The Vampire Bat
UW Cinematheque 821 University Ave., UW Vilas Hall, Room 4070, Madison, Wisconsin
press release: USA | 1933 | DCP | 65 min.
Director: Frank R. Strayer; Cast: Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, Melvyn Douglas
The superstitious citizens of a small European village believe vampirism is to blame for the increasing discovery of corpses drained of blood. Meanwhile, the sinister Dr. von Niemann (Atwill) toils in his laboratory to sustain the life of the artificial being he has created (it looks suspiciously like a loofa sponge oxygenating in an aquarium). Goofy fun, UCLA's restoration of The Vampire Bat recreates the sensational Gustav Brock color sequence, unacknowledged and unseen since the movie’s first release. Preceded by Hearst Metrotone News, Vol. 4, No. 250 (1933, 9 min.) and Ub Iwerks’ animated Jack Frost (1934, 9 min.)
All Cinematheque screenings are free and open to the public.
Down and Dirty in Gower Gulch: Poverty Row Films Preserved by UCLA
During the 1930s and 1940s, while the major studios controlled first run theatres, numerous independent studios produced what were called “B-Films,” whether westerns, crime dramas, or horror. Low budget studio independents, like Monogram, Producers Releasing Corporation, Reliance, Republic, and Tiffany, were housed in rental studios off Gower Street in Los Angeles, often referred to as “Gower Gulch.” So-called “Poverty Row” pictures were usually made for $100,000 or less, and shot on five to ten day shooting schedules. Despite their exceedingly low budgets, resulting in often cheesy sets and under par acting, the poverty row studios had a surprising degree of freedom to tackle controversial subject matter, whether venereal disease, the psychology of kidnap victims or rampant quackery in the medical profession. The lack of budget also gave creative film directors, like Edgar G. Ulmer and Lowell Sherman, the opportunity to turn minimal resources into expressive devices. UCLA Film & Television Archive has moved increasingly towards preserving independent and poverty row titles, many of which are no longer copyrighted, because their producers never registered the films to begin with or lost rights because they went bankrupt. These “orphan films” visualize many of the repressed or forbidden themes that preoccupy the nether regions of the American psyche. Get ready for a wild ride! (Jan-Christopher Horak, Director, UCLA Film & Television Archive).