User Reviews (205)

Add a Review

  • You have to change your way of looking at movies to really enjoy old horror movies like this one. Don't be in a rush to see action, violence and don't expect to see any bloodshed at all. Most of the grisly part is implied and you have to fill in the details. Instead, watch it for the scenery, the acting and the plot.

    I prefer the older horror films to the newer, slash-fest movies because they allow me to think and they generally have a good, moral theme. You never have a good guy as a demon or a fiend, for instance.

    White Zombie has the older, traditional zombie characters that are not evil in themselves. Instead, they are mindless and controlled by a shaman, who is generally evil and must be destroyed to set the zombies, who are victims, free. In the newer Zombie movies like Night of the Living Dead, the Zombies are either not controlled or are evil themselves and must be destroyed.

    I think the acting by the zombies is very good and so is their make-up (i.e. they have very frightening faces.) Their master, played by Bela Lugosi, is also played masterfully. The missionary is also good, but most of the rest of the cast is only average.

    It's a fun movie to watch and I gave it a score of 7 out of 10. If you love early horror movies, buy it. Don't pay more than $10 unless it's packaged with other movies because the picture and the sound quality are weak. If not, you might catch it on a Friday night horror fest on TV. It's worth the time watching it if for Bela Lugosi alone.
  • A couple of years ago I saw the 1931 version of Dracula as part of a live performance for the new musical score composed by Philip Glass. Even in this refined setting, the film was met by laughter from the audience during several sections. This seemed rather odd to me, but I suppose older horror films cannot help but lose some of their initial impact over time. The black and white photography and performance techniques became antiquated, hence humorous to some. As time went on, filmmakers begin to spoof the broad overacting and dramatic music of the vintage horror picture. It is impossible today to view a film like WHITE ZOMBIE and fully understand the impact it may have had in 1932. It does, however, escape (for the most part anyway) the mirthful reactions described above.

    Director Victor Halprin's telling of this tale is often cited as the genesis of the "zombie picture." There is some debate about this, but WHITE ZOMBIE is certainly one of the early films to deal with the Haitian legend of "the dead that walk." The story revolves around a young couple who have traveled through Haiti to meet with their friend and benefactor Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer), at whose villa they plan to be married. He has designs on the young bride, Madeleine (Madge Bellamy), and enlists the help of Murder Legendre (the name kind of says it all) played by Bela Lugosi. After the wedding, Legendre performs some "witchcraft" rituals and Madeleine falls into a death-like state. Believing that she has in fact died, the newly minted groom (John Harron) spirals into a drunken maelstrom, eventually seeking out the learned missionary Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn) to help solve the mystery. All paths seem to lead back to Legendre as the plot thickens and Beaumont's true motives are discovered.

    It is fascinating to watch these type of films, some of which, like WHITE ZOMBIE age well with time. This is partly due to the fact that it has been largely forgotten in the wake of the more successful Universal horror flicks. The main drawn here will be the performance by Lugosi. He essentially "vamps" his role in Dracula, but manages to fashion a fairly distinct and unsettling screen presence. It would be roles like this however that would lead to his rigid typecasting; as time went on, he was all but discarded by the film industry (see ED WOOD [1994] for his later years). Halprin's direction focuses on atmosphere and gloom. He is well paired with cinematographer Arthur Martinelli and together they create a suitably shadow-laden backdrop for this macabre story. WHITE ZOMBIE is ambitious in camera angles and editing. At one point there is a diagonal wipe edit, which stops midscreen to reveal the actions of two separate characters. This type of effect is effortless to achieve now, but must have been laborious in 1932. Observe also the unusually large transitional set of the plantation interior, or the framing of Lugosi though the ornate stone work during certain shots. These small details help set WHITE ZOMBIE apart by creating a realistic environment and aid in visually representing the pathology of the characters.

    Since the 30's there has been countless movies about killer zombies run amuck. The concept predominantly became fodder for B-grade schlock productions. The genre would experience something of a renaissance in 1968 with George Romero's NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD which created quite a stir at the time and resulted in zombies becoming, once again, fashionable. The Haitian setting of WHITE ZOMBIE would also be revisited in THE SERPENT AND THE RAINBOW (1988) and the "undead" as a means of cheap labor subtext would be exploited for darkly comedic effect in the underrated HBO film CAST A DEADLY SPELL (1991). In recent years, there has been such a boom of these "living dead" productions that it is hard to keep track of them all. WHITE ZOMBIE, as an early example of this current trend, but should be seen as more than just a footnote in the ever growing history of film. It is not a great movie, like Dracula, but will prove to be of interest to film buffs at least. It has more to offer, though, and I hope that it will continue to be rediscovered by successive generations. 7/10
  • I'm a big Bela Lugosi fan, as well as a sucker for '30s and '40s horror chestnuts in general. But no matter how many times I watch WHITE ZOMBIE, I'm just always a bit short of considering it a "good" movie. Lugosi is delightfully weird and mysterious as Murder Legendre, a sinister zombie master who commands a legion of Walking Dead, and who grants a favor to a jealous man by helping him possess the woman he yearns for -- by turning her into a mindless zombie!

    The surroundings are purely macabre and unsettling. But despite these assets, something goes astray in the snail-like pacing. Some of the acting is hopelessly dated and exaggerated, most notably by con man Robert Frazer and, to a lesser extent, hero John Harron. It's interesting that Lugosi - who's often lambasted by critics for overdoing it himself - is perfectly "on," however.

