The Phantom Creeps
The Phantom Creeps is a 1939 12-chapter science fiction horror serial starring Bela Lugosi as mad scientist Doctor Zorka, who attempts to rule the world by creating various elaborate inventions. In dramatic fashion, foreign agents and G-Men try to seize the inventions for themselves.
It is the 112th serial released by Universal Pictures and the 44th to have sound. It was adapted in DC's Movie Comics #6 with cover date September–October 1939, the final issue of that title.
In 1949, the 265-minute serial was edited for television as a 78-minute feature film:
Plot
Dr. Zorka is a rogue scientist and the inventor of various weapons, including a "devisualizer" belt that can render him invisible, an eight-foot slave robot, and robot spiders that can either paralyze or outright destroy their prey. He also has a deadly meteorite fragment from which he extracts an element that can induce suspended animation in an entire army. Foreign spies, operating under the guise of a foreign language school, are trying to acquire the meteorite element by any means necessary while Zorka's former partner, Dr. Fred Mallory, irritated that Zorka will not turn his inventions over to the United States government, alerts Capt. Bob West of the Military Intelligence Department. Tired of answering the door and saying no to the spies and the government, Zorka relocates his laboratory. When his beloved wife is killed, Zorka is crushed and swears eternal vengeance against anyone trying to use his creations. Dr. Zorka also has aspirations of world domination, and he would have it, too, if not for his assistant Monk, an escaped convict whom Zorka has virtually enslaved. Monk is cowardly, treacherous, and totally incompetent, but his accidental or deliberate interference repeatedly frustrates Dr. Zorka's plans...Cast
- Bela Lugosi as Dr. Alex Zorka
- Robert Kent as Capt. Bob West
- Dorothy Arnold as Jean Drew
- Edwin Stanley as Dr. Fred Mallory
- Regis Toomey as Jim Daley
- Jack C. Smith as Monk
- Edward Van Sloan as Jarvis
- Dora Clement as Ann Zorka
- Anthony Averill as the henchman Rankin
- Hugh Huntley as Perkins, Dr. Mallory's lab assistant
- Monte Vandergrift as the guard Al
- Frank Mayo as train engineer
- Jim Farley as skipper
- Eddie Acuff as AMI agent Mac
- Reed Howes as signalman
- Ed Wolff as the robot
Production
Universal tried to improve their serials by eliminating the written foreword at the start of each chapter. This led to The Phantom Creeps being the first serial in which the studio used vertically scrolling text as the foreword.
Influence
The Rob Zombie song "Meet the Creeper" is based on the film. Zombie has used robots and props based on the design of Dr. Zorka's robot in several music videos and live shows. The character "Murray the Robot" in Zombie's animated movie The Haunted World of El Superbeasto is also based on this robot. Dr. Zorka's robot also appears on the album cover and music video for the single "Dragula".A comic book adaptation was published by DC Comics in Movie Comics #6.
The first three chapters of The Phantom Creeps were featured as shorts in season two of Mystery Science Theater 3000. They preceded the episodes Jungle Goddess, Rocket Attack U.S.A., and Ring of Terror.
Footage from the serial was used in the 1982 video for Automaton by the Canadian band United State.
Chapter titles
The chapters of The Phantom Creeps are:- The Menacing Power
- Death Stalks the Highways
- Crashing Timbers
- Invisible Terror
- Thundering Rails
- The Iron Monster
- The Menacing Mist
- Trapped in the Flames
- Speeding Doom
- Phantom Footprints
- The Blast
- To Destroy the World