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Mystery of the Wax Museum

  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 17m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)
The disappearance of people and corpses leads a reporter to a wax museum and a sinister sculptor.
Play trailer3:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
HorrorMysteryThriller

The disappearance of people and corpses leads a reporter to a wax museum and a sinister sculptor.The disappearance of people and corpses leads a reporter to a wax museum and a sinister sculptor.The disappearance of people and corpses leads a reporter to a wax museum and a sinister sculptor.

  • Director
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Writers
    • Don Mullaly
    • Carl Erickson
    • Charles Belden
  • Stars
    • Lionel Atwill
    • Fay Wray
    • Glenda Farrell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    7.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Writers
      • Don Mullaly
      • Carl Erickson
      • Charles Belden
    • Stars
      • Lionel Atwill
      • Fay Wray
      • Glenda Farrell
    • 133User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Restoration Preview
    Trailer 3:32
    Restoration Preview

    Photos140

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    Top Cast38

    Edit
    Lionel Atwill
    Lionel Atwill
    • Ivan Igor
    Fay Wray
    Fay Wray
    • Charlotte Duncan
    Glenda Farrell
    Glenda Farrell
    • Florence
    Frank McHugh
    Frank McHugh
    • Jim
    Allen Vincent
    Allen Vincent
    • Ralph Burton
    Gavin Gordon
    Gavin Gordon
    • George Winton
    Edwin Maxwell
    Edwin Maxwell
    • Joe Worth
    Holmes Herbert
    Holmes Herbert
    • Dr. Rasmussen
    Claude King
    Claude King
    • Mr. Galatalin
    Arthur Edmund Carewe
    Arthur Edmund Carewe
    • Prof. Darcy
    Thomas E. Jackson
    Thomas E. Jackson
    • Detective
    • (as Thomas Jackson)
    DeWitt Jennings
    DeWitt Jennings
    • Police Captain
    Matthew Betz
    Matthew Betz
    • Hugo
    Monica Bannister
    Monica Bannister
    • Joan Gale
    Bull Anderson
    • Janitor
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Austin
    Frank Austin
    • Winton's Valet
    • (uncredited)
    Max Barwyn
    Max Barwyn
    • Museum Visitor
    • (uncredited)
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • Ambrose
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Writers
      • Don Mullaly
      • Carl Erickson
      • Charles Belden
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews133

    6.87.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7utgard14

    "You can go to some nice warm place and I don't mean California."

    Classic horror movie directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Lionel Atwill as a deranged sculptor with an "interesting" method of making the statues on display at his wax museum. The last (and best) of the three horror movies Lionel Atwill did with Fay Wray. Atwill is fantastic here and Wray is, as always, delightful. Nice support from Frank McHugh, Gavin Gordon, and Edwin Maxwell, among others. The scene stealer of the movie is Glenda Farrell as the fast-talking reporter heroine. She really has fun with the part. A few years later she would star in the Torchy Blane series and play a character very similar to the one she plays here.

    It's a good-looking movie, filmed in two-color Technicolor with nice atmospheric direction from Curtiz. The sets are great, especially Atwill's art deco laboratory. The makeup effects are terrific. It's a juicy Pre-Coder, as evidenced by the gruesome plot and the junkie character played by Arthur Edmund Carewe. Some viewers might be put off by the fact that a large chunk of the middle of the picture is more like a crime story/newspaper movie but I was always entertained, particularly by the back & forth between Farrell and McHugh. So it's not a straight horror movie from beginning to end but, so what, it's still a great film and worth a look. Remade in the '50s as House of Wax with Vincent Price. That version is more well-known than this one but I like rewatching this one more. It's just more fun.
    Elvis-53

    Remember this forgotten masterpiece

    A genuinely frightening film from Michael Curtiz, jack of no trades and master of all. Many of the tricks of classic 1930's horror are here, including the opening scene set in a dark, rainy London street, the long shadows on the wall, lengthy periods of silence, and all timed to perfection. Only the faster-than-the-speed-of-sound dialogue of Glenda Farrell truly lets the film down. But other than that it is a gothic masterpiece, an underrated movie probably due to the fact that it lay undiscovered, thought lost, for over half a century. Far more inventive and imaginative than the majority of horror films made today.
    7emilywallace-49758

    Pre-Code Classic

    Glenda Farrell steals the show as an energetic reporter who gets the scoop of a lifetime when she realizes a wax museum is using real life corpses to re-stage their exhibits after their previous museum burnt to the ground.

