Oct 262018
 

90s horror has a bad reputation, remembered as made up of fading franchises and the bloom of self-award/meta horror, that seemed so clever at first, but most people find irritating now. And yes, there is truth in that reputation. Notice how many on my list have numbers after their title. Originality was hard to find. Itā€™s been suggested that the 90s has no identity of its own, but then, when you are stuck between the two worst sub-genres, slashers and the yet to come torture porn, maybe no identity is a good thing. And the problem with those meta films is less the ā€œmetaā€ nature and more that they are meta-slashers. My top 50 is a drop from my 80s list, but not a huge one, and it actually has stronger bottom third.

This is a horror list, and I split horror from thrillers. Where that line is is up to the individual, so Iā€™m only concerned with my line. That means no Silence of the Lambs or Se7en. Horror comedy gave me some trouble as it is unclear where to draw the line. I include all the horror comedies when chatting with friends, but for here I’ll pull that back a bit, so Iā€™m only going to give honorable mentions to The Addams Family and Death Becomes Her, both of which would be quite high on the list. Also an honorable mention to the Gamera trilogy, which was an unexpectedly good daikaiju series; while I have a few giant monster films on my list, I decided these fall outside ofĀ horror.

 

#50. Sleepwalkers (1992)

Weā€™re in 50th placeā€”you didnā€™t expect a great film? This is gonzo silliness written by Stephen King when he was in a goofy mood, and elevated by Alice Krige.

 

#49. Tetsuo II: Body Hammer (1992)

Perhaps the definition of an unnecessary sequel, Tsukamoto takes the cyber-body-horror surrealism of the first film and tries to make it coherent. Itā€™s much less than the first, but the first was fantastic, so lesser is still good.

 

#48. Frankenstein Unbound (1990)

Some films are worthwhile purely based on weirdness. Roger Corman directs a Brain W. Aldiss story that sends John Hurtā€™s scientist back in time to meet Frankenstein. And thatā€™s not even the weird part. (My review)

 

#47. Hellraiser IV: Bloodline (1996)

Sure, the word that comes to mind is ā€œdisappointingā€ but it is less disappointing than Hellraiser 3, and it, at times, feels like a Hellraiser film (the only one after the first two to do so). Doug Bradley still works as Pin Head, and Valentina Vargas in a fine new demon. The restā€¦ well, the prelude stuff is good and the space stuff is zany.

 

#46. Mimic (1997)

A bland, nothing-special horror story handed to a master. Guillermo del Toro couldnā€™t make a masterpiece out of this, but he gave this giant bug movie a lot of style.

 

#45. Wes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994)

The best of the 90s meta horror films as the actors and director of A Nightmare on Elm street play themselves being haunted by an actual Freddy after making the film about Freddy. (My review)

 

#44. The Haunting (1999)

Call it Art Design: The Movie. It gets unfairly criticized for not being the same as the 1963 film, but this has a different goal and a different audience. That one was for people who dislike ghosts but love unnecessary narration (My review). This one is people who love set decoration and CGI ghosts.

 

#43. Night of the Living Dead (1990)

If this had come out in the ā€˜70s, Iā€™d rank it higher. It isnā€™t that it is specifically an unnecessary remake, but that it is generally unnecessary. But if you are looking for the same old thing, this is a reasonable version. Besides, Iā€™ve met Tom Savini and heā€™s a hoot.

 

#42. A Chinese Ghost Story III (1991)

The second sequel to the classic A Chinese Ghost Story is essentially a remake. As the original was so good, this one is good as well, but it is a copy. Once youā€™ve watched the first multiple times and feel like watching it one more time, then try this.

 

#41. Alien: Resurrection (1997)

Space horror from the director of Amelieā€¦ Well, thatā€™sā€¦odd. Alien 3 was a miserable A-movie, so they went for B-movie this time and did OK. Itā€™s not deep or emotional or sensible. Itā€™s guys with big guns fighting monsters and Sigourney Weaver playing way over the top. Itā€™s stupid fun.

