraordinary and far from easy childhood, through his youth in London and then off to America before returning to the UK. He was highly regarded in the theatre and despite up and downs in his career he was never really out of work in the movies and tv until dying from emphysema in 1969.
It's an interesting look at his life and shows him as an intelligent and caring man and someone who stood up for his principles - he was an early officer in the screen actors guild. There are the usual array of famous and not so famous names who talk about him, with some like Guillermo Del Toro and Christopher Frayling, knowledgeable fans and others whose presence is a bit of a mystery eg Christopher Plummer. Worth seeing though and particularly to see what a huge star he was during his days in horror films in the 1930s and how later on her earned a whole new legion of fans who caught his films on tv.
It's an interesting look at his life and shows him as an intelligent and caring man and someone who stood up for his principles - he was an early officer in the screen actors guild. There are the usual array of famous and not so famous names who talk about him, with some like Guillermo Del Toro and Christopher Frayling, knowledgeable fans and others whose presence is a bit of a mystery eg Christopher Plummer. Worth seeing though and particularly to see what a huge star he was during his days in horror films in the 1930s and how later on her earned a whole new legion of fans who caught his films on tv.
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By what name was Boris Karloff: The Man Behind the Monster (2021) officially released in Canada in English?
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