    WHITE ZOMBIE is still a "pretty good" horror movie in its own right for such a minor production. But it's not a film I would recommend to those younger viewers who tend to feel bored by older classic films.
  • There's something about 1930s horror movies that makes them really special and haunting. It's probably got a lot to do with the talkies being new and directors being free to experiment with tricks learned from German expressionism. Whatever the explanation the best movies from the early 30s (James Whale's 'Frankenstein', 'Bride Of Frankenstein' and 'The Invisible Man', Todd Browning's 'Dracula' and 'Freaks') have a dreamlike quality that sticks in your brain and just won't leave. Bela Lugosi is one of the icons of horror movies. He made 'White Zombie' not long after 'Dracula', his definitive role, and gives another great performance. 'Island Of Lost Souls' is a better movie than 'White Zombie' but Lugosi on has a small role in that so I'd say this is his best movie after 'Dracula'. It's easy to forget just how quickly his career died. His two mid-30s teamings with Boris Karloff ('The Black Cat' and 'The Raven') were basically the beginning of the end for him as a major star, and by the time he played Ygor in the underrated 'Son Of Frankenstein' at the end of the decade he was almost a has been. Oh well Lugosi is just terrific in this movie as the sinister 'Murder' Legrende, Haitian mill owner and zombie master. Robert Fraser plays Charles Beaumont, a local plantation owner who becomes obsessed with a young woman (Madge Bellamy) about to be married. He invites her and her fiance (John Harron) to his estate to have their wedding all the while planning some way to win her. An hour before the wedding he becomes desperate and reluctantly approaches his sinister neighbour Legrende. Legrende's solution has dire consequences for all involved. The movie was obviously made a shoe string budget but there are plenty of striking visual images, especially those involving Bellamy after Lugosi gets to her. The zombies are very creepy and are the precursors to zombie classics later made by Tourneur, Romero, Fulci and Raimi. For this and for Lugosi 'White Zombie' is a must see for any horror buff!
  • This review will be more about the print and theatrical experience than about the plot. Most people won't find this "useful", but hey, so what. Here's my two cents.

    If you have the opportunity to see the Roan Group print projected in a theater, don't hesitate. Go see it.

    I just saw this in the big screen last weekend and it is MUCH better in a proper theater with a crowd of enthusiasts than in the confines of your home, even with a big TV and 5.1. The audience I was in was comprised of about 150 kids and their parents. The kids had a great time as did I, who has seen the movie several times over the years in the washed out public domain video prints that have circulated forever.

    The Roan Group print (same as the remastered DVD) is the one we saw, projected in 35 mm. It was obvious that there were two sources for this print. The vast majority of this appears to come from a very nice print with high contrast and sharp definition. The "fill-in" portions, apparently missing from the other source, are much more typical of a 75-year-old cheapie independent production shot in 11 days, i.e., scratchy, multiple generations removed from the negative, and faded. Thankfully there's not too much from that second source. There are a few jumps in the film (a few seconds at most) that could not be restored. Too bad, but no biggie.

    The sound was problematic, veering from a comfortable volume when dialogue was speaking, to way too loud, almost to the point of distortion, when the music played or the bird squawked. I really don't think it was the theater's fault as their sound is always "just right".

    Interestingly, for a movie this old (pre King Kong and Bride of Frankenstein) there was a whole lot of music and not as much dialogue as one usually gets in a film from this era. The music was rarely background to dialogue and was used almost exclusively to enhance the mood of the film. It was probably cheaper to do it this way, but who cares why. It works.

    This is a really neat film full of great shots and creepy characters. Bela is fantastic, maybe his best performance on film. White Zombie hardly ranks up there with the Universal classics of the era, but it is positively time for a historical and critical reappraisal of this newly restored film.

    It's good on video, but on the big screen, WOW!
  • I'm not entirely sure why this film is considered a horror classic. But having seen many other horror films from the 1930s, I would have to agree it's definitely one of the better ones.

    The plot: a Frenchman in Haiti makes a deal with Bela Lugosi to turn a beautiful young woman (Madge Bellamy, the finest 1930s woman by far) into a zombie. But then he becomes disillusioned and Bela Lugosi strikes back at the Frenchman. Oh ,and there are other zombies, an absent-minded professor and a really annoying screeching vulture.

    This film has some of the strangest transitions between scenes. I forget the word for when the screen slides over, but it does it a number of times in short succession in some strange shapes (like curtains, or diagonally). And there is a weird fascination with showing Bela Lugosi' eyes and his hand gestures repeatedly. The eyes reveal what seems to me some of the fakest eyebrows ever glued to a forehead.

    But if you like Lugosi or classic horror, or Madge Bellamy... yeah, you should see this film. So much crap is pumped out of theaters and studios these days in the horror genre, why not see the roots that inspired all this before it went bad?
  • The picture is set in Haiti and deals upon a wizard called Murder (Bega Lugosi) who wants to abduct a charming girl(Magde Bellamy) from her recent husband by means of Voodoo. The sorcerer rules an army of Zombies who execute every its eerie wishes.The film is based on the novel with title ¨The magic island¨.