 

#40. In the Mouth of Madness (1994)

John Carpenter ruled the ā€˜80s, but this is his only passable entry in the ā€˜90s. Itā€™s one of the better Lovecraft-inspired films. I like it, but find it disappointing. It should have been more. Carpenter would revisit the themes in 2005 with Cigarette Burns.

 

#39. Bride of Chucky (1998)

It took them multiple attempts to work out that the franchise should be comedic, and then they got it right. Jennifer Tilly was the perfect addition (she always sounds a bit like a killer doll).

 

#38. The Craft (1996)

The precursor to Charmed, thereā€™s more high school social structure here than spells, but it works either way. This is where the pop culture version of a witch took the final step from Satanic hag to hot Wiccan. (My review)

 

#37. The Faculty (1998)

A nice little teen alien monster flick, with a fine cast and solid direction from Robert Rodriguez. It doesnā€™t break any ground, but it doesnā€™t need to.

 

#36. Haunted (1995)

The first of two miscastings of Aidan Quinn on this list. He does his best to drag down the film, but canā€™t quite manage with everything else so good, particularly Kate Beckinsale. Itā€™s a nice version of the standard movie ghost story. (My review)

 

#35. Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992)

It has been superseded in the public consciousness by the TV show, as it should, but that doesnā€™t mean this version doesnā€™t have some things to like, particularly Kristy Swansonā€™s take on Buffy.

 

#34. Meridian (1990)

Itā€™s a dark erotic fairytale that starts with roofies, rape, and evil carnies, and slides into were-beasts and ghosts. It is the best looking film made by Charles Band and while it isnā€™t to all tastes, if it is to yours, itā€™s hard to forget.

 

#33. Idle Hands (1999)

The best of the slacker horror comedies. A demon possessed hand kills a stonerā€™s parents and friends and his buddies are too lazy to bother going into the light. The jokes are good and Jessica Alba is adorable,

 

#32. The Prophecy II (1998)

Extremely unnecessary and whatā€™s good is a rehash, but itā€™s still wonderful to watch Christopher Walken do his thing as Gabriel, the perching angel. (My review)

 

#31. Predator 2 (1990)

Another sequel! Much like the first. Danny Glover is a no-nonsense tough guy, but instead of a soldier heā€™s a cop. The Predator comes to town and things play out as expected. (My review)

 

#30. Practical Magic (1998)

Aidan Quinn appears a second time in a movie he shouldnā€™t have gotten close to. The romance and Quinn donā€™t work, but Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman are so cute together that nothing else matters. Their late night party, with Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest makes it worthwhile.

 

#29. Species (1995)

A ā€˜50s-style alien film merged with ā€˜70s Euro-cult and it comes out as stupid and as enjoyable as that sounds. The turnaround is niceā€”the alien wants our men instead of our women. (My review)

 

#28. Bride of Re-Animator (1990)

Re-Animator was one of the great surprises of the 1980s. This sequel isā€¦ good. Jeffrey Combā€™s Herbert West is one of the finest mad doctors, so it worth spending a bit more time with him, even if it was done better before. (My review)

 

#27. Nightbreed (1990)

What might have been. Chopped up and left with an unfinished story, it is still Clive Barker at his most Clive Barkerist. Itā€™s a celebration of monsters and blood and sex and the night.

 

#26. Blade (1998)

The beginning of the horror-action craze and the rebirth of superhero films, Blade was a revelation. It canā€™t compete with what was to follow, or even its own immediate sequel, but it’s still cool. (My review)

 

#25. Trancers II (1991)

Trancers was B-movie mogul Charles Bandā€™s greatest work. Trancers II is much like the first, but a little less. Tim Thomserson is again a riot as Jack Deth, zombie slayer, and where else are you going to see Helen Hunt in a low budget horror film? The series would continue, but best to ignore that fact.

