The Invisible Ray (1936 film)
The Invisible Ray | |
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Lobby card for 1948 re-release | |
Directed by | Lambert Hillyer |
Produced by | Edmund Grainger |
Written by | John Colton |
Starring |
Boris Karloff Béla Lugosi Frances Drake Frank Lawton Walter Kingsford Beulah Bondi |
Music by | Franz Waxman |
Cinematography | George Robinson |
Edited by | Bernard W. Burton |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 79 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $235,000[1][2] |
The Invisible Ray is a 1936 American science fiction film starring Boris Karloff (credited as '"KARLOFF") and Béla Lugosi as Dr. Felix Benet that was released by Universal Pictures.
Plot
A visionary astronomer, Dr. Janos Rukh (Boris Karloff) has invented a telescope that can look far out into space — into the Andromeda Galaxy — and photograph rays of light that will show the Earth's past, something which he has theorized as possible for some years, to his discredit among his scientist-colleagues. Looking at the past on a planetarium-like dome in his lab, two of these ardently skeptical scientists, Drs. Benet (Bela Lugosi) and Stevens (Walter Kingsford), watch a large meteor hitting the earth, thousands of years ago at a spot in Africa. Amazed by the demonstration, the pair invite Rukh to go on an expedition to find the meteor.
While in Africa, Rukh finds the meteor but is exposed to its strong radiation, dubbed ("Radium X"), which causes him to glow in the dark, makes his mere touch cause instantaneous death, and will eventually destroy his mind, then his body. Dr. Benet develops a serum that holds this effect at bay, then takes a piece of the meteorite back to Europe, where he modifies its effects to help people, including curing the blind. Rukh returns to his jungle base and has Benet declare that he has heroically died in Africa, leaving his discovery to the world.
The situation has all along been complicated by the romantic relationship between his wife, Diana (Frances Drake), and Ronald Drake (Frank Lawton), the nephew of Lady Arabella Stevens (Beulah Bondi), Dr. Stevens' wife. As his mind deteriorates, Rukh become crazed with jealousy over Benet's success with his discovery, and returns to Europe and follows the others to Paris. Believing that he has died, Diana marries Ronald. Rukh begins to use the toxic radiation poisoning imparted to him by Radium X exposure to kill off the members of the expedition, and marks each death by disintegrating one statue outside a church across from his hideout by focussing his radiation through a raygun-like apparatus aimed out the window.
Rukh manages to kill each of the Stevenses before the police realize what is happening. They set a trap by convening a faux conference of scientists to discuss Radium X; but Rukh secretly gains access to the house and kills Benet also. He has saved Ronald and Diana for last, but finds himself unable to kill his wife, and this hesitation brings him to a confrontation with the one most-important woman in his life, his mother, who has all along foreseen her son's fatal flaws. She smashes the last of his antidote bottles as the radiation begins to consume him from within, and Rukh jumps from a window, being consumed by an explosive flame and vaporized by Radium X before reaching the ground.
Cast
- Boris Karloff as Dr. Janos Rukh (billed as KARLOFF)
- Béla Lugosi as Dr. Felix Benet
- Frances Drake as Diana Rukh
- Frank Lawton as Ronald Drake
- Violet Kemble Cooper as Mother Rukh
- Walter Kingsford as Sir Francis Stevens
- Beulah Bondi as Lady Arabella Stevens
- Frank Reicher as Professor Meiklejohn
- Paul Weigel as Monsieur Noyer
- Georges Renavent as Chief of the Sûreté (as Georges Renevant)
Production
The film was originally budgeted at $166,785 but went $68,000 over budget.[2]
Soundtrack
The film features music by film composer Franz Waxman. Many of the sets and sound effects were later used in the Flash Gordon movie serials.
Legacy
Stock footage of the film was later recycled into the 1939 serial The Phantom Creeps, starring Bela Lugosi.[3] The film was part of the original Shock Theater package of 52 Universal monster films.
See also
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Invisible Ray. |
- The Invisible Ray at the American Film Institute Catalog
- The Invisible Ray at the Internet Movie Database
- The Invisible Ray at AllMovie