How do you make a great monster movie? Universal knew the secret for many decades, delivering numerous iconic characters, plus tons more creatures that don’t wind up in the monster mashes and crossovers and — starting with the latest remake of The Mummy— cinematic universes. Will the studio prove it’s still the best when it come to vehicles for Dracula, Frankenstein’s Monster, the Invisible Man, the Wolf Man, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, etc.? Or does it need to further study the lessons of those legendary directors that came before, many of them German refugees, and the advice some had to offer?
These six tips are for the writers, directors, and producers of Universal’s newly branded Dark Universe, as well for any fans and filmmakers out there interested in learning something from Tod Browning, James Whale, Karl Freund, Jack Arnold, Joe May, and Curt Siodmak.
1. Tod Browning: Don’t Make ‘Em Laugh
Browning made a single contribution to the Universal Monsters vault, but it’s one of the first and possibly the most famous: Dracula. He’s also known for such MGM horror classics as Freaks, The Unknown, Mark of the Vampire, The Devil-Doll, and London After Midnight. His tip is a quote from the March 1928 issue of Motion Picture Classic magazine (reprinted in the book “A Thousand Faces: Lon Chaney’s Unique Artistry in Motion Pictures“):
The thing you have to be most careful of in a mystery story is not to let it verge on the comic. If a thing gets too gruesome and too horrible, it gets beyond the limits of the average imagination and the audience laughs. It may sound incongruous, but mystery must be made plausible.
James Whale directs Claude Rains on the set of ‘The Invisible Man’
2. James Whale: Easy Thrills
Whale is primarily known for directing Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein, the two most culturally significant Universal Monsters movies after Dracula (if not also before it). He also did The Invisible Man and The Old Dark House between those two monuments. His tip is a quote on project choice and the fun of the job featured in the 1989 MagicImage Filmbooks Presents book on Frankenstein (reprinted in “Fear Itself: Horror on Screen and in Reality During the Depression and World“):
I chose Frankenstein out of about 30 available stories because it was the strongest meat and gave me a chance to dabble in the macabre. I thought it would be an amazing thing to try and make what everybody knows to be a physical impossibility into the almost believable for 60 minutes. A director must be pretty bad if he can’t get a thrill out of a war, murder, robbery. Frankenstein was a sensational story and had a chance to become a sensational picture. It offered fine pictorial possibilities, had two grand characterizations, and dealt with a subject which might go anywhere — and that is part of the fun of making pictures.
Karl Freund directs Boris Karloff on the set of ‘The Mummy’
3. Karl Freund: “Get to the Fucking Point”
Freund is the one we owe for the first Dark Universe installment, as he directed the original version of The Mummy. He was mainly a cinematographer (a pioneer of mobile camera and multi-camera techniques at that) and shot such movies as The Good Earth (for which he won an Oscar), Metropolis, The Golem, Key Largo, and Browning’s Dracula, as well as TV’s I Love Lucy.
Before sharing his best tip, I want to include what he had to say negatively about the job of directing, which he gave up because he found it a “dull routine” and lacking in the “latitude of special creativeness” of camerawork. From an interview quoted in the book “Universal Horrors: The Studio’s Classic Films, 1931–1946“:
Anyone can make a good cake if he has the right ingredients. It all depends on story, cast, and circumstances.
And now for the “first lesson in directing,” as relayed in a terrific story told by filmmaker Richard Brooks about what he learned from Freund on the set of John Huston’s Key Largo, the screenplay for which Brooks wrote:
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