 

#24. From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)

Two separate films stuck uncomfortably together. Iā€™m not fond of Tarantinoā€™s crime section, but Rodriguezā€™s vampire strip club is exciting and sexy and funny. Salma Hayekā€™s erotic snake dance is the high point.

 

#23. Tremors II: Aftershocks (1996)

Hey, itā€™s another sequel. I can just simply cut and paste my comment: Itā€™s much like the first, so itā€™s good because that one was, but not quite as good.

 

#22. Innocent Blood (1992)

John Landisā€™s companion piece to An American Werewolf in London. I prefer this one. Anthony LaPaglia is wrong for the part of the romantic cop, but Anne Parillaud is a sexy bloody vampire and this is my favorite Robert Loggia mob performance. (My Review)

 

#21. Return of the Living Dead III (1993)

Itā€™s not often that the third is the best, but Brian Yuzna dialed down the wacky comedy of the franchise and added his brand of twisted humor and created one of the best zombie movies. Mindy Clarkeā€™s pierced zombie doesnā€™t hurt either. (My Review)

 

#20. Dreams {Yume} (1990)

I got Akira Kurosawa onto a horror list! This strange anthology includes fairytales, ghost stories, science fiction, and post apocalyptic demons. It doesnā€™t all work, but some of the imagery is fabulous.

 

#19. Braindead (1992)

Before Peter Jackson went nuts on big money, never-ending, fantasy epics, his skill lay in splatter comedies, and this was his best. Itā€™s claimed to be the bloodiest movie ever made (at least at the time), and the lawnmower massacre scene supports that.

 

#18. Army of Darkness (1992)

The one where Sam Raimi got a budget. There are 13 different cuts of this demon-zombie-comedy, and some are better than others, so good luck on the search.

 

#17. The Devil’s Advocate (1997)

A Faustian lawyer flick with Keanu Reeves and Al Pacino. Itā€™s better than it has any right to be. Unfortunately, a lawsuit has made the theatrical version impossible to find (they didnā€™t get rights to include a relief sculpture that I mentioned in my original review).

 

#16. Event Horizon (1997)

Think Hellraiser in space, done far better than when they actually made Hellraiser in space. This is another of those ā€œwhat might have beenā€ films, with 30 minutes cut and now missing. What we have is good, but it could have been a masterwork.

 

#15. Cast a Deadly Spell (1991)

In an alternate reality where magic is common, detective Phillip Lovecraft searches for the Necronomincon. Made for HBO, It didnā€™t get a theatrical release, which is a shame.

 

#14. Deep Rising (1998)

Before Stephen Sommers made The Mummy, he tried it out here. Itā€™s the same feeling, but in the water. Treat Williams makes an amiable hero after Harrison Ford bowed out. Itā€™s all fun and explosions and monsters eating bad guys.

 

#13. Candyman (1992)

Itā€™s poetry meets slasher and both are caught off guard. Candyman is an atmospheric art film with hooks rending flesh and pools of blood. Tony Todd creates one of the great modern horror icons. (My review)

 

#12. The Forgotten One (1990)

Maybe itā€™s the purity of it that works so well. This is the standard ghost story told straight. No wild effects or twists to complicate or screw things up. Itā€™s just a haunting and a mystery and a hot ghost who likes to take baths. (My review)

 

#11. Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

The story is overwhelmed by appearance, but thatā€™s because the appearance is spectacular: magnificent gothic structures, writhing vampire babes, a half-human bat, extravagant gowns, independently moving shadows, and translucent lingerie. Sometimes overindulgence is what you need. (My review)

 

#10. Wolf (1994)

Itā€™s a satire mixed with a monster mash which works out nicely. Jack Nicholson works well as the broken man who goes a little nuts (thatā€™s his bread-n-butter), though James Spader steals the show. Itā€™s easily a top 5 werewolf film of all time. (My Review)

 

#9. Interview with the Vampire (1994)

More of a gothic soap opera than a monster movie, Interview gives us beautiful people in beautiful surroundings doing beautiful things. Itā€™s not surprising that the film is as seductive as its characters are supposed to be. (My review)

 

#8. Tremors (1990)

I must have seen this film twenty times during the ā€˜90s, and it never got old. Lots of gore and lots of jokes and some characters to care about. It doesnā€™t aim high, but it also never misses.

