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Film Historian Alan K. Rode talks Michael Curtiz and ‘Doctor X’

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Doctor X Michael Curtiz

Doctor X, the 1932 film by Michael Curtiz, is part of this year’s TCM Film Festival. The late-night entry into the festival’s schedule will play at 1:30 am ET on Friday May 7, 2021.

Set against the backdrop of an elite medical college, the film is based on a play titled The Terror, which premiered a year before the film’s release and involves a series of cannibalistic serial murders. When a reporter (Lee Tracy) gets wind that one of the college’s professors might be behind the killings, he’ll stop at nothing to get the story for his paper even when it puts him in danger, as well.

Tracey is joined in the cast by Fay Wray (King Kong), Lionel Atwill (Captain Blood), and Preston Foster (The Last Days of Pompeii).

It was an interesting time for filmmaking. The depression had hit the film industry–like the rest of the economy–hard. An estimated third of theaters were closed, and many turned to gimmicks in an effort to keep their doors open. Studios like Warner Bros., MGM, and Universal turned to horror films to generate audiences. Lucky for them, the formula worked, and that’s where Alan K. Rode says, director Michael Curtiz entered the picture.

Rode literally wrote the book on the director who would helm almost 200 films before his death. The exhaustive 700+ page biography, Michael Curtiz: A Life in Pictures, began with a commission and a suggestion from a friend as iHorror discovered when we sat down with the historian to discuss the film and its director ahead of the film festival.

Lee Tracy in Doctor X

“I was asked to write a book about a director by University Press of Kentucky,” Rode explained. “I like plowing new ground. I don’t think the world needs another book about Joan Crawford, for example, so I’m not going to write it. I had a couple of people in mind. Then my friend, the late Richard Erdman, said, ‘You know Mike discovered me. He discovered me right out of high school. You should write about Mike Curtiz.'”

And, that’s exactly what Rode did. What was supposed to be a two-year project became six years of research, travel, and writing to produce the book about Michael Curtiz. Naturally, when TCM decided to schedule Doctor X for its festival this year, they called up Rode to participate.

So how did the man who would eventually direct films like Casablanca and Mildred Pierce become involved with a horror film?

Naturally, due to the era, a lot of it had to do with the studio system. Rode points out that Curtiz was under contract with the Warners from 1926 to 1953. In a time when studios reigned supreme and got away with so many unethical things, Curtiz’s first contract read that “anything he did or thought of” while under contract with Warner Bros. belonged to the studio.

“I can’t think of any other run of a director that really was so responsible for the style and the output of any other studio,” Rode said. “But, at this period, he was still looking to find himself. The analogy I use in my book is that he was a general foreman in a movie factory. He was an important guy but they had a lot of other important directors at the time. He was doing whatever they told him to do. That was what he was about.”

What they told Curtiz to do in the early 30s was make a horror film. Jack Warner had a contract obligation to fulfill with Technicolor, and Project X with its “smart aleck reporters, tough editors, cops that were about as sensitive as commode lids, and Fay Wray” tied to a story about a cannibalistic serial killer fit the bill.

As with all of his projects, Curtiz threw himself entirely into the project in order to make the best film tahhatt he possibly could.

“He tried to imbue every artistic variance to make the film as best as he could,” he said. “Of course, that put him behind these very tight schedules and tight budgets. So, in the case of Doctor X, at one point, I think he worked the crew for a solid 24 hours on Sunday. They all collapsed.”

Fay Wray and the Moon Killer in Doctor X

The super-hot, bright Technicolor lighting on the project did not help Curtiz either. At one point, the film’s star, Lionel Atwill, gave an interview in which he talked about his costume’s lab coat suddenly beginning to smoke as if it were ready to combust. During filming, the actors would often run off set as soon as the director called “cut.”

Still, for genre fans, the film boasts Fay Wray’s first big screen scream a year before King Kong, and is filled with an amazing amount of tension, thanks largely to Curtiz’s camera work and attention to detail especially in one pivotal scene in Xavier’s laboratory.

In trying to ferret out the killer, the doctor chains his fellows to chairs and forces them to watch a reenactment of one the Moon Killer’s crimes in an attempt to gauge their physical and emotional reactions. The scene is an incredible example of tension-building.

And when the cameras were too big to move much themselves, Curtiz would move the actors instead. It gave his films a momentum that carried them from one scene to the next and kept his audience on the edge of their seats.

You can see Curtiz’s work in Doctor X this Friday, May 7, 2021 at 1:30 AM ET as part of the TCM Film Festival complete with a short documentary featuring Alan K. Rode speaking about the horror films of Michael Curtiz in the early 1930s.

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’47 Meters Down’ Getting Third Movie Called ‘The Wreck’

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Deadline is reporting that a new 47 Meters Down installment is heading into production, making the shark series a trilogy. 

“Series creator Johannes Roberts, and screenwriter Ernest Riera, who wrote the first two films, have co-written the third installment: 47 Meters Down: The Wreck.” Patrick Lussier (My Bloody Valentine) will direct.

