![]() ![]() ![]() The Mummy tells of Im-Ho-Tep an Ancient Egyptian priest who was mummified alive for blasphemously attempting to bring back to life his deceased lover, Ankh-es-en-amon using the Scroll of Thoth. They landed on Ancient Egypt, still popular thanks to the discovery of Tutankhamen’s tomb ten years earlier and all the associated talk of curses. Universal Studios, fresh from their success with Dracula and Frankenstein (both 1931) were looking for a vehicle for their new star, Boris Karloff. It wasn’t until 1932 that the definitive mummy movie would make it onto screens. Most dealt with reincarnation and some were comedies in which a character wraps himself up as a mummy in order to scare people. However, few of these films actually featured a reanimated mummy. With the rise of cinema, mummies were every bit as suitable for celluloid terror as vampires and other monsters and there were several silent mummy-themed movies like The Eyes of the Mummy (1918, released in the U.S. Although the concept of reanimated mummies are never mentioned in Egyptian sources, the writers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century were fascinated by the creepy possibilities they posed as plot devices. In writing them I drew on mythology more modern than ancient. Mummies feature in my novels Curse of the Blood Fiends and Silver Tomb. ![]()
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