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6.1/10
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A physician on death row for a mercy killing is allowed to experiment on a serum using a criminals' blood, but secretly tests it on himself. He gets a pardon, but finds out he's become a Jek... Read allA physician on death row for a mercy killing is allowed to experiment on a serum using a criminals' blood, but secretly tests it on himself. He gets a pardon, but finds out he's become a Jekyll-&-Hyde.A physician on death row for a mercy killing is allowed to experiment on a serum using a criminals' blood, but secretly tests it on himself. He gets a pardon, but finds out he's become a Jekyll-&-Hyde.
Ernie Adams
- Sam - Hospital Prison Orderly
- (uncredited)
Stanley Brown
- Prison Gate Guard
- (uncredited)
Frederick Burton
- Governor Prentiss
- (uncredited)
Jack Cheatham
- Patrolman Olson
- (uncredited)
Edward Earle
- Dr. Nichols
- (uncredited)
Richard Fiske
- Mandish
- (uncredited)
Featured review
Basically "Before I Hang" is very simplistic and inconspicuous thriller story, but it is almost evidently brought to a much higher level solely thanks to the always-reliable performance and natural class of the iconic Boris Karloff. I wrote it before and I'll write it forevermore in my reviews: this man was simply amazing! With is moody voice, he could narrate the content of a phone book for all I care, because I would still hang on his lips. His charm and charisma make every movie atmospheric and his grimaces when he transforms from a seemingly gentle elderly person into a cold-blooded murderer (as masterfully demonstrated a couple of times in "Before I Hang") are utmost petrifying! Mr. Karloff truly was – and still is – horror personified! So, that concludes my ode to this brilliant actor, and on to the film itself. "Before I Hang" is actually another loose interpretation of the classic novel "Les Mains d'Orlac" by Maurice Renard. The novel first got turned into a film in 1924 already, in the German expressionist masterpiece "Orlacs Hände" starring Conrad Veidt, and several more times since, including two films starring Peter Lorre ("Mad Love", "The Beast with Five Fingers") and another one starring Christopher Lee in 1960 ("The Hands of Orlac"). Although the source material isn't specifically credited here, it's clear that Renard's novel also provides the basic plot idea. The movie opens with a beautiful and long Boris Karloff plea in court. He's physician Dr. John Garth, sentenced to death by hanging because he attempted to cure a man but failed. Awaiting his execution, Dr. Garth continues his experiments with the consent of the prison director and the help of the resident doctor, and he uses himself as guinea pig when he injects the serum into his own veins. Dr. Garth's execution gets overruled after all, but he begins to notice that the serum rejuvenates him. Unfortunately, however, he used the blood of a convicted murderer to finalize his serum and this bad blood is now slowly turning him into a merciless strangler as well. Classic Karloff material, in other words, with numerous fantastic monologues and a handful of eerie moments. Short (barely 60 minutes), intense and to the point; where would (mad) science be without Boris Karloff?
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis film was shot in the house later used in the 1945 title The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) staring Hurd Hatfield.
- GoofsWhen speaking to his older friends, Dr. Garth mentions that humanity had only been able to increase life expectancy by maybe 15 years in the past fifty years of modern science. His friends counter that human lifespan is meant to only be 70 years ("three score and ten"). Both statements are incorrect. Life expectancy in the US was more like 60 (men) and 65 (women) in 1940, up from life expectancy around 40 in 1890. However, data was spotty before 1900, and life expectancy in the early 1900s was closer to 50, which may have been more what Dr Garth was referring to, he was just hyperbolic about the time frame.
- Quotes
Dr. John Garth: Someday, somehow, medical science will find a way to end the needless, ghastly suffering caused by the ravages of age!
- ConnectionsFeatured in TJ and the All Night Theatre: Before I Hang (1979)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El mago de la muerte
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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