Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Conversations with The Mummy: Critical Reactions

View through CrossRef
This chapter describes the critical reception of The Mummy (1932). When the film was screened, professional film critics were intrigued by the central figure of Boris Karloff, the actor who had been transformed into a living mummy. The Los Angeles Times even offered a prescient take that foresaw Karloff's future place in the film pantheon. As for the film itself, however, the critical reception was more lukewarm. Critics who had grown tired of horror cinema found little in The Mummy to change their opinions. The chapter then looks at re-evaluations and later evaluations of the film. Critics continue to find weaknesses, but they also continue to find rewarding new ways of approaching The Mummy. On the whole, The Mummy has managed to stand firm despite early critical indifference and subsequent changes in audience tastes. The film's position as the start of a subgenre has ensured that The Mummy retains immortality as a popular culture artefact.
Liverpool University Press
Title: Conversations with The Mummy: Critical Reactions
Description:
This chapter describes the critical reception of The Mummy (1932).
When the film was screened, professional film critics were intrigued by the central figure of Boris Karloff, the actor who had been transformed into a living mummy.
The Los Angeles Times even offered a prescient take that foresaw Karloff's future place in the film pantheon.
As for the film itself, however, the critical reception was more lukewarm.
Critics who had grown tired of horror cinema found little in The Mummy to change their opinions.
The chapter then looks at re-evaluations and later evaluations of the film.
Critics continue to find weaknesses, but they also continue to find rewarding new ways of approaching The Mummy.
On the whole, The Mummy has managed to stand firm despite early critical indifference and subsequent changes in audience tastes.
The film's position as the start of a subgenre has ensured that The Mummy retains immortality as a popular culture artefact.

Related Results

The Legacy of The Mummy
The Legacy of The Mummy
This chapter highlights the legacy of The Mummy (1932). Ever since the 1930s, the plot elements and iconography of the film have been re-used, re-interpreted, and re-worked in myri...
The Egypt of The Mummy
The Egypt of The Mummy
This chapter assesses how The Mummy (1932) approaches ancient Egypt and the ways in which it reflects contemporary attitudes towards the place and era. Although set almost entirely...
The Makers of The Mummy
The Makers of The Mummy
This chapter evaluates the visual fields of direction, performances, and effects in the making of The Mummy (1932). While it was Richard Schayer and Nina Wilcox Putnam who laid out...
Horror and Fantasy in The Mummy
Horror and Fantasy in The Mummy
This chapter explores the horror and fantasy in The Mummy (1932). Universal Pictures' treatments of the vampire and werewolf themes had specific bodies of folklore to draw upon for...
Introduction
Introduction
This introductory chapter provides an overview of The Mummy (1932). While the setting and concepts of The Mummy were relatively new to horror cinema as it existed in 1932, the film...
The Mummy-Pits of Egypt
The Mummy-Pits of Egypt
Abstract Clues to Ankh-Hap’s travels were discovered in the packing material wedged around his mummy. This led to an investigation of Henry Augustus Ward, proprietor...
Electrochemistry of Heterocycles
Electrochemistry of Heterocycles
Abstract The sections in this article are Overview on the Electrochemistry of Heterocycles Electrosyntheses of Heterocyc...
End‐of‐life conversations for the older person: A concept analysis
End‐of‐life conversations for the older person: A concept analysis
AbstractAimThe aim of this concept analysis is to seek clarity as to what end‐of‐life conversations involve by developing a clear working definition and using model cases to concep...

Back to Top