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A Passion For Horror

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The Corpse Vanishes (1942)
(a.k.a The Case of the Missing Brides)
Directed by Wallace Fox The Corpse Vanishes is a black and white horror film from 1942, starring Bela Lugosi. Lugosi plays Dr Lorenz, a brilliant scientist with an aged and sickly (and more than a little mad) wife. Lorenz' wife, the Countess, might be getting on in years, but she looks a lot younger than she should. There is, however, a price to pay for her vitality, and she is not the one who must keep paying it. In an effort to keep his lady-love young and lovely(ish), Lorenz must keep abducting young women and extracting glandular fluid from them. The fluid is then used as the main ingredient in the potion that keeps a spring in the Countess' step. The Countess' looks might be deceptive most of the time, but, sadly she is mad all of the time -- the bats in her belfry might not be growing old gracefully, but they are still there. For some strange reason, which is never explained, the Dr only kidnaps brides on their wedding days. Lorenz sends each of his victims an orchid, which the brides believe is from their soon-to-be-hubby. 'Wear it next to your heart' the accompanying note instructs them, and they do. Something stinks about the orchids though, and before the young ladies can get the words 'I do' out of their mouths they faint to the carpet and appear to be dead. Then, posing as people from the coroner's office, Lorenz' henchmen pick up the bodies and carry them out to their getaway hearse, which is parked conveniently outside. Once Lorenz has the brides safely in his lab he revives them and gets busy with his needles (and he ain't knitting, folks). I quite enjoyed watching The Corpse Vanishes, but it reminds me of a lot of other Lugosi films. Once again Lugosi's character seems to be a dab-hand at hypnotizing people, once again he is a mad scientist, and there is also a nosy female reporter thrown into the mix for a little added sex appeal. Obviously, at the time, these things must have been considered to be essential ingredients for all and any horror flicks. But if these are the ingredients, then the icing on the cake, for me anyway, had to be seeing Lorenz and the Countess lying side by side in his and hers coffins. "I find a coffin much more comfortable than a bed," Lorenz tells the nosy female reporter, when she questions him about it. "Many people do so my dear." The reporter looks less than convinced, and who can blame her?
CAST Bela
Lugosi
... Dr. Lorenz
Watch
The Corpse Vanishes
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