“The Smiling Ghost” (1941) is one of those fast-paced
scary/silly B-movies that the Warner Bros. studio could knock out in its
sleep. There’s a lot to amuse here, and
a bit of a mystery, but mostly it’s a lot of scary house clichés as harmless as
a handful of candy corn.
Unless you’re allergic to candy corn.Or unless candy corn offends you.
There’s only one offense here in this well-intentioned free-for-all, and that’s the stereotyped character of Willie Best, who plays the longsuffering assistant of Wayne Morris. To Mr. Best’s credit, he gets some good lines and his delivery is hysterical. I think he probably gets more screen time than anybody in this movie except for Wayne Morris.
Wayne Morris, a befuddled victim/suitor who agrees to pretend to be engaged for one month to a jinxed girl for $1,000 (her former fiancés are all either incapacitated or dead), is a sweet fellow who really needs Willie Best to look after him. I like how when they are called to the attorney’s office to set up the deal, the receptionist asks which gentleman is the client, not presuming that it’s the white guy and calling them both gentlemen. Willie takes charge and speaks up, because it always takes poor slow Wayne a minute to sort things out: “The light-complected gentleman here.”
Alexis Smith is the “Kiss-of Death-Girl” who cannot hold onto her fiancés. We see how early in her career she’s been cast as the cool beauty, a template that would stay with her for many years.
Barbara Marshall is the sane and sassy girl reporter, because
you just have to have a girl reporter in these things.
Alan Hale is the butler, but not in the Arthur Treacher
mold. He’s a regular Joe, who talks
gruff and carries a gun. He’s supposed
to guard Wayne Morris, because Wayne is supposed to
break the curse. If he lives.Helen Westley is the sharp old grandma who set up the caper, and Lee Patrick is a cousin who covets the family jewels.
And I have to smile at Renie Riano in a typically small, stereotyped and funny role as The Homely Woman. She's a game gal.
Wayne Morris meets the dour extended family, including a
crazy uncle, played by Charles Halton, who shrinks heads in his laboratory. Mr. Morris settles into to a spooky night, oblivious to the fact he might be victim number
four.
We have secret panels, cobwebs in the cellar, cobwebs in the
family crypt, a fog-shrouded graveyard, and best of all, a thunderstorm during
which we hear peals of “The Storm” from Rossini’s William Tell, which you will recognize from many, many Warner Bros.
cartoons.A murderer wanders the mansion, and though we get glimpses of a waxy face with dark, sunken eyes and a sickeningly fixed grin, the identity of the monster is withheld until the end. He lends some excitement to the proceedings, but for my money, the scariest sight in this movie is the fellow, one of the former fiancés who lived, but who is now paralyzed—encased in an iron lung. Jeez, those things were frightening.
And if you think about it, just the shot of watching the patient through the mirror mounted on the top of the machine suggests a disembodied head.
You don’t have much time to think about the plot, even if you wanted to, because there’s too much going on, a few fistfights, a couple magnificent tumbles down a very long staircase, and a romantic triangle when the girl reporter and the Kiss-of-Death Girl become rivals for the hapless hand of Wayne Morris.
True love conquers all in the end, including one disgruntled
smiling ghost.
One of my favorite lines, when the Justice of the Peace
arrives to perform a midnight wedding, “The Justice of…stuff is here.”