The first two films were a moderate success, released in 2017 and 2019 respectively. The second film is titled 47 Meters Down: Uncaged

47 Meters Down

The plot for The Wreck is detailed by Deadline. They write that it involves a father and daughter trying to repair their relationship by spending time together scuba diving into a sunken ship, “But soon after their descent, their master diver has an accident leaving them alone and unprotected inside the labyrinth of the wreck. As tensions rise and oxygen dwindles, the pair must use their newfound bond to escape the wreck and the relentless barrage of bloodthirsty great white sharks.”

The filmmakers are hoping to present the pitch to the Cannes market with production starting in the fall. 

47 Meters Down: The Wreck is the perfect continuation of our shark-filled franchise,” said Byron Allen, founder/chairman/CEO of Allen Media Group. “This film will once again have moviegoers terrified and on the edge of their seats.”

Johannes Roberts adds, “We can’t wait for audiences to be trapped underwater with us again. 47 Meters Down: The Wreck is going to be the biggest, most-intense film of this franchise.”

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A24 Reportedly “Pulls Plug” On Peacock’s ‘Crystal Lake’ Series

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Crystal

Film studio A24 might not be going forward with its planned Peacock Friday the 13th spinoff called Crystal Lake according to Fridaythe13thfranchise.com. The website quotes entertainment blogger Jeff Sneider who made a statement on his webpage through a subscription paywall. 

“I’m hearing that A24 has pulled the plug on Crystal Lake, its planned Peacock series based on the Friday the 13th franchise featuring masked killer Jason Voorhees. Bryan Fuller was due to executive produce the horror series.

It’s unclear whether this is a permanent decision or a temporary one, as A24 had no comment. Perhaps Peacock will help the trades shed more light on this project, which was announced back in 2022.”

Back in January 2023, we reported that some big names were behind this streaming project including Bryan Fuller, Kevin Williamson, and Friday the 13th Part 2 final girl Adrienne King.

Fan Made Crystal Lake Poster

“‘Crystal Lake info from Bryan Fuller! They officially start writing in 2 weeks (writers are here in the audience).” tweeted social media writer Eric Goldman who tweeted the info while attending a Friday the 13th 3D screening event in January 2023. “It will have two scores to choose from – a modern one and a classic Harry Manfredini one. Kevin Williamson is writing an episode. Adrienne King will have a recurring role. Yay! Fuller has pitched four seasons for Crystal Lake. Only one officially ordered so far though he notes Peacock would have to pay a pretty hefty penalty if they didn’t order a Season 2. Asked if he can confirm Pamela’s role in the Crystal Lake series, Fuller replied ‘We’re honestly going to be covering it all. The series is covering the life and times of these two characters’ (presumably he’s referring to Pamela and Jason there!)'”

Whether or not Peacock is moving forward with the project is unclear and since this news is secondhand information, it still has to be verified which will require Peacock and/or A24 to make an official statement which they have yet to do.

But keep checking back to iHorror for the latest updates to this developing story.

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‘The Carpenter’s Son’: New Horror Film About The Childhood Of Jesus Starring Nicolas Cage

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This is one unexpected and unique horror film that will cause controversy. According to Deadline, a new horror film titled The Carpenter’s Son will be directed by Lotfy Nathan and star Nicolas Cage as the carpenter. It is set to start filming this summer; no official release date has been given. Check out the official synopsis and more about the film below.

Nicolas Cage in Longlegs (2024)

The film’s synopsis states: “The Carpenter’s Son tells the dark story of a family hiding out in Roman Egypt. The son, known only as ‘the Boy’, is driven to doubt by another mysterious child and rebels against his guardian, the Carpenter, revealing inherent powers and a fate beyond his comprehension. As he exercises his own power, the Boy and his family become the target of horrors, natural and divine.”

The movie is directed by Lotfy Nathan. Julie Viez is producing under the Cinenovo banner with Alex Hughes and Riccardo Maddalosso at Spacemaker and Cage on behalf of Saturn Films.  It stars Nicolas Cage as the carpenter, FKA Twigs as the mother, young Noah Jupe as the boy, and Souheila Yacoub in an unknown role.

FKA Twigs in The Crow (2024)

The story is inspired by the apocryphal Infancy Gospel of Thomas which dates to the 2nd century AD and recounts the childhood of Jesus. The author is thought to be Judas Thomas aka “Thomas the Israelite” who wrote these teachings. These teachings are regarded as inauthentic and heretical by Christian Scholars and are not followed in the New Testament.

Noah Jupe in A Quite Place: Part 2 (2020)
Souheila Yacoub in Dune: Part 2 (2024)

This horror film was unexpected and will cause tons of controversy. Are you excited about this new film, and do you think it will do well at the box office? Let us know in the comments below. Also, check out the latest trailer for Longlegs starring Nicolas Cage below.

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