 

#7. The Ninth Gate (1999)

Johnny Depp, before he went crazy, stars in this calm and focused mystery involving a book that may have a supernatural connection. This is Roman Polanskiā€™s second shot at Christian-mythological horror and he does it better this time.

 

#6. Ringu (1998)

Ringu kicked J-horror into high gear and set the path for a decade of cinema. Itā€™s also excellent, appearing to tell the standard movie ghost story right up until it doesnā€™t. Few films are half as creepy. (My review)

 

#5. The Prophecy (1995)

It asks the question, ā€œWould you want to meet an angel?ā€ and answers it: no. The conception of angels is marvelous, but the specific execution is even better. In any normal movie, Viggo Mortensen would steal it all with his powerful and frightening Lucifer, but not here. Christopher Walken rules as the warped Gabriel. (My review)

 

#4. Sleepy Hollow (1999)

This is the perfect Halloween celebration movie: emotional, creepy, and beautiful.Ā Tim Burton creates a lush, dreamlike, bewitching world where even a beheading looks elegant and the grotesque is alluring. (My review)

 

#3. Jurassic Park (1993)

Yes, itā€™s a horror film. People get hunted by monsters in the darkā€”thatā€™s horror. It also has a strong theme, which everything in the film contradicts. Is making dinosaurs a bad idea? Sure. Would I do it? In a second. It would be wondrous.

 

#2 The Mummy (1999)

One of the finest adventure films of the last 50 years, and one that’s surprisingly gory. The dialog is clever, the characters pull you in (both the likable ones and the villains), the effects look great, and the monster is menacing. This is Deep Rising perfected. (My review)

 

#1. The Sixth Sense (1999)

What else could it be? Itā€™s the best ghost movie since the 1940s. It does what other twist movies fail to doā€”that is, have a great story without the twist. The twist just makes it so much better. Itā€™s been a long time since M. Night Shyamalan and Bruce Willis were thought of as great talents, but in 1999, they were. (My review)

Oct 222018
 

Mad Scientists. You have to love them. I do. Where would our monsters come from without them?

For my reviews of Mad Doctor/Scientist films, check out my full list here.

This is a horror list, so Iā€™m trying to stick to that arbitrary line. That means I wonā€™t be counting any of the myriad evil super scientists in spy and superhero films. Honorable Mention goes to The Rocky Horror Picture Show for so many reasons.

Starting with #10:

 

#10: Return of the Living Dead III (1993)

The third Living DeadĀ film is the best (and the only one that would qualify for this list). Director Brian Yuzna takes the franchise in a less camp direction,Ā instilling this movie with his darker sense of humor, while keeping theĀ violence and gore of its predecessors. He also slips in a great deal more character development as this is a love story. ThinkĀ Romeo and Juliet with zombies and the military. Our mad doctor is trying to weaponize zombies. Bad plan. Yuzna will return to this list two times, in the role of producer. (My review)

 

 

#9: Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

I debated if this film qualified, as the mad doctor is the 6th banana, but the plot is built around mad science, and it is filled with all the trappings, so yes, it counts. Here we have a full on comedy, and one of the best horror comedies of all time that also happens to be the best Abbot and Costello film, the best of the Universal classic monster mash-up films (there were only 5), and only the second time Dracula was played by Bela Lugosi. While Abbot and Costello do their normal wacky bits, the monster side of things is treated respectfully. It was the perfect way to end an era.