    Today is considered a cult movie in spite of being a little ridiculous,outdated and slow moving .However along with ¨Dracula¨(Tod Browing), is deemed the best film of the Austro-Hungarian actor making a creepy interpretation with his mesmerizing eyes and gestures .The movie is shot during thirteen days with low budget and short runtime(seventy minutes)and was a authentic ¨sleeper¨ but the producers didn't wait the success.The picture has sinister scenarios and spooky images what are adding fascination into of gloomy and lugubrious atmosphere. Besides appears as make up artist Jack Pierce ,he's famous by ¨Frankestein¨and his wide career in the ¨Universal¨.The film had influence in others as ¨Plague of Zombies¨(John Gilling) and ¨Night of living dead¨(Romero)¨. It's the better film directed by Victor Halperin.
  • Lugosi is his usual sinister self, evil and Satanic looking, particularly when a medium close-up shot of his eyes fill the screen. The film is stage-bound, yet it has an exotic, sprawling feel to its mansion setting, elaborately decorated. It's also a good example of the then-current transition from silent films to "talkies", as there is only sporadic, yet well-written and memorable, dialogue. Chilling image, also, of zombie slave falling silently into huge grinder, and no one notices, or seems to even comprehend what happened.

    Yet, for all of those things working in its favour, why is this movie so boring? It is slowly paced and draggy, even at only 65 minutes, and by the time the effectively creepy ending happens, I felt like it had gone on for hours. It was further negated by a terrible final line; an attempt at lightening the mood with humour, and it failed miserably.
  • A diabolical voodoo master plots to turn a beautiful young American into a WHITE ZOMBIE, a slave of his perverted passions...

    Here is one of the great unheralded horror classics of the 1930's. Almost forgotten today, it is an excellent example of what can be accomplished by an obscure film company (in this case Halperin Productions) working with a tiny budget, but using enormous flair & imagination. Some of the visuals - the opening scene of the burial on the road, the sugar mill worked by zombies - remain in the imagination for an uncomfortable amount of time, one sure sign of true success for a horror film. Certain of the settings - the hillside graveyard, the villain's towering fortress - are as good as you'll find anywhere. Additionally, the moody music of Xavier Cugat & the make-up wizardry of Jack Pierce help tremendously.

    But it's the performance of Bela Lugosi, looking utterly satanic, which is truly memorable. Released the year following his celebrated Dracula, WHITE ZOMBIE gives him another character which, in measures of pure menace, is easily the equal of the Count. With his mesmeric eyes, expressive, spider-like hands & wonderfully eerie voice, Lugosi radiates absolute evil. This talented Austro-Hungarian actor (born Béla Ferenc Dezsõ Blaskó, 1882-1956) would fritter away much of his career in low-budget dregs, but here he must have realized he was in competent hands and he is obviously having a wonderful time. To see his imposing, cloaked figure stalk about the screen, closely followed by his Living Dead slaves, is to enjoy one of cinema's most deliciously spooky moments.

    Madge Bellamy & John Harron are both impressive as Lugosi's victims. Robert Frazer is very good indeed as the plantation owner whose obsession for Miss Bellamy throws him right into Lugosi's clutches. Elderly Joseph Cawthorn scores as the aged missionary who may be the only person wise enough to thwart the zombie master. Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Clarence Muse as the frightened coach driver in the opening sequence.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    An early horror movie, which stands as the first ever movie to feature zombies, or at least creatures that can be called zombies. Don't be put off by the typical plot, or the fact that these zombies are not of the modern flesh-eating variety seen in NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, rather the old-fashioned mute slaves. WHITE ZOMBIE features some nice (if low budgeted) atmospheric scenes in graveyards, where bodies are ripped from their graves under the cover of the night and used in sinister black magic rituals where they are reanimated and set to work. You see, zombies are the perfect workers; they don't talk, they don't need paying, they don't even have a union!

    We just know we're back in familiar horror territory when the film opens with two young lovers fleeing into an unknown world (in this case, Haiti) in a carriage, little realising the terrible situations they will find themselves in. Unfortunately a lot of potential impact is ruined when the actors begin acting - and we realise that they're hopelessly trapped in the past, their over-acting carefully built up in the silent movies and unable to let go, only a few years after the silent films had actually ended.

    At fault the most? Probably the actor playing the couple's host, who permanently has manic hair, gleaming eyes, and a larger-than-life persona. The dashing hero is not in the least bit dashing, instead he keeps on fainting instead of battling the hordes of evil, and it is up to an old man to save the day in the final reel! What a wimp. The actress playing his wife isn't much better, it's difficult to distinguish her transformation from human into zombie seeing as she's just about catatonic for the entire film. Still, her woeful/soulless demeanour is a good one and scenes of her under Legendre's control are genuinely unsettling.

    Thankfully, though, we have old Bela Lugosi hanging around the sets, giving us an actor to watch and recognise in all this madness. Lugosi was already typecast after making the fantastic Dracula, and it shows here, with maximum emphasis on Lugosi's evil appearance (complete with widow's peak and goatee beard). The film also employs the trick of having Lugosi's staring, wild eyes displayed in close-up, a technique Hammer relied on in their Dracula films with Lee substituted for Lugosi. You can really believe that Legendre is capable of hypnotising people with the smallest effort, and of course, being the baddie he gets all the best lines. The best line in the film is where the hero asks who the zombies are, Lugosi replies "For you, my friend, they are the Angels of Death!".

    Okay, so much of the film is slow and static, but this is to be expected. To break up the dialogue we have some weird shots of zombies at work in the sugar mills, ignoring a fellow worker who collapses into the mill and is ground up in the mechanism. They just keep working, willed on by Legendre's powers, single-minded and single-purposed, with no thought of their own. To accentuate the fact that these people are supposedly dead, some crude black makeup is used to make fingers seem thin and skeletal, also in eye sockets to make the actors look like cadavers. While this might not be frightening to a modern audience, it is effective in a simplistic way.

