Navigation
The Mummys Shroud (1967)

Dir : John Gilling
1920, an archaeological expedition led by Sir Basil Walden (André Morell,
"Plague of the Zombies") discovers, after much hardship, the supposedly
cursed tomb of the ancient Egyptian child prince Kah-to-Bey.
Returning with their discovery, they find that the expedition's arrogant, pompous
and scheming backer Stanley Preston (John Phillips, "Village of the Damned")
is taking all the glory for himself as he plays up his role in finding the tomb
to the press, as his long suffering Wife Barbara (Elizabeth Sellars) and his
scolded press officer Longbarrow (Michael Ripper) flail along in his wake.
When the ill Sir Basil is suddenly carted off to the local Asylum due to a supposed breakdown, Preston's son, Paul (David Buck) wonders how involved his Father was in getting his rival certified, but soon he and the other members of the expedition, Claire (Maggie Kimberly), who seems to have psychic feelings of doom, and Harry (Tim Barret, "The Deadly Bees") have greater things to worry about as it seems the curse that was cast on anyone who enters Kah-to-Bey's tomb seems to be coming true, as the boy Prince's mummified protector (Eddie Powell, Christopher Lee's regular stunt double) starts to hunt down the desecrators......
The Mummys Shroud was famously (or infamously) the last film to be shot by 'Hammer' at their Bray Studio home. Its also a film that starts off deceptively poor in many ways.
The needlessly long (7 minutes!) pre-credits flashback sequence about Kah-to-Bey
gives us far too much unnecessary background story (reportedly narrated by Peter
Cushing, though I'm not so sure) and sports Egyptian sets that can certainly
be described as fun if not remotely convincing (let alone authentic) and which
are decorated with supposedly ancient artefacts that look like they were made
the day before shooting commenced.
Add in the fact that most of the Egyptians are played by podgy white guys with
'instant tan' smeared on and things do not look good.

The inclusion of the highly eccentric Tomb Keeper, Hasmid (the
original "Dr Who" 'Master' himself, Roger Delgado) ,who springs out
of the darkness in full black- face make-up, rants a lot of (supposedly) Egyptian
curses with an English accent before scuttling off like something from a comedy
sketch, also bodes ill.
As does the look of the Mummy itself, which is let down by the fitted suit looking
bandages and extremely obvious eyeholes in them through which can be seen the
rather too well preserved eyes of Eddie Powell.

Not all these opening moments are poor (there is a great scene where Preston
is dictating to Longbarrow the deadly hardships that the members of the expedition,
including himself, are going through to break into the tomb, while he actually
lounges in a chair sipping drink from his ornate decanter) but the film does
need a miracle it seems if it is going to make anything really worthwhile of
itself. And it gets one!
When the expedition return out of the desert the movie suddenly erupts with
engaging character moments and interaction , some (I stress, some) excellent
performances and some very well crafted horror moments.
The violence and bloodshed may be pretty restrained here (the film now rates
a 'PG' in the UK) but there is a palpable air of merciless brutality that surrounds
from the Mummy and its attacks and the first murder in particular is very well
done and delivers a real punch despite the actual act being played out of camera
shot.
Another thudding (literally) death scene is when the Mummy casually hurls a
poor soul through a window to smash onto the concrete below, a scene that delivers
a rare splash of crimson to the proceedings.

But it is really the characters and the actors performances that make The
Mummys Shroud ultimately such a success.
That most beloved of 'Hammer' support stalwarts Michael Ripper is given a far
bigger role than normal here and he does an exceptional job.
As the kindly but cowed Longbarrow he has some marvellous scenes and delivers
moments of real pathos when he comes face to face with the naked disdain and
selfishness that Preston shows towards him, while being too weak to do anything
but bow and scrape.
You can truly feel his own self-loathing and despair at his own cowardess thanks
to Rippers astute line delivery and subtle facial movements.
Ripper really