From 1943 through 1945, Universal Studios made a string of six movies that starred Lon Chaney, Jr. that were all termed "The Inner Sanctum". Many of the actors were seen in several of the films, though Chaney managed to play the lead in all of them. The stories were B-films--with small budgets and running at just over 60 minutes each. In many ways, they were similar to the later "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" TV series. In addition, Columbia Pictures apparently thought there was money in the concept and brought out The Whistler series just a year after the first Inner Sanctum film. Like the other series, the same actor was supposed to star in the films and they all had different stories about murder and mayhem. Of the two series, I think the Inner Sanctum ones were just a bit better and part of this was because Chaney was excellent in the films.
Chaney plays a stage mentalist who apparently accidentally killed an audience member using his psychic powers. Since Chaney is such a nice guy, he can't live with himself and gives up the stage. Oddly, he is offered a job working in a wax museum and things seem okay, until yet another person dies--seemingly from Chaney's power.
THE FROZEN GHOST is a fun movie to watch, though I'll also admit that the plot was a bit silly and there were a lot of plot holes. At times, characters behave irrationally due to poor writing and plot is incredibly convoluted and tough to believe. However, for lovers of the genre, it's still well worth a look.
The Frozen Ghost
1945
Action / Horror / Mystery / Romance
Plot summary
Stage mentalist Gregor the Great becomes enraged when a drunken audience member belittles his act. When the man dies suddenly, Gregor convinces himself that his hypnotic powers are to blame. Guilt-ridden, he retires from performing to Valerie Monet's wax museum. He becomes increasingly stressed when he is pursued romantically by Valerie, her niece, and his former stage assistant, Maura Daniel. When Valerie mysteriously disappears, it is apparent that sinister forces are at work in the museum.
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Possibly the weakest of the Inner Sanctum films, but it's still fun to watch
Fun Watching Chaney
Lon Chaney, Jr. is the leading man here. It is fun watching him get unhinged as he thinks his gift of hypnosis has caused the death of a drunk who comes on stage plastered. What follows is Chaney's amazing overacting. He is beset with whininess and guilt. Soon, the women in his life begin to be problems for him, as is his manager, played by Milburn Stone. When one of those women disappears, the police start sniffing around. This is really a borderline horror movie. Once again, a wax museum takes up much of the action, along with its curator, a strange evil little man with a Peter Lorre accent. It is good fun and doesn't try to be something it is not.
No ghosts here
Like B westerns at the time the title The Frozen Ghost has nothing to do with ghosts. All the folks here are alive though in suspended animation.
Possibly this film might have been better had Universal gotten old horror film standbys Bela Lugosi or Boris Karloff to do the title role. Lon Chaney, Jr. is a fine actor and can be frightening indeed on a occasion, but his role as a mentalist who has convinced himself that he can kill with a thought really required someone like those two titans of horror.
In any event Chaney is doing his mentalist act with assistant Evelyn Ankers and when a drunken customer ruins his act he wishes him dead and so he is. His agent and friend Milburn Stone persuades Chaney to retire and spend some time helping another friend of Stone's Martin Kosleck run his wax museum.
Kosleck is our bad guy, he's done many a sinister role most prominently Joseph Goebbels in a few films. In this he's a scientist doing the usual ghoulish things that scientists do. When his assistants Tala Birrell and Elena Verdugo disappear Chaney thinks he might have something to do with it. So does homicide cop Douglass Dumbrille for once a good guy.
The Frozen Ghost is not up to the usual Universal standards of Gothic horror. Chaney is very much miscast in the lead here.