    WHITE ZOMBIE is perhaps a little too low key for it's own good, but there is some genuine suspense built up at the finale, where Lugosi clutches his hands together in a battle of wills with the hero and heroine, and the zombies are forced to walk off a cliff after good wins out in the end (and you just knew it would). This exciting climax compliments an atmospheric film which wrings maximum haunting impact from the zombies themselves.
  • Oodipherus17 December 2015
    The overall acting felt so forced for this film. I know it's a movie with zombies, being alive today, i'm desensitized by all the high-quality zombie films out now so White Zombie seems more silly than scary. I'm sure for the time, people were creeped out by the film and the idea. But I was more creeped out by how slow and uneventful 70% of the movie was. Granted, it's definitely a classic horror film, but not one i'd ever recommend to anyone. However, I was pleasantly interested in the double expose scenes of the haunting eyes. When I think of this film, I think of those eyes and those bushy eyebrows.

    All in all, not terribly interested in ever seeing this again.
  • Zombie movies from the '30's and '40's are quite different from the zombie movies most people know from the '70's till present time. In the '30's and '40's, zombies and voodoo kind of rituals always walked hand in hand. As a result of this zombie movies from the '30's and '40's have a certain creepy atmosphere and scary voodoo sound effects.

    "White Zombie" is the very first (still excising) zombie movie ever made. The zombies look extremely good and creepy thanks to the charismatic actors that perform them. Don't underestimate this people, acting with just your body and mostly face is also a form of tough acting. I think that it is thanks to the fine casting of the zombies that most of the scene's with them in it, work really well.

    Bela Lugosi is totally fantastic as sort of witch doctor and 'king of the zombies'. He plays one scary monsieur. I even tend to say that this is his best villain role he has ever portrayed, yes even better as Count Dracula. Lugosi was always at his best in roles like these and just like in "Dracula" he is once more acting very well with also both his hands and face, especially his typical horror-like-eyes make him one legendary villain. For the Lugosi fans this is an absolute must see!

    The story is very intriguing and sad and its told in a beautiful way. Especially the ending was fantastic and actually also quite tense.

    Unfortunately time has not been kind on this movie. The movie had been lost for many years until the '60's after acquiring the rights to distribute the movie, the quality was already beyond restoration, so now days we can never watch this movie in its full glory. The movie has the grainy and visual look of movies from the 1920's and at times small chunks of sound and music are missing.

    The cinematography is absolutely fantastic and the experimental editing provides some unique and extremely well looking sequences. It reminded me of some of Brian De Palma's early work. There is one unique and brilliant scene that I can't even describe. It features a split screen but the scene is constructed more complex than I make it sound. Really something you have to see for yourself.

    OK maybe the beginning of the movie isn't that good and memorable and quite standard and typical for the horror genre in the '30's but the last half hour or so is really unique, excellent, tense and just a shear delight to watch, mainly thanks to Bela Lugosi's his character 'Murder' Legendre (what a brilliant name by the way) and the story in which once more love conquers all.

    By the way this is the movie Ed Wood and Bela Lugosi were watching together in the movie "Ed Wood". Most people think that it was a Dracula movie with Lugosi but it in fact is this movie they're watching.

    A really unique little forgotten horror masterpiece, that's worth seeing already alone for its movie historical value and Lugosi's fantastic, passioned villain role.

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
  • White Zombie is beautiful to watch, a combination of gorgeous black and white photography and wonderfully rendered matte paintings, and combo shots. I found the ending somewhat underwhelming, especially in light of some foreshadowing which does not pay off. Nonetheless, a true classic, even more fascinating if viewed through the lens of more informed understandings of colonialism, slavery, and related race relations.
  • In Haiti, a sweetheart couple from America are stopped from marrying by a desperate plantation owner who wants the girl for himself; he turns for help to the diabolic voodoo master who also runs the sugar cane mill (which is staffed by the living dead!). A zombie Gothic, reportedly the first of its kind; rather ridiculous on the whole, but still retaining some potency and fascination due to the atmospheric production design and cinematography. Solid direction from Victor Halperin (whose brother, Edward, served as producer) lends the scenario a woozy, dream-like feel. Bela Lugosi, looking a bit like Fu Manchu, gives a playful, sassy performance, and his zombie minions are a slow-stepping but spooky lot. There are some sexual proclivities which are steeped in the hypothetical, giving the story some unexpected subtext, as well as a general air of good humor and melodramatic adventure. ** from ****
  • WHITE ZOMBIE is one of those rare early talkies where everything fits just right. Rumours have circulated for years that Bela Lugosi himself actually directed part, if not all, of the movie. Having seen all of the movies made by the Halperin Brothers in the 30's this is deffinitely the best, but DID Bela direct it? There is a quality in this film lacking from all other Halperin films. In many scenes the technique seems to have been borrowed from German silent films and Bela did work with Edgar Ulmer in Germany early in his career. Also notice that WHITE ZOMBIE is essentially a silent film with key scenes performed with a minimum of dialogue . . .or none at all; a standout moment is when Legendre (Bela Lugosi) traps the soul of Madeline (Madge Bellamy) by carving, and then melting, a wax image in her likeness. All without a single word being said. Another key sequence is a montage of scenes set against the haunting spiritual "Listen To The Lambs" performed by an offscreen chorus. Notice also the scene where Neil (John Harron, brother of former silent film star Robert Harron) and Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn) are talking. The camera starts out behind Harron's back and moves out. It moves in a circle around the room while the men talk and finally goes back behind Harron to end the scene; deffinitely an Expressionist Germanic touch! Granted the film has its flaws, Joseph Cawthorn's character is supposed to be to be a Christian missionary but he has a noticably Yiddish accent. Also for a film that is set in Haiti there is an uncomfortable lack of black characters. Clarence Muse as the coach driver is the only one in the movie! Two other alleged native Haitians are white actors in blackface! Madge Bellamy's bee-stung lips and eye makeup also belong back in a silent film. Weighed against the film as a whole however, these inadequacies are slight. The cast is quite good. Robert Fraser met up with Lionel Atwill in THE VAMPIRE BAT (1934). Clarence Muse met up with Bela again in THE INVISIBLE GHOST (1944). One of the zombies is played by George Burr McAnnan who had played the puritannical leader of the farm community that ostracises unwed mother Lillian Gish in WAY DOWN EAST (1920). Also look for Brandon Hurst as a creepy looking butler. He had played the evil Jehan Frollo opposite Lon Chaney's Quasimodo in THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME (1923). By all means see this movie! It is well worth your time. So did Bela direct it? Alas we may never know. Then again, in an interview given in the early 1970's Clarence Muse said he clearly recalled Bela directing a few scenes. So maybe . . .
  • eroberts-9386520 October 2015
    This film was introduced to me as being low-budget, and while it made sense upon watching it, the White Zombie certainly exceeded my expectations. To begin with, the light/"color" effects were aesthetically pleasing. I say "color" because of how hard they drove it home that Madge Bellamy's Madeline would indeed be the "white zombie" the title referred to. This could be considered a cheesy or ham-fisted entity, but Bellamy was truly an entity with power on screen, though only in appearance.

