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The Ghost Breakers

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The Ghost Breakers
Directed byGeorge Marshall
Written byWalter de Leon
Produced byArthur Hornblow, Jr.
StarringBob Hope
Paulette Goddard
Richard Carlson
Paul Lukas
Willie Best
Anthony Quinn
Paul Fix
CinematographyCharles B. Lang
Edited byEllsworth Hoagland
Music byErnst Toch
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
1940
Running time
83 min.
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

The Ghost Breakers is a 1940 comedy film directed by George Marshall and starring Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard. The movie was adapted by Walter DeLeon from the play The Ghost Breaker by Paul Dickey and Charles W. Goddard. [1][2]

Plot

The film opens in a Manhattan radio studio during a broadcast by crime reporter Lawrence Lawrence (Bob Hope) -- “Larry” to his friends, as well as his enemies, who are many in number among the local underworld.

Listening in on the broadcast is pretty brunette Mary Carter (Paulette Goddard), whose high-rise apartment goes dark as a violent thunderstorm causes a city-wide blackout. In the near darkness, a knock comes at her door. It is Mr. Parada (Paul Lukas), a suave, vaguely sinister solicitor attached to the Cuban consulate. He informs her that she has inherited a plantation and mansion, “Castillo Maldito,” on a small island off the coast of Cuba. Despite Parada’s discouragement, she impulsively decides to travel to Cuba by ship to inspect her new property.

Shortly after Parada’s departure, Mary receives another visitor-- Mr. Mederes (Anthony Quinn), an even more sinister gent who extends an offer to purchase the newly inherited property. Despite his insistence, Mary declines.

Meanwhile, after Larry Lawrence has finished broadcasting the evening’s exposé of a local crime boss, he is met by a pair of henchmen and taken for a ride. The crime boss, Frenchy Duval (Paul Fix), makes it plain to Larry that the attention isn’t welcome, and it would be “healthier” for Lawrence to cease and desist.

Coincidentally, this exchange takes place within the same apartment house where Mary Carter lives. In a mix-up in the still-darkened building, Larry accidentally fires a gun and believes he’s killed one of Duval’s henchmen. In the confusion, he escapes Duval’s apartment and finds himself in the rooms of Mary Carter, who is already busy packing for her journey. Believing that he is being pursued by Duval’s men, Larry hides in Mary’s large open travel trunk. Unaware of Larry’s presence, Mary locks the trunk and arranges for its transport to the harbor.

Later at the dock, Larry’s valet Alex (Willie Best) searches among the luggage bound for loading and finds Larry among them. Although not in time to prevent the trunk’s transfer to the ship’s hold, Alex manages to get on board, hoping to extricate his employer before the ship sails.

Once in her stateroom, Mary is shocked to unpack Larry along with the rest of her belongings. Just as he tries to explain his situation, a knife is thrown through an open porthole in Mary’s cabin, narrowly missing her and Larry, and embedding itself in the cabin door. Attached to the knife is a note, warning Mary to stay away from the island plantation. Larry and Alex decide to remain on board, partly to act as bodyguards to the plucky beauty, but also to keep out of Frenchy Duval’s reach.

As Larry and Mary strike up a flirtation, they run into an acquaintance of Mary's, Geoff Montgomery (Richard Carlson), a young professorial type who regales them with tales of the local superstitions of their destination, particularly voodoo, ghosts and zombies. Impressed by his knowledge, Mary invites Geoff to accompany them to the plantation once they arrive.

Upon reaching port in Havana, Mary, Larry, Alex and Geoff are ferried to the island. En route they encounter a shack occupied by an old woman (Virginia Brissac) and her catatonic son (Noble Johnson), who she explains is a zombie. Despite Geoff’s skepticism, the group is unnerved by the cadaverous appearance of the “zombie.”

The imposing plantation manor proves to be a spooky edifice indeed. The quartet begins to explore the long-abandoned, cobweb-ridden mansion, and discover a large portrait of a woman who is nearly an exact likeness of Mary-- most certainly an ancestor.

Soon the quartet is terrorized by the appearance of a ghost, and the reappearance of the zombie. Are these specters real, or are they a ruse to frighten Mary away from her inheritance?

Various Versions

The Dickey and Goddard play The Ghost Breaker was filmed twice previously by Paramount. It was first made in 1914 by Cecil B. DeMille, with stars H. B. Warner and Rita Stanwood, and again in 1922 by director Alfred E. Green, with Wallace Reid and Lila Lee starring. [3]

George Marshall, director of the 1940 version, remade The Ghost Breakers in 1953 as Scared Stiff, featuring Martin and Lewis (Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis). The remake featured cameos not only from Hope, but also from Bing Crosby. A year before Scared Stiff, Martin and Lewis appeared in the Crosby/Hope film Road to Bali.

Notes

The Ghost Breakers was a sequel of sorts to Paramount’s 1939 hit The Cat and the Canary, also starring Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard. Paramount teamed the pair again, along with costar Willie Best, in Nothing But the Truth (1941). [4]

Cinematographer Charles Lang would go on to earn an Academy Award nomination for his work on another spook-filled Paramount release, The Uninvited (1944).

The Ghost Breakers, along with The Cat and the Canary, was an inspiration to Walt Disney for his Haunted Mansion attraction at Disneyland.[5]

Quotes

Geoff Montgomery: It's worse than horrible because a zombie has no will of his own. You see them sometimes walking around blindly with dead eyes, following orders, not knowing what they do, not caring.

Larry Lawrence: You mean like Democrats?

Cast

Bob Hope ... Larry Lawrence
Paulette Goddard ... Mary Carter
Richard Carlson ... Geoff Montgomery
Paul Lukas ... Parada
Willie Best ... Alex
Pedro de Cordoba ... Havez (as Pedro De Cordoba)
Virginia Brissac ... Mother Zombie
Noble Johnson ... The Zombie
Anthony Quinn ... Ramon Mederes/Francisco Mederes
Tom Dugan ... Raspy Kelly
Paul Fix ... Frenchy Duval
Lloyd Corrigan ... Martin

References

  1. ^ A History of Horror [1]
  2. ^ Turner Classic Movies [2]
  3. ^ Turner Classic Movies http://www.tcm.turner.com/thismonth/article.jsp?cid=97206&mainArticleId=133204]
  4. ^ Turner Classic Movies [3]
  5. ^ Jim Hill. "A special what-might-have-been version of Why For".

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