Showing posts with label Bela Lugosi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bela Lugosi. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2022

Shocktober 10/3/22

And now? For your viewing pleasure, Vampira and Bela Lugosi on the Red Skelton Show.

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Shocktober 10/20/21

"The Bats Have left the belltower, the victims have been bled/Red velvet lines the black box, Bela Lugosi's dead."

Bauhaus, "Bela Lugosi's Dead"

It's somewhat difficult after all these years to think of Bela Lugosi as anything other than a caricature of himself--an outlandishly theatrical actor capable of playing only a narrow range of characters in increasingly cheap productions; when your career ends with you playing the lead in an Ed Wood film, you know you've gone beyond rock bottom.

But, as ever, there is more here than meets the eye.

Lugosi, a new graphic novel written and illustrated by Korem Shadmi, attempts to humanize the caricature, starting with arguably his lowest moment: Checking into rehab for morphine addiction in 1955. From there, Shadmi tells Bela's story in a time-shifting narrative; going back and forth from Bela's glory days in Hollywood starring in top-of-the-line productions like Dracula and Murders in the Rue Morgue (both for Universal) to his ignoble final days acting in Ed Wood movies; his last film, the infamous Plan 9 from Outer Space, was completed after Bela's death using a double who looked nothing like Bela.

Shamdi's approach is even-handed--not reveling in Bela's downfall, but not glossing over his career miscues, either. (Turning down the lead in Frankenstein? Not a good idea.)

Lugosi is a perfect read for an autumn afternoon, when the leaves tumble down the streets and the shadows are especially long.

Also? Today is Bela Lugosi's birthday. So raise a glass of plasma to our favorite vampire.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Shocktober 10/15/19


"Listen to them...children of the night...what music they make!"

Friday, October 24, 2008

Shocktober: Friday is Bring Your Vampire to Work Day

Or, at least it is on this Friday before Halloween, when Bela Lugosi, Jonathan Frid and Christopher Lee are gracing my workspace with their fiendish presence. Coworkers have had little trouble recognizing the two actors who played Dracula on the bir screen, but have struggled to identify Barnabas Collins in the middle--perhaps because Dark Shadows went off the air before most of them were even born. (Yes, I'm old.)