    The acting itself (and often the writing) is actually quite bad pretty consistently. That can have its merits though, especially in this genre. For instance, much of that acting contributes well to the horror/zombie aspect of the film; what would be considered a "classic" element of it today. Bela Lugosi takes it over the top, with his signature presence. While I have trouble getting genuinely invested in films of this nature, Lugosi is truly some sort of force of amusement. The cast is thoroughly entertaining, if nothing else.

    On top of being a good "classic" horror/zombie movie, White Zombie had several independent merits, both creative and social. For instance, one scene when Neil (played by John Harron) is having something of an emotional breakdown after losing Madeline, and the use of shadows on the wall and noise itself are excellent. It's a visually engaging scene, and one that stuck with me, though White Zombie uses light and shadow extremely well throughout. Sound is a great tool in the film as well, such as the too-quiet scene in the sugar mill when Charles Beaumont, something of an antagonist, pays a visit to Lugosi's Murder Legendre. The grinding noise is striking, and builds to the tone of at least Lugosi's sinister character quite well.

    Socially, White Zombie implies a lot about the colonialism that affected at the time through its treatment of setting, lore, and the actual people by Beaumont at his manor/plantation. This, however, has far more relevance than being simply a setting today than it would have when it was released, as nothing is explicitly said about these things in the film. But with a modern view, there's certainly something to be seen there.

    All in all, White Zombie is simply enjoyable and at several points, artful. This is more than can be said for what we would generally think of as a "low-budget" horror movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    If you don't mind the technical limits of a movie from 1932, "White Zombie" is a great way to spend an hour and six minutes. I watched it for free on IMDb. While the 4:3 aspect ratio and the overacting that was so prevalent in the early movie days (all the actors were exclusively stage trained) were a little distracting, I could easily put them out of my mind or even appreciate their quaintness. Bela Lugosi is exceptional! With his slow, steady movements and those gazing, hypnotic eyes, he was made for movies. Anyone with an interest in film history should watch White Zombie. Think of all the zombie movies that have followed and how few of them live up to it, regardless of their big budget Hollywood bells, whistles and breasts. I was also impressed by the simplicity of the plot. Today's zombies are the result of some government lab test or virus gone wrong. White Zombie's incentives for reanimation are simple: lust and greed. I enjoyed White Zombie and I think you will too.
  • Spondonman28 December 2004
    I don't know, but I don't think that I've ever seen the "Roan restoration" of this movie, unless it's jumpy bumpy and jerky like this, the only print I've ever seen (on TV and now DVD). But it doesn't really bother me, I've always been a sucker for late 20's/ early 30's Hollywood talkies and compensated accordingly for smoky visuals and erratic audio.

    White Zombie is a good 'un, but could have done with a slightly bigger budget, was obviously hamstrung in retrospect by the limiting technology and techniques of the time, and being "lost" for years must have helped print decomposition along with its reputation. But what an atmosphere results! Surely we can swallow anything in this queer world, from Madeleine's romantically beautiful and probably long dreamed of wedding ceremony to the slow and thoughtfully reflective climax?? Or maybe not! Fancy not shaking hands with Bela - what kind of fool was Beaumont!

    My personal choice for an better insight into zombieism, and for a better hokey film fantasy for that matter is I Walked With A Zombie, but this is also worth watching, for something slightly different, and a view of lower budget Hollywood in 1932.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    After having enjoyed Bela Lugosi's surprisingly strong 1941 movie Invisible Ghost,I decided to take a look at another Lugosi title from a Mil Creek,which along with later inspiring the name for future writer/director Rob Zombie's Industreal band,is also credited with being the "first ever" zombie film.

    The plot:

    Arriving in Haiti for their upcoming wedding,fiancé's Madeline Short and Neil Parker head to plantation owner Charles Beaumont home,so that they can begin preparing the wedding reception.Heading to Beaumont's house,Short and Parker's carriage is stopped in its track's by a gang of locals from fellow plantation owner "Murder" Legendre's plant.Nagotiating his way around the gang,the coach driver gives the couple the good news that workers at Legendre's factory are "Neither living,or dead".

