Plot
When Egyptologists discover the tomb of Prince Ra, an American
entrepreneur immediately insists on shipping everything inside the tomb to
England to go on tour for public display. Back in England, someone with other
ideas awakens the mummy guardian and sends it to kill those who desecrated the tomb.
Review
Like Universal did before them, Hammer churned out countless
sequels to their three popular re-workings: The Curse of Frankenstein,
The Horror of Dracula and The Mummy. However, the
Frankenstein and Dracula sequels were lucky in that most of them featured at least one
of Hammer's two top stars - Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee - in them to boost
their popularity. Unfortunately for some reason, the mummy series was given the
short end of the stick and had their budgets clearly reduced and their star
power severely restricted. Neither Cushing nor Lee would appear in any of the
sequels, handing the ball over to solid actors who were dependable but who
weren't the company's top drawing stars and not marketable enough to get the
audiences flocking back. As a result, the drop in quality between the 1959
original and
this first sequel is staggering.
Typical of an old fashioned mummy flick, The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb is
slow-moving and takes a while to get going before picking up in the
second act. But like all of the Universal mummy films before it and many of the
mummy films after it, how much originality can you add to the story? They all
involve people desecrating a tomb and then being punished for it by a mummy
later in the film. This is no exception at all and it takes a long time for the
"curse" to finally kick in and the mummy to awaken. Until then we're given very
little to keep us engrossed, save for an interesting opening where a man gets
his hand cut off in gruesome detail. The first half is rather talky, plodding
and the attempts to make us care about secondary plots are to no avail. However
once the mummy's sarcophagus is opened, the film does pick up steam quickly.
Characters are bludgeoned to death, blood spilt and in the film's most memorable
scene, the mummy crushes the head of an unlucky Egyptian beneath his huge foot.
There's no visual squishing but the sound effect is rather icky and gives you
the exact mental image of what just happened. The mummy isn't the greatest
looking creation - the make-up is pretty shoddy and the suit looks rather bulky. It moves
slowly as one would expect and it at least comes off as menacing when it needs
to. Stuntman Dickie Owen lacks the sheer
physical presence and sympathy of Christopher Lee's mummy in the 1959 version
but is least serviceable enough to carry the role through as a brutish monster
as opposed to a forlorn lover.
Director Michael Carreras only helmed a handful of
Hammer films (including the utterly bonkers The Lost Continent) and you
can tell that he's not used to the big chair. The direction is pedestrian and he
is unable to inject any sort of life or pace into proceedings. He struggles hard
to capture the traditional Gothic Hammer atmosphere at a time in their history
when they could really do no wrong. Not only that but he wrote the film and
produced it so the blame for this failure can be laid squarely on his front
door. The leads are really disappointing but the script does them no favours.
Ronald Howard tries his best as the young hero but seems out of his depth and
Jeanne Roland amply fills out a variety of low cut dresses (her performance is
even dubbed, it must have been that bad. It's up to veteran Jack Gwillim to try
and instill some sort of authenticity and believability in his short-lived role
as Egyptologist Sir Giles. It's a pity that his character is soon turned into a
buffoon and drunk and literally kicked to the sidelines until the time comes
when he's needed to die a horrible death. Michael Ripper, a regular Hammer
character actor, pops up as an Arab (a role which is very non-politically
correct nowadays as he's covered in face paint!).
Verdict
The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb is arguably one of
Hammer's most pedestrian efforts. It's harmless throwaway horror which sticks
closely to the mummy flick formula but the title monster arrives a little too
late on the scene to stop the rot. The lack of big "Hammer power" really damages
this and it could have used someone more accomplished either in front of or
behind the camera to steady the ship.