    Mystery of the Wax Museum has been remade twice (both under the title House of Wax) and each film has its own unique stamp to keep things interesting. Being that this is a pre-code movie, there's a good deal more innuendo than you can expect to find in the 1953 remake. There's also a lot more comedy and a general tongue in cheek quality to this film, especially due to Farrell's hysterical performance.

    Still, there are some thrills to be had and the killer's ghoulish burnt face makeup can certainly still creep one out in the right lighting. It's worth tracking this one down.
    pfeinman

    A Thirties Movies Made for the 30s.

    Considering the fact that this 1933 movie was produced during the depression, when moviegoers expected pure entertainment, the results were exactly what they wanted. Glenda Farrell's hard-boiled Florence Dempsey was what filmgoers were looking for. Please note that many of the movies of the period had male and female stars who were fast talkers and wise-crackers. Such stars as Cary Grant, Carole Lombard, Rosalind Russell, Bette Davis, James Cagney, Mae West, W. C. Fields, William Powell, Myrna Loy, etc. were the norm and not the exception.

    This wonderful movie was way ahead of its time. It's two-color look was also something very different for the 1930s and its washed-out looked helped give it a more sinister appearance. The later "House of Wax" used 3-D and having seen it in the movies I can tell you it was probably the best of the 3-D movies. Even better than "The Creature from the Black Lagoon".

    Fay Wray was pure candy and she practiced her scream well for the upcoming "King Kong". I have seen most of Lionel Atwill's work and I believe the underplaying of Ivan Igor helped make him a more credible monster. The movie was well cast and one can not help but notice the uncanny fact that most of the actors in "The House of Wax" were chosen because they looked like the earlier actors except for the difference between Charles Buchinsky (Bronson) and Matthew Betz as the loyal mute assistant.

    Although enjoyable, "The House of Wax" was no match for the earlier edition. It's understandable that "The House of Wax" did not use the characters of Florence Dempsey and Gavin Gordon. Sidekicks didn't work as well as in the 50s.

    I wonder what the movie critics of the 30s thought of the "Mystery of the Wax Museum?"
    boris-26

    Landmark horror film that should not be missed

    In the early 1930's Jack Warner was under contract to use the Two-strip technicolor process on a Warner Brothers film. Unfortunately, this primitive form of color cinematography had a limited pallet of colors. Everything had an unnatural pastel look. Warner wisely choose a genre not dependent on reality- the horror film. Their first color horror film was DOCTOR X, a wild and macabre who-dunnit complete with scary murders, truly mad doctors and a cannibal. DOCTOR X, released in 1932, was enough of a success, that Warner Brothers reunited it's director, Michael Curtiz, the two leads, Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray, and the two strip Technicolor process for yet another horror film. The new film, simply titled WAX MUSEUM during production was a fast moving creepy chiller that mixed the gloom of Depression era New York with the creepy going-ons of a wax museum. The film begins in 1921. Sculptor Ivan Igor (a bohemian looking Lionel Atwill), so obsessed creating his wax museum, that he ignores that he and his partner, Worth (Edwin Maxwell) are in deep financial trouble. Worth sets fire to the museum to collect on a fire insurance policy. The museum is destroyed, and Igor is left a cripple with useless hands.

    Twelve years later, in Manhattan, Igor opens a new wax museum. At the same time, a wisecracking reporter, Florence (Glenda Farrell) tracks a hot case of the corpse of a recently murdered socialite stolen from the morgue. She begins to suspect that creepy wax museum downtown of stealing bodies and posing them as wax statues. What makes things worse, is that her best friend, Ruth (Fay Wray) is dating the most innocent of the questionable wax-workers. THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM is a DVD shelf must-have.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The morgue set was recycled from the laboratory set in the earlier Doctor X (1932), also a two-strip Technicolor horror film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray.
    • Goofs
      Ivan Igor says that Jean Paul Marat's assassin, Charlotte Corday, was his mistress. This is incorrect; they never had met until she came to his office posing as a courier and quickly stabbed him to death. After her execution a few days later, she was found to be virgo intacta.
    • Quotes

      Florence: Listen, Joan Gale's body was swiped from the morgue, have you ever heard of such a thing as a death mask?

      Jim: I used to be married to one.

      Florence: Then it came to life and divorced you, I know all about that.

    • Alternate versions
      This film was shot in two versions. One camera unit shot the film in two-color Technicolor. A second camera unit shot the scenes at the same time in black and white. The black and white version was meant for theaters who could not afford the higher rental cost of the color prints.
    • Connections
      Edited into Mame (1974)
    • Soundtracks
      Agitato
      (uncredited)

      Music by Bernhard Kaun

      Stock cue played over main titles

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 1933 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Mystery of the Wax Museum
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 17m(77 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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