    Shaken by what they have seen,Parker and Short attempt to relax when they at last reach Charles Beaumont's house.With being focused on making the wedding as perfect as possible,Parker and Short fail to notice Beaumont developing a deep desire for Short.Desperate to get his hands on Short,Beaumont decides that he is going to do everything possible to turn Parker into one of Legendre's undead workers.

    View on the film:

    Saved from being lost forever thanks to a surviving print being discovered in the 60's,the film impressively contains a transfixing atmosphere,which along with still having a real kick after its now 81 years ago origin,is also able to make the "damaged" soundtrack something that is easy to forgive.

    Despite shooting the movie in only 11 days,director Victor Halperin reveals a sharp eye for in- camera special effects,with the scenes of Parker realising about Beaumont's desire for Short having a strong icy chill,and Haperin also including a delightfully black comedy raven,that helps to give the movie a real Gothic edge.

    Placing Parker and Short's romance at the centre of his adaptation of William's Seabrook's novel The Magic Island,the screenplay by Garnett Weston sadly makes the paternally exciting subtext that the "upper class" see all of the workers as slaves/zombies one that is disappointingly underdeveloped,with Weston instead focusing on the romantic side of Short and Parker's relationship,which despite having a charm about it,leaves the film from fully grasping its tantalising plot threads.

    Along with a wonderfully stern Bela Lugosi,the cute Madge Bellamy, (who also starred in John Ford's overlooked Western The Iron Horse)gives an excellent performance Madeline Short,thanks to Bellamy showing Short go from a rosy cheek youngster,into becoming an undead whiter shade of pale.
  • One of the most important names in the history of the horror genre is without a doubt, Bela Lugosi, the Hungarian actor who in 1931 became an icon after playing the legendary Count Dracula in Tod Browning's adaptation of the film. Thanks to the powerful presence he gave to the elegant vampire, Lugosi became instantly famous and a major star for Universal Studios. Sadly, due to his heavy accent Lugosi wouldn't have much luck in finding roles for him, and eventually became type-casted as the obvious choice for playing sinister and classy villains in horror films, a problem that would take him from making movies for big studios to acting in low-budget independent films. However, the fact that such movies weren't big productions didn't mean that they were bad films, and this 1932 film is probably the best proof of that, as "White Zombie" is a classic as important as any film done by Universal in those years.

    In "White Zombie", Neil Parker (John Harron) and his fianceé Madeline (Madge Bellamy) are traveling to a plantation located in Haiti to celebrate their wedding. Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer), the owner of the plantation, invited the couple to his house after meeting them on a cruise ship during one of his travels, and not only he offered his plantation for the party, he has also offered Neil a highly profitable job in the island. However, there is a sinister purpose behind Beaumont's apparent good nature and friendly attitude: he is madly in love with Madeleine and plans to separate the couple before the wedding. To do this, he has asked the help of a man named Legendre (Bela Lugosi), a Voodoo sorcerer with the ability to create and control zombie slaves. But the zombie master has his own plans for the trio's souls.

    Written by Garnett Weston, "White Zombie" is a very dark and atmospheric tale of horror and suspense partially inspired by the writings of traveler W.B. Seabrook, whose 1929 book, "The Magic Island", introduced Voodoo to American audiences. Of course, Weston's movie is a highly fictionalized account of Voodoo, but it was probably the first movie to introduce zombies to the horror genre. With a story that mixes romance, horror and melodrama, "White Zombie" is essentially a Faustian tragedy with a Voodoo setting, where a man's forbidden desire brings damnation to him and those around him. There is not really a lot of character development through the film, but that actually helps as "White Zombie" is more about the nightmarish experience of the three characters facing Legendre's sinister machinations than about their relationships.

    The film's highlight is certainly Victor Halperin's directing, which in its cinematography (by Arthur Martinelli) shows a lot of influence from the German expressionist movement of the 20s and gives the movie an ominous surreal atmosphere. Due to the film's scarce use of dialogs, it would be easy to believe that Halperin wasn't interested in sound technology (new at the time), however, he does give an interesting use to sound in this film by using atmospheric sounds and Xavier Cugat's score to enhance the film's eerie ambiance. It is clear that Halperin was working on a very low-budget (sets were rented from Universal Studios), but his inventive use of camera effects together with Martinelli's beautiful cinematography truly give the film a special nightmarish look similar to Browning's "Dracula" or Dreyer's "Vampyr - Der Traum Des Allan Grey".

    The acting is for the most part effective, although several members of the main cast give average performances that tend to diminish the power of the film a bit. John Harron is one of them, delivering a really weak performance as Neil, a shame as his character is essentially the story's protagonist. Robetr Frazer is a bit better as Charles Beaumont, although like Harron, he could had done a better job than the average performance he gave. Still, Madge Bellamy is remarkable as Madeleine, and is specially dreamy after falling under Legendre's spell. Now, if Bellamy is excellent in her role, Bela Lugosi is simply perfect as the macabre zombie master Legendre. Taking what he did in "Dracula" one step beyond, Lugosi appears here in what is probably one of the best performances of his career, literally becoming this embodiment of evil with his strong presence and sinister elegance.