 

 

#8: Island of Lost Souls (1932)

The first, and best adaptation of H. G. Wellsā€™s novel,Ā The Island of Doctor MoreauĀ shifts the tone of the tale away from science fiction and toward horror. In doing so, the story is given power and one of the great cinematic ā€œmadā€ doctors is created.Ā Thereā€™s so much to bite into. You can spend the entire film dwelling on the twisted Garden of Eden myth or you can examine what it means to be human or or the nature of laws and society or of religion and a lesser god.Ā Too thoughtful? Then skip all of it and wallow in the horror of the House of Pain. There are plenty of thrills and chills. This is Charles Laughtonā€™s film. His Moreau isnā€™t mad. Heā€™s suave, clever, domineering, and evil. He enjoys his work, and enjoys the worship of his creations. Island of Lost Souls won my Foscar Award for 1932. (My review)

 

 

#6: Re-Animator (1985)

Based so loosely on a H.P. Lovecraft story that itā€™s hardly worth mentioning,Ā Re-AnimatorĀ is as much fun as you can have with a re-animated corpse. It has all the violence, gore, and nudity of your standard survivors-fight-zombie-horde movie, but with wit and one hell of a mad scientist. And it’s that mad scientist that makes the film.Ā  Jeffrey Combs plays him as an intense sprite and it is one of the great performances in horror.Ā  Itā€™s not surprising that Herbert West has so many devoted fans. (My review)

 

 

#7: The Fly (1986)

An honorable mention to the 1958 The Fly which almost made this list, but was beaten out by this re-make. Perhaps re-imagining is a better word as the first film was a family drama focusing on the wife, and this is body horror as metaphor for the dating scene.Ā David Cronenberg was the Western cinematic master of twisted flesh and he finally had the backing to fulfill his vision. It is something to see. The Fly radically changed the view of actor Jeff Goldblum, who previously was limited to “nerdy” friend parts.

 

 

#5: From Beyond (1986)

The Re-Animator team return in a more Lovecraftian film. This may be the only Mad ScientistĀ flick that manages to make a persuasive argument for giving up science and hiding out on a farm somewhere.Ā Gordon has pulled out all the stops to makeĀ From BeyondĀ a joyride of gore, nudity, sadomasochism, violence, retribution, and dark humor.Ā  Thereā€™s a giant, man-eating worm that sucks off hair and a few layers of skin, and there are flying barracudas that do pretty much what the swimming ones do.Ā There are ax-attacks, brains sucked through eye sockets, and a shape-changing rubber demon with a breast obsession.Ā And thereā€™s Barbara Crampton, first in a ripped nightgown, and then in S&M gear. If you canā€™t find something to enjoy in that list, youā€™re not trying. (My review)

 

 

#4: Jurassic Park (1993)

I refuse to say there is anything mad about the science in Jurassic Park. If you can make a dinosaur, then make a dinosaur. I can’t even call it a mad businessman film as I find the business reasonable..ish.Ā They just needed to work on their security. Well, it is close enough to count for this list (and yes, this is a horror filmā€”kids about to be eaten in a kitchen counts for horror).Ā Jurassic ParkĀ is a great film in so many ways (frights, action, character), but its true achievement is in pulling the audience into the wonder of it all. And yeah, as we find out in the sequels, the main scientist is a touch on the amoral-obsessed side.

 

 

#3: Altered States (1980)

Filled with all the weirdness director Ken Russell is famous for, Altered States follows a scientist played by William Hurt as he fanatically searches for the meaning to the universe, and finds it. Sometimes it is best not find what you are looking for. It is brilliant and thought-provoking, though could use a few less minutes of drug trips. I question if this film counts as horror, but it has elements that tend that way and others count it, and there’s no question we have a truly obsessed doctor.

 

 

#2: The Invisible Man (1933)

No one has done more for horror and mad doctor cinema than James Whale. The man who formed Universal horror had a brilliant eye and a quirky pitch black sense of humor. This was his second Universal Monster, and skating on a major success, he relaxed and let himself go, slipping a great deal of comedy between the frights. There are no times when Una O’Conner screaming isn’t wonderful. It was also the big break for the greatest character actor of all time, Claude Rains.

