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1933 Directed by Frank R. Strayer
Synopsis
These are the TALONS of The Vampire Bat
A German village is stricken by a series of murders that appear to be the work of vampires.
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- Cast
- Crew
- Details
- Genres
- Releases
Cast
Lionel Atwill Fay Wray Melvyn Douglas Maude Eburne George E. Stone Dwight Frye Robert Frazer Rita Carlyle Lionel Belmore William V. Mong Stella Adams Harrison Greene
DirectorDirector
Frank R. Strayer
ProducerProducer
Phil Goldstone
Executive ProducerExec. Producer
Larry Darmour
WriterWriter
Edward T. Lowe Jr.
EditorEditor
Otis Garrett
CinematographyCinematography
Ira H. Morgan
Art DirectionArt Direction
Charles D. Hall Daniel Hall
ComposersComposers
Mischa Bakaleinikoff Peter Brunelli Charles Dunworth
SoundSound
Dick Tyler Sr.
Studios
Larry Darmour Productions Majestic Pictures
Country
USA
Language
English
Alternative Titles
Vampire der Nacht, Il vampiro, Sombras Trágicas, ¿Vampiros?, Летучая мышь - вампир, 吸血蝙蝠, 뱀파이어 배트
Genres
Thriller Horror
Themes
Thrillers and murder mysteries Horror, the undead and monster classics Creepy, chilling, and terrifying horror Intriguing and suspenseful murder mysteries Chilling experiments and classic monster horror Gothic and eerie haunting horror Suspenseful crime thrillers Show All…
Releases by Date
- Date
- Country
Premiere
20 Jan 1933
- USANew York City, NewYork
Theatrical
21 Jan 1933
- USA
Physical
01 Jan 1986
- USANR
25 Apr 2017
- USANR
09 Dec 2022
- Germany12
Releases by Country
- Date
- Country
Germany
09 Dec 2022
- Physical12
USA
20 Jan 1933
- PremiereNew York City, NewYork
21 Jan 1933
- Theatrical
01 Jan 1986
- PhysicalNRGoodTimes Home Video #VGT-5153 [VHS] 63minutes
25 Apr 2017
- PhysicalNRDVD & Blu-ray Special RestoredEdition
64mins More atIMDbTMDb Report this page
Popular reviews
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Review by Scumbalina ★★★ 3
Sometimes you just need Vampire Bat ambiance at midnight. Nothing much happens but it's gray and gothic. I've gone my entire life assuming Bela Lugosi was in this but he is not.
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Review by Joe ★★★½ 3
Lovely off-brand horror nevertheless has some very brand name horror stars: Fay Wray, Lionel Atwill, and GOAT Dwight Frye. Three striking images:
- The vicious village mob goes after Frye's character with torches lit by gorgeously hand-tinted orange flames. I don't know why this was done but I'm very glad it was.
- Melvyn Douglas, for reasons that it would probably be spoiler-y to go into, storms into a mad scientist's laboratory dressed a lot like The Shadow, and it's a better Shadow movie than any of the actual Shadow movies they made in the 30s.
- The end title card has "The End" printed over a picture of a bat with its back turned.
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Review by The Horror of Marna Larsen ★★★
Sets recycled from Frankenstein and The Old, Dark House lend more ambiance than possibly The Vampire Bat Deserves. But for me, most of these oldies tend to fade into the background almost immediately. There's not a whole lot to keep track of so I allow my brain to tune them out while I just enjoy the fog and grainy look of them.
Not much of a mystery with mr spooky science standing there while they theorize about what type of madman the killer must be! To drain people of their blood! He just stands there with his eyes spinning around in their sockets. He couldn't look guiltier (or creepier) if he tried. They still blame the bat obsessed guy because everyone hates the mentally ill. But it was an honest mistake which only cost a man his life. So. Happy ending?
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Review by Dr. Ethan Lyon ★★★ 2
5/52 of Podcast Macabre 2024- Unseen 30s
1st Frank R. Strayer
Ah, Gothic horror, my old friend. Watching this is as cosy as The Mirror Crack’d, and it’s just as surreal to describe this in terms I would use to describe a toasted teacake, a cup of Whittard’s hot chocolate and a night under a warmed blanket. But there’s such a rush of warmth I feel in witnessing Lionel Atwill control people through mesmerism that I can’t help but feel ready for bed. Not that my bed is anything special, currently. It’s a mattress on the living room floor. This is the Gothic Horror equivalent of that thin, hard mattress. No, I will not elaborate that analogy. But I will…
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Review by Karina Oliveira 2
-"That blood-sucking legend belongs in the same category with werewolves and all other peasant superstitions."