    Like the previously mentioned film "Vampyr", Victor Halperin's "White Zombie" seems to be a literal bridge between silent films and the sound era, as it keeps a lot of the silent style of film-making including the highly expressive acting and the expressionist visual design. Together with the movie's extremely slow pace, those elements enhance the whole surrealist vibe that surrounds the movie, making it look almost as the representation of a nightmare. However, this is a double edged sword, as certainly those elements may disappoint those expecting something more graphic and action-packed (it is nothing like the modern zombie films of Romero and Fulci), or at least, something similar to Universal's "Frankenstein"'s series. Don't get me wrong, this is still Gothic horror at its best, but it's definitely on a more serious tone than most Universal films.

    "White Zombie" is a difficult film to watch, but certainly one that's very rewarding in the end. Its silent style feels definitely dated, but oddly, this only adds to that surreal atmosphere that Halperin was aiming for when making the film. Sadly, director Victor Halperin would never reach the mastery of this work, as if this was the movie he was destined to make. A very underrated classic of horror, "White Zombie" is another of the films that prove that there was more in Bela Lugosi than "Dracula", and it's a film that can proudly stand next to the Universal classics despite its modest and humble origins. 8/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I'm sorry, but this movie about a young couple, Neil Parker (John Harron) and Madeleine Short (Madge Bellamy) arriving at the Haitian plantation of a casual acquaintance, Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer) where they plan to be married; only to be terrorized by a crazed plantation owner, Murder Legrende (Bela Lugosi) who wish to turn Madeleine into a zombie in order to join his legions of mindless slave workers, was not that good. It wasn't that entertaining. Yet, I will give the movie some credit for serving as one of the very first zombie movies ever, predating George Romero 1968's 'Night of the Living Dead' by 36 years. While zombie movies normally are portray as reanimated corpses or virally infected human beings feeding on the flesh. There was a time, where zombies meant living people under mind control, through the means of voodoo magic and drugs. Taken from spiritual Haitian culture, inspired by a Broadway play titled 'Zombie' by Kenneth Webb and influence by 'the Magic Island' by William Seabrook, director Victor Halperin and screenwriter Grant Weston hope to make 'White Zombie' into the next big horror movie, after the surprise hit of 1931's 'Dracula'. After all, it seemed the zombie film came out at a proper time in America with it paralleled the Great Depression. It highly reflect the powerlessness and misery felt by the American workforce. The American workforce felt like zombies themselves - mindless workers that are easily replaced. Yet, when the film was originally released, it only made decent money after a lukewarm response. Critics at the time, universally loathed it, and more or less people forgot that it existed. It was lost for a while, but it experienced a bit of a revival once it was found and released on television in the 1950s, and then later on video in the 80's. By that time, its film copyright claim has expired, causing the film to fall into the public domain. Now, anybody can make a DVD copy of this movie. Because of that, many of the film prints out there are in really bad shape, seeing how many of them, having been duped from second- or third-generation copies that is already in poor quality. So, don't be surprised, that the copies available on the market are either severely damage. My copy had some really bad editing cuts and a few missing scenes. Not only that, but very bad audio. I can barely hear any dialogue in this film. Obviously, this movie need a criterion collection edition. Despite that, the movie did get some cult viewers, overtime that love the film. After all, a band was named after it with the lead singer taking 'zombie' as his last name. Nevertheless, with great spooky atmosphere with shadows/silhouettes, epic Universal sets, fantastic classical music and great cinematography, I still really couldn't behind this film. First off, the pacing was bad. It really took forever for this film, to finish. Plus, it doesn't have much twist or turns, so it highly predictable. It doesn't help that the main two protagonists in the film were kinda boring. Don't get me wrong, Madge Bellamy is one of the sexiest flapper ever, but she doesn't do anything in the film, besides being a damsel in distress. John Harron is just dull. He really doesn't do much in the film, besides moan and cry. Another character, that really annoyed me, was Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn). I didn't like how the filmmakers made him into a comic relief, rather than a wise 'Abraham Van Helsing' stock character. All those scenes where he is asking for a light is annoying and repetitive. Regardless of what scholars may think about him, the idea that he's supposed to be the 'light-bearer' doesn't hold any weight. The reason for this; is why would a 'light-bearer' be the one looking for a light? Anyways, the movie delivers the ideas that he might have powers, so badly. There is scenes, where a hand, supposedly snap a person, out of Murder's control, but the film never truly establish, if it's Dr. Bruner or not. Despite that, I have to say the quality body language work from Bela Lugosi is a lot better. We know, what he's doing with his deadpan v line monobrow stare, and the gripping on his hands. It's easily noticing, that he is taking control of people. Lugosi is much more menacing with his sinister stage presence than his natural, heavily accented voice. It really adds to the intensity of the film. Yet, I do less of that screeching vulture that follow his character, around. That bird was irritating. Plus, the zombie could had been a little more scary, rather than goofy hokey buffoons. Like the mind-control gimmick, just wish, the zombies were smarter. Also, I didn't like, the fact that one of the extras that plays the zombie was in blackface. It was somewhat offensive, even for the time. Even the way, the movie portray Haitians was also kinda upsetting. I really didn't like how they were made to look like servers and lesser beings to the white race. A good example of this, is the horse sequence scene, where the rich white heroes are riding horses, while the poor black man is riding a donkey. However, that's just nitpicking. This film is from a bygone era, that I will cut it some slack on that. Yet, all of the jarring on-screen mistakes like the 'hold my nose' take and fake tombstone does weight this movie, really down. There is little excuses for those. Overall: I have to say, this movie is meh. It's sucks, because I was really dying to see this movie. I really wanted to like 'White Zombie' more, but after watching it. I just got really dead tired. Still, it is a very influential horror classic that needed to be seen, at least once. At least, it's better than its 1936's loose sequel, 'Revolt of the Zombies'. Now that was dead on, unwatchable.
  • bkoganbing19 June 2009
    Hoping to capitalize on his success in the classic Dracula for Universal, Bela Lugosi stars in White Zombie which draws elements from a whole lot of horror features of the time including Lugosi's own Dracula and The Island Of Dr. Moreau. You will also find pieces of Frankenstein, The Mummy, Svengali, and The Most Dangerous Game here. I daresay if I looked at it again I might find other films that I could compare with.