 

 

#1: Frankenstein (1931)
Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā Son of Frankenstein (1939)

Yes, this is a cheat, putting the three films together, but otherwise half this list would be from the 1930s. Besides, separating the three wouldn’t change much; two of the three would keep the top positions and Son of Frankenstein would only slip a few places. So, the original Frankenstein films take the top spot. James Whale, Boris Karloff, andĀ Jack P. Pierce created the greatest horror icon of all time and a magnificent film. Then they returned, with the help of composer Franz Waxman, and made an even better film. Son of Frankenstein suffers without Whale’s touch, but excels with beautiful German expressionist sets. Frankenstein won my Foscar Award for 1931, though BrideĀ only made runner up in a more competitive year, and Son was a nominee for 1939.

Oct 032018
  October 3, 2018

RenaissanceI discovered Renaissance in the early ā€˜80s and was sucked into the beauty of their music. I hadnā€™t heard anything like them, and while Iā€™ve run into copies and bands treading similar ground since, thereā€™s nothing like the original.

Back before ā€œprogressive rockā€ was a term, there was Renaissance, which along with GenesisĀ  and Yes, formed the foundation of British art rock. Renaissance surprisingly rose from the ashes of The Yardbirds, when Keith Reif and Jim McCarty wanted to add classical elements to their performance. Personnel shifts removed both (and everyone else) by the third album, which many consider the true beginnings of the band. Renaissance combined rock with classical (their early albums all incorporated classical works), jazz, and folk. They are best know for their dominate and complex piano, and for lead vocalist Annie Haslam, who is in the running for finest rock vocalist.

Their prime period was ā€™72-ā€™78, and my favorite songs stay within that era. My ranking of their studio albums (and pretty much everyone elseā€™s) sticks to this as well, with one of their ā€™72, ā€™73, or ā€™74 albums taking the top slot.Ā  I’d order them, from best to worst: Turn of the Cards (1974), Ashes Are Burning (1973), Scheherazade And Other Stories (1975), A Song For All Seasons (1978), Novella (1977), Prolog (1972), Renaissance (1969), Illusion (1971), Tuscany (2001), Symphony of Light / Grandine Il Vento (2013), Azure Dā€™Or (1979), Camera Camera (1981), Time-Line (1983). If you can only buy one, I’d suggest their Live at Carnegie Hall, which does a good job covering their best period, and includes 7 of my 10 favorite songs.

RenaissanceĀ faded quickly after ā€™77, and their dalliance with new wave in the ā€˜80s was a disaster. Theyā€™ve reformed several times with varying forms since, trying to recapture their glory days with only mild success.

My favorites, without further comment:

 

#10 The Vultures Fly High

(from Scheherazade And Other Stories)

 

#9 Ashes Are Burning

(from Ashes Are Burning)

 

#8 Black Flame

(from Turn of the Cards)

 

#7 Song of Scheherazade

(from Scheherazade And Other Stories)

 

#6 Northern Lights

(from A Song For All Seasons)

 

#5 Can You Understand

(from Ashes Are Burning)

 

#4 Prologue

(from Prologue)

 

#3 Running Hard

Ā (from Turn of the Cards)

 

#2 Carpet of the Sun

(from Ashes Are Burning)

 

#1 Mother Russia

(from Turn of the Cards)

Oct 022018
  October 2, 2018

MotoIā€™d seen most of the ā€˜30s detective series when I was a kid, including Charlie Chan, but somehow I missed Mr. Moto. Most of these sorts of films are amusing, but cut pretty much the same and they can get old quickly without something special (like the chemistry between Nick and Nora Charles in The Thin Man). I assumed Mr. Moto would be a weaker entry, but finally watching the movies, I was taken aback at how good they are. These were inexpensive B-pictures, made to fill in the gap of the lessening Charlie Chan (the stories were written on request because the author of the Chan books had died, leaving a hole in the Asian detective sub-genre, and there was demand). And for the lead, they cast not a Japanese actor, or any Asian actor, but Peter Lorre, a Hungarian Jew with a drug problem and an uncertain interest in the part. This was a recipe for disaster.