-"But the bats, man - the bats!"It's like Poverty Row studio Majestic Pictures took all the scary movie staples that were available circa the early 1930s - a dubiously Germanic village full of incongruous accents, a trail of blood-drained corpses, The Old Dark House (literally - they rented the sets from Universal!), fancy lab gear, resident freak Dwight Frye, a torch-bearing vigilante mob (big thanks to UCLA for digitally recreating the fiery hand coloring; it's really cool), mind control, Fay Wray in distress*, a lunatic scientist on a quest to create artificial life - threw them into a blender, and this was the resultant…
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Review by ✯ Miloš⑬ 💀↯ ★★½
It was just pretty mediocre with boring dialogue that runs for an hour, and not much happens in the movie. They spent too much time talking to each other, and I hated that. I was expecting some special effects, but it doesn't have any. The ending felt kind of rushed, and I don't even remember what the film's plot was.
However, I thought the colored torches were cool.
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Review by theironcupcake ★★★ 2
Dwight Frye as a misunderstood misfit and George E. Stone in age makeup as an elderly street sweeper? Sign me up! How I love those adorable little men.
Frank R. Strayer's The Vampire Bat is an extremely predictable but largely entertaining horror drama. The 63-minute programmer makes good use of its cast, which includes such notable names as Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, Melvyn Douglas and the aforementioned Frye and Stone. It has always been my belief that Wray was a so-so actress who just happened to be in some iconic early horror films, but she's tolerable here; it's worth sticking around to see Atwill in his creepy mad scientist mode, Frye petting his "soft" bat friends, the color details added…
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Review by Gentry ★★½ 3
“God save us, the devils.”
Part Dracula part Doctor X, b-movie studio Majestic Pictures feasting on the scraps, hoping to capitalize on both of those films as well as the pairing of Fay Wray and Lionel Atwill. The Universal production values aren’t there, but MP does their best sleight of hand to make it watchable, with a decent enough German hamlet/dark old house vibe. Everyone suspects half-wit Herman for the blood loss murders around town, and for good reason, he carries dead bats around in his coat pocket! It ends up being a lot more “mad scientist” than I expected, with gagged and bound (*adjust collar*) Fay Wray in the lair of lab beakers, a beautiful witness to the insanity. Save us from all these devils, Melvyn Douglas.
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Review by Blaze the Action Junkie ★★½
On the surface this is another early Vampire flick, but underneath it's a murder mystery where the mad doctor fakes vampire attacks making an unruly mob think the real killer is a mentally handicapped young man. It's actually not a bad flick, it did keep my interest throughout. I may have enjoyed a parnormal twist, but the twist here is actually that the killer is not a paranormal entity which helps keep things interesting. I wouldn't go into this one expecting anything great, but it was a bit more interesting than much of the others from these year, and it does so with very little help from any kind of tricks or gimmicks.
1933 Ranked
1930's Ranked
Horror Ranked
Horror in the 1930’s Ranked
Crime and Law Enforcement / Investigation films Ranked
Serial Killers Ranked -
Review by noir1946 ★★★½ 1
“There’s some human urgency at work here, doctor.”
When I was a wee bairn, I watched the horror films of the 30s and 40s over and over but was always a tad bothered by how slow and badly acted the early ones are, more creaky than creepy. Seeing them today, their stiffness is part of their charm, their stylistic signature. The Vampire Bat is typical of these films. Following are some random comments.
The main reason for seeing this moderately entertaining film is that the restored version—thanks, UCLA—shown on TCM is absolutely beautiful, with crisp b&w cinematography by Ira Morgan who toiled in the B-movie vineyards for most of his career, with Chaplin’s Modern Times being a rare exception.
The…
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Review by Dom Holder ★★★
#PreCodeApril
No doubt a cash-in of sorts on the burgeoning Universal Monster movies that had attained some success in the early 1930s, this Vampire horror film from the lesser-known Majestic Pictures starts out all over the place but manages to get itself together for a rather satisfying climax that actually contained a rather nifty twist.
According to Wikipedia, director Frank R. Strayer had managed to lease a number of sets and costumes from its more illustrious siblings at Universal which generally gives the film's production values a rather polished look. It didn't just stop with the backgrounds, Dwight Frye plays yet another one of his deranged Renfield-type characters, here called Hermann, but in all other manners is yet another vampire-obsessed…
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Review by sakana1 ★★★ 2
A quickly made effort by a poverty row studio to capitalize on Universal's teaming of Fay Wray and Lionel Atwill — in Doctor X, which preceded The Vampire Bat, and The Mystery of the Wax Museum which followed it by about a month — this is surprisingly fun and genuinely spooky at times.
The film examines the centuries-long conflict between reason, and tradition and superstition, here represented by science and deduction on one side and, on the other, townspeople with a deep faith in legend and mystical history. This tension is further escalated by the seeming slide by the representatives of reason (Melvyn Douglas' cop and Atwill's medical doctor) toward a belief in vampirism as their modern, enlightened attempts to…
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