    The mix doesn't always work well, but the atmosphere created is great and there's nothing wrong with Bela Lugosi's performance of studied evil. Lugosi is the 'zombie master' and with a concoction of voodoo jungle juice and some hypnotic tricks he's created a race of soulless beings, not alive or dead. He's one practical dude that Bela, he hires his zombies out to the local planters in that area of Haiti. You got to admit this crew works real cheap, better than convict labor.

    Young lovers John Herron and Madge Bellamy come to the island and their host, planter Robert Frazer decides he has to have Bellamy, devil take the consequences. But it's a devil's game he plays when he makes a deal with Lugosi who turn her into one of his creatures. And Bela's got plans all his own for Bellamy, the kind his Dracula had for Helen Chandler in that film.

    Playing the Van Helsing role in White Zombie is Joseph Cawthorn who sounds awful Jewish to be a Christian minister. But he does know his way around the island and its voodoo customs.

    In fact Lugosi and Cawthorn are the only two in the cast not guilty of overacting. The other players are all silent screen veterans who never quite got the technique of sound down. But the show really is all Lugosi's.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    If you've seen a lot of Bela Lugosi's films, you might be tempted to think that apart from the horror movies he made for Universal Studios the rest of his films were crap. This wouldn't be fair but it also could easily be understood due to the huge volume of rotten films he made during his career (such as his movies for Ed Wood). However, dismissing him too quickly is a mistake, as this little film from United Artists is amazingly scary and exciting to watch more than 70 years later due to excellent writing, special effects and acting.

    The film is a super-moody thriller about zombies in Haiti. However, unlike Val Lewton's super famous I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE, this film is much, much scarier and has a much creepier look about it. In particular, I loved the matte painting used for the castle on the cliff--it was highly reminiscent of some of the matte work done for KING KONG the following year. I also liked the look they gave Lugosi--looking more like the Devil than Dracula!! This, combined with his excellent delivery, made this one of his best performances.

    The film is about an evil man that is secretly in love with a woman he met on a cruise. This woman is about to be married and the evil guy asks her and her fiancé to come to his mansion to be married. In the meantime, he meets with Lugosi who informs him that they can fake her death and make her his zombie lover! Then we see the products of Lugosi's mad secret--an army of zombie workers that are used as cheap labor on the sugar cane plantation! They work incessantly and decline to become unionized--a dream come true for an evil capitalist! Once they use the magic formula and do some mumbo-jumbo, the new husband thinks his bride is dead and he spends much of the rest of the film drinking and brooding. The evil guy, though, isn't much happier with her as life with a zombie bride turns out to be pretty lame after all (what a surprise)! But, by now the deed has been done and Lugosi threatens the evil guy when he talks of wanting to restore the lady to her original condition. This is when the film really heats up and leads to a wonderful and super-creepy conclusion! I don't want to ruin it, but this film really delivers and deserves to be recognized as an exceptional film.
  • claudio_carvalho24 September 2006
    While traveling to New York, the young couple Madeleine Short Parker (Madge Bellamy) and her fiancé Neil Parker (John Harron) are convinced by their new acquaintance Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer) to stay in Port Prince and get married in his mansion. However, Beaumont felt in love for Madeleine and his real intention is to convince her to call off the wedding. When he realizes that the time is too short to seduce her, he visits the local witch Legendre (Bela Lugosi) , who gives him a drug to transform Madeleine into a zombie. She dies immediately after the wedding, and her corpse is disputed by Beaumont and his sick love for her; Legendre, that wants her for his team of zombies; and Neil, who is convinced by the local missionary Dr. Bruner (Joseph Cawthorn) that she might be alive. In the end, true love triumphs.

    "White Zombie" is certainly one of the first movies of zombies with a weird non-corresponded romance of Beaumont for Madeleine. The zombies, differently from the latest horror movies, are not evil, since they simply obey the command of the villain Legendre. The greatest attraction is certainly Bela Lugosi in the role of the evil "Murder" Legendre and the giant Gothic scenarios, which are very impressive. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "White Zombie".

    Note: On 07 August 2010, I saw "White Zombie" again on VHS.
  • Bucs196025 October 2001
    When this film was still thought of as "lost", it's reputation grew as if it were a masterpiece. When it was "found", it turned out to be somewhat of a disappointment. It was released by a small independent and it is said that Lugosi accepted something like $5,000 to play the zombie master, Murder Legendre. He had just turned down "Frankenstein" and probably thought that this film might make the same kind of splash. He was wrong. As usual, he hams it up so badly, that it is almost enjoyable. You have to be a Lugosi fan to appreciate his style of emoting. John Harron is a real wimp as the bridegroom. Robert Frazier is much better as the man who is trying to steal Madge Bellamey, the bride. The black and white cinematography is really quite good for such a low budget picture and there are some artistic moments. But it is one of those movies that you either like or hate and does not live up to its "lost" film expectations. A much better version of the walking dead genre is "I Walked With A Zombie" with Tom Conway and Frances Dee.
An error has occured. Please try again.