Cat and Mouse (Alex Cross, #4)
Book
Alex Cross is back-and so is a raging and suicidal Gary Soneji. Out of prison and dying from the...
Switched (Trylle, #1)
Book
Switched is the first novel in Amanda Hocking's bestselling trilogy, Trylle. Wendy Everly knew...
Deliciously Ella: Awesome Ingredients, Incredible Food That You and Your Body Will Love
Book
The record-breaking bestselling cookbook of 2015 that's taken the healthy eating world by storm!...
Alfred Jarry
Book
Alfred Jarry's creation of the monster-tyrant Ubu was a watershed in theatre history: his play Ubu...
Game Art: Art from 40 Video Games and Interviews with Their Creators
Book
Game Art is a collection of breathtaking art from 40 video games and interviews with their creators....
Magnificence
Book
I loathe us, I loathe our stupid puerile view of the world ...That we have only to do it, that we...
The Sleeping Warrior
Book
Libby Butler's life is a mess. Her career as a solicitor in a prestigious London law firm is going...
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Motherless Brooklyn (2019) in Movies
Mar 10, 2021 (Updated Mar 11, 2021)
Matthew Krueger (10051 KP) rated The Invisible Man Returns (1940) in Movies
Dec 7, 2020
The plot: Wrongly accused of murdering his brother, Geoffrey Radcliffe (Vincent Price) is found guilty and sentenced to die. But when sympathetic Dr. Griffin (John Sutton) injects him with a serum that renders him invisible, Radcliffe is able to escape and search for the real culprit. With Inspector Sampson (Cecil Kellaway) of Scotland Yard hot on his trail, Radcliffe begins to suspect that a recent hire in his family's mining company might have the answers he seeks.
Following the commercial success of Son of Frankenstein, Universal Studios announced the development of The Invisible Man Returns in March 1939.
In May, Joe May was announced as the director of the film with either Boris Karloff or Bela Lugosi hinted at playing the lead.
Vincent Price when he was not covered by bandages or special effects only appears as himself for one minute in the film. Price spoke on the film saying that the special effects were done with Price being draped in black velvet and working against a set draped in black velvet. Price also spoke about working with Hardwicke, who he recalled "didn't like doing this film; he was facing home problems at the time. We became very close."
Its a great movie.