But it wasnā€™t one. Lorre was a fine actor, who not only was up for the challenge of the character, but also of the many fight scenes. And that’s the film series’ second big plus: These werenā€™t normal detective stories. Rather, Mr. Moto is more of an international spy, and that set these pictures apart. There is as much James Bond at play as there is Philo Vance. Thereā€™s a real joy in watching the diminutive Moto taking out one bad guy after another.

As for the casting of a white actor, 1930s Hollywood was ripe with racial issues, but as Keye Luke (Charlie Chanā€™s #1 Son) noted, the yellow-face and stereotypes were a problem, but the trade-off was that there were roles, the stereotypes were more often positive ones, and there was actually representation. Later, there were no roles at all, and no representation for Asians. And the Moto films had many parts for Asian actors and Asian characters were treated with respect.

And things are better with Moto, as he doesnā€™t fit a stereotype, nor have a two-dimensional character (he is more complex than either Charlie Chan or Rathboneā€™s Holmes). He is smart, well educated, athletic, and heroic. He lives well but is able to rough it without complaints. He can, and does, kill (a rarity in ā€œdetectiveā€ series of the time). He is funny and kind, and is often amused at those around him. He drinks milk in bars, but has no aversion to liquor. Heā€™s a Buddhist, but it comes up no more often than being a Christian comes up for other detectives.

As for stereotypes, they are used in abundance, but not in Asian characters. Instead, silly Westerners (never the villains, who know better) assume the Asian characters will fit their preconceptions, and Moto uses their ignorance to his own advantage. Itā€™s good writing.

And in another bit of joyful twist, Moto is a master of disguise, taking on not only Asian identities, but also German and Austrian. In the Moto universe, no one can tell one race from another (well, until Willie Best shows up in a later entryā€¦).

The series is at its best at the beginning, then stumbles through a rough patch before getting better again, but with the downside that those later entries add comic relief that is out of place and not comic. Another problem is that two of the films (Mr. Motoā€™s Gamble and Mr. Moto in DangerIsland) were originally meant for Charlie Chan, the first even included Chanā€™s son as a side kick. I find the Chan films weaker, but also he is a different kind of characterā€”a methodical detective rather than an action heroā€”so this turns out to be a major problem, at least for Gamble. DangerIsland was actually based on a unrelated novel, that was made into a film and then was being adapted for a second film to feature Chan before it was switched to Moto.

But when the series is good, it is quite good (again, think ā€˜30s B-movie). Thereā€™s a lot of excitement, a touch of archeology (I have to think Indiana Jones owes as much to Moto as Bond does), mystery, and some excellent characters.

I highly suggest the first two films, and then more modestly the fifth, and then a bit more modestly the final three. Use your discretion with the third and forth.

Ranking them (with the # being their release order, not their production orderā€”they changed their dates around when they saw they had a dud with the second one filmed, Takes a Chance):

1 –Ā  Thank You, Mr. Moto (Mr. Moto #2 – 1937)
2 –Ā  Think Fast, Mr. Moto (Mr. Moto #1 – 1937)
3 –Ā  Mysterious Mr. Moto (Mr. Moto #5 – 1938)
4 –Ā  Mr. Moto’s Last Warning (Mr. Moto #6 – 1939)
5 –Ā  Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation (Mr. Moto #8 – 1939)
6 –Ā  Mr. Moto in DangerIsland (Mr. Moto #7 – 1939)
7 –Ā  Mr. Motoā€™s Gamble (Mr. Moto #3 – 1938)
8 –Ā  Mr. Moto Takes a Chance (Mr. Moto #4 – 1938)