6/10
Sinister prophecy
28 April 2017
No other worldly creatures. no man made type monsters are in this Boris Karloff film. Instead Karloff plays a pair of twin brothers, one good, one bad in The Black Room set during the 19th century in some German principality.

The concept of twins is always an interesting one ever since Romulus and Remus battled in ancient times. Bette Davis did a pair of films playing good and evil women. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. did a great film The Corsican Brothers with the same idea about one good and one cursed apparently evil twin.

But there's some prophecy here about a pair of twin heirs that one would slay the other. So the boys who grew up to be Boris Karloff were separated with one going off to live the life of a 19th century trust fund baby.

Wouldn't you know it, but the bad twin is left in charge and Karloff is his usual malevolent self. Won't go into it, but he has evil designs on the young women of the domain like Marian Marsh and Katherine DeMille. The prophecy is fulfilled, but in a most ironic way.

Note the presence of Robert Allen who at that time was Columbia's B picture western star for once not in cowboy gear for a film. He's a young guards officer with a thing for Marian Marsh.

Karloff's double performance makes this one worth watching.
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