5/10
First outing for Lon Chaney Jr. under heavy makeup
14 November 2023
1935's "Scream in the Night" was the last of two features produced by Ray Kirkwood's Commodore Pictures, starring vehicles for the 29 year old Lon Chaney Jr., whose dual role here isn't really much better than "The Shadow of Silk Lennox." Instead of a natty big city gangster, Lon is on the right side of the law as Jack Wilson, tracking down master jewel thief Johnny Fly (Manuel Lopez) to Singapore, where he infiltrates the smugglers by impersonating the scarred Butch Curtain (also Chaney), owner of the waterfront dive where the gang resides. Curtain gives the younger Chaney a chance to compete with his father under a heavy makeup, otherwise that's where the comparison ends, for neither part gives him much to do apart from having two (admittedly attractive) leading ladies. Contrary to what many reviewers have to say, Lon didn't change his name to do these two low budget efforts, since he answered the call at RKO for "Captain Hurricane," only to see his footage end up on the cutting room floor, followed by an unbilled bit in Paramount's "Hold 'Em Yale" (he first receives credit as 'Lon Chaney Jr.' in a second Paramount, "Accent on Youth"). Neither of his Commodore films saw any release in 1935, this one earning a 1943 premiere for Astor Pictures, following Lon's star making performances in "Of Mice and Men" and "The Wolf Man."
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