Product Details
Voodoo Island/The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake (Midnite Movies Double Feature)

Voodoo Island/The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake (Midnite Movies Double Feature)
Directed by Edward L. Cahn, Reginald Le Borg

Price: $9.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

43 new or used available from $3.34

Average customer review:

Product Description

VOODOO ISLAND: Master of the macabre Boris Karloff delivers a rare non-monster performance as the leader of an investigation of mysterious disappearances on a South Pacific island that is the proposed site of an exclusive resort. But after a few encounters with carnivorous plants and zombies, he realizes that this might not be the ideal place for a vacation…and that his team will be lucky to make it off the island alive!THE FOUR SKULLS OF JONATHAN DRAKE: The sins of the fathers rest heavily on the heads of the sons – literally – in this fun-filled frightfest that'll keep you "awake and screaming through many a traumatic night" (Variety)! Faced with an age-old family curse that beheaded their forefathers, two brothers attempt to unravel the family plot…even as sinister forces attempt to put them into it!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #21733 in DVD
  • Brand: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
  • Released on: 2005-09-20
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, French, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 148 minutes

Customer Reviews

A Psychotroic Double Bill!4
Once upon a time, way back in the years B.C. (before cable), television stations used to run old horror movies on Saturday nights under the name "Chiller Theater." Yeah, they were "B" movies, but we as children found them scary and fascinating. Now these films find themselves an endangered species. Stations simply don't run them anymore, even in this age of cable where we supposedly get to choose from 100 plus channels. What we're not told is that the broadcast stations dropped late night old movies in favor of the infomercial, which means that the only refuge for old time psychotronic fans is the DVD.

MGM has done all us fans a favor by releasing "Voodoo Island" and The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake" as a double feature. These two favorite films from the "Chiller" days have fallen into oblivion and it is nice to see them resurrected in DVD format. Granted, these are not lost classics in ant sense except the psychotronic, but they are worth the time of any horror film buff.

The first film, "Voodoo Island," has Boris Karloff in fine form as a scientific investigator called in by wealthy industrialist Elisha Cook, Jr. to examine strange happenings on a Pacific Island. So far, so good, but Boris soon discovers a voodoo cult (in the Pacific, no less) with some man-eating plants thrown in for good measure. The plot breaks down shortly after this discovery as the explorers use that old time-tested blueprint to get them all killed - Let's Split Up.

Produced by Howard W. Koch of "Airplane" fame, "Voodoo Island" looks like it's off the coast of New Jersey rather than in the Pacific. Still, Boris and Elisha maintain their dignity throughout, helped by a fine performance from Beverly Tyler.

"The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake" concerns on Jonathan Drake (Eduard Franz), who while attending his brother's funeral in South America, is shocked to find his decreased brother is missing his head, which later turns up in the family vault as a skull. Turns out it's part of a curse placed on the Drake family for their role in a massacre of Amazon natives. All the Drake men die of shock at age 60 and lose their heads.

Henry Daniell steals the picture as Dr. Zurich, who is the bad guy behind the Drake misfortune. Daniell has a grand time chewing up whatever scenery comes his way and is great fun to watch. Also look for noted English character actor Paul Cavanagh ("Sherlock Holmes and the House of Fear," "The Scarlet Claw") in his last film as Jonathan's brother, Kenneth.

Directed by Edward L. Cahn, whose credits include "Invisible Invaders," "Invasion of the Saucer Men," and the classic, "Creature With the Atom Brain.")

Excellent transfer, two great psychotronic classics, and Boris Karloff and Henry Daniell: What more could a film fan want?

