In 1920 an archaeological expedition discovers the tomb of an ancient Egyptian child prince. Returning home with their discovery, the expedition members soon find themselves being killed off... Read allIn 1920 an archaeological expedition discovers the tomb of an ancient Egyptian child prince. Returning home with their discovery, the expedition members soon find themselves being killed off by a mummy, which can be revived by reading the words off the prince's burial shroud.In 1920 an archaeological expedition discovers the tomb of an ancient Egyptian child prince. Returning home with their discovery, the expedition members soon find themselves being killed off by a mummy, which can be revived by reading the words off the prince's burial shroud.
- Sir Basil Walden
- (as Andre Morell)
- Claire
- (as Maggie Kimberley)
- Arab Cleaner
- (uncredited)
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
With no star power, a weak looking mummy and exactly the same plot as before it really is a weak link.
Stop me if you've heard this one. A group go on an excavation, uncover a tomb but find themselves besieged by a mummy and get picked off one by one.
This time however at least there is no reincarnated love interest for how horny bandage wearer!
Dull, lifeless, with few characters worth a damn and a script that feels highly recycled. Maybe I'm burning myself out watching all of these back to back, but this failed to entertain on any level.
The Good:
Interesting finale......kinda of
The Bad:
Worst looking mummy yet
Very dull
No originality
Things I Learnt From This Movie:
Wine does not go in the ear
All Egyptians have bad teeth
Mezzera, Egypt, 1920, and an expedition to find the tomb of Pharaoh Kah-to-Bey gets more than they bargained for when they unearth a shroud adorned with the ancient writings of life and death...
The third instalment of Hammer Films forays into Mumified based Egyptology, The Mummy's Shroud follows the standard formula but never the less entertains in undemanding fashion. Released as the support feature to Frankenstein Created Woman (not Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed as listed in some quarters since that was two years later), it's nicely photographed, stoically performed by the cast (especially by Hammer hero Ripper who gets a meaty role) and is pacey enough to uphold the interest. The violence aspects are strongly constructed, but kept mostly in suggestive terms as per visual enticements, and how nice to see the lead ladies here be more than token cleavage.
This was the last Hammer feature to be made at Bray Studios, so it has some poignant significance in the history of Hammer Films. It's not a great send off for Bray, but it's unmistakably one of those Hammer Horror films that fans of the studio's output can easily spend the evening with and not feel it has been time wasted. 6.5/10
Did you know
- TriviaEddie Powell, who plays the mummy in this film, was a stuntman in future films often doubling Christopher Lee as Dracula.
- GoofsThe desert scene in the prologue was clearly shot in a quarry of some sort. Amusingly enough, thousands of years later, the same quarry represented the same desert with no change in the piles of sand. An amazing coincidence since the area had just been struck by a massive sandstorm.
- Quotes
Claire de Sangre: You mean I'm going to die?
Haiti: Hee hee, in a few minutes from now, ha ha!
- Alternate versionsWhen originally released theatrically in the UK, the BBFC made cuts to secure a 'X' rating. All cuts were waived in 1995 when released on home video with a 'PG' certificate under the Lumiere Pictures label and all subsequent releases have been certificated 'PG' on their website since 2003.
- ConnectionsEdited into Tela Class: Uma Obra do Barulho (2007)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1