The Power Of Voodoo3
Who will escape from Voodoo Island? If the maneating plants don't kill them first, the boredom will. Yes, Voodoo Island is rather dull. I certainly don't set my standards too high when dealing with old B pictures, but a B film director has accomplished something rather rare when he makes a schlock picture that's not even mildly amusing. The film has a pretty short running time, and our cast doesn't even get to the island till about 40-45 minutes through the film. Alot of dilly-dallying up to that point. Karloff gives a good performance as a skeptic who likes to debunk superstitious theories, but he really can't even save this film. The natives on this island are about as threatening as the three stooges, and you don't see hardly enough of the maneating plants which are the only interesting thing in the film. It's very anticlimatic as well. Don't read any further if you honestly want to keep the ending of Voodoo Island a surprise. The civilization on this island purposely turned it's back on the rest of the world and wants to keep the island and it's people a secret. Is there a big showdown between Karloff and the chief? No. Karloff says, "Don't worry, we won't tell anyone" and the chief says, "Oh, alright, you can all go". That's the end to the terror and menace of Voodoo Island.
The Four Skins Of Jonathan Drake is naturally the better film of the two. It concerns a curse killing off the men of the Drake family, and the last man, Jonathan's attempts to stop it. The witchdoctor(a native Indian's body with a white man's head) and his assistant(a guy who looks like he tried to swallow a sneaker and has the laces hanging out of his mouth) try to get their hands on the slippery Jonathan Drake. Lots of cool shrunken heads in this one. A decent film, that's where the three stars go. I don't know if it's just my dvd, but there were a few glitches on the Voodoo Island side of the disc. Lots of skipping, as though you hit the FF button on your remote at the lowest setting. Maybe I just got ahold of a bad copy, but there are no scratches on the disc. Buy with caution.

Wow! What a bargain!5
First of all, this is NOT a 2-disc set like it states in the data relating to this film, so don't be expecting that -- both movies are on one disc (one movie on each side) which is fine with me since they are both of very high quality.

If you're a cult film junkie like myself, you'll find that both of these films are a superb treat, "Voodoo Island" being slightly the better of the two. I'll address that one first:

This is a very well-shot B&W film with Boris Karloff radiating at its very center, only in this movie he does NOT play a monster. It was this film that showed me what a very fine actor Karloff really was. He plays a fairly genteel, but rugged, TV show personality who's investigating why a guy turned into a zombie on Voodoo Island, in the South Pacific (actually, shot in Hawaii). A developer wants to build a resort hotel there and he employs the hard-hitting Karloff to clear the way.

You'll see some other familiar cult film faces in this fine movie -- Elisha Cook, Jr., who played the strange little guy (homeowner) in the 1958 version of "House on Haunted Hill", (another awesome movie!), also does an equally fine job in this film. You'll similarly enjoy the man-eating (well... woman-eating) plants on Voodoo Island -- in a tongue-in-cheek sort of way, they're to die for!

And the grande coup for me was when, to my joy, I discovered that Les Baxter ("The Pit and the Pendulum," "Tales of Terror," and "The Raven", all AIP films), did the filmscore for this one. It's one of my very favorites, being of the atmospheric late 50s/early 60s-type of "atmospheric jungle score." Compare this mood music to to that in the great 1959 Frank Sinatra WW II (color) film, "Never so Few", (filmscore by the great Hugo Friedhofer).

I found that the clarity of the shots and locations in this one were just absolutely superb. There are a couple of goofy script spots in the film (e.g., the redundant calling on the radio at one point in the film), but this wasn't enough of a distraction to impact the larger story. There is a definite sense of nostalgia about this film, from the music to the old Douglas aircraft in which the principals fly into the islands -- most Baby Boomers will pick up on it.

The final super bonus is that this one was digitized from a 35 mm print, if you're interested in such minutia, and this IS a nice clear print. Wow! I LOVE watching this flick on my 32" flatscreen wide screen TV. It's just great!

As for "The Four Skulls of Johnathan Drake", I found this to be as much of a mystery (which helps to make it great) as it is a horror film and I liked it a great deal. Again the sets and locations were super (well, at least, fun) and, for me at least, this one doesn't ever drag at all. It also helps that this is another "voodoo jungle film"...sort of. I REALLY like jungle films, especially black magic ones, and while you don't get a sense of "jungle" here, you still get the ominous Hivaro Indian slinking around with his mouth sewn shut.

As far as the cast, with Paul Cavanaugh and Henry Daniell (playing a spectacular chief evil-doer, Dr. Zurich) included here, who could possibly ask for more? They're both incredible in this film. It's a very good 1959 B&W flick that I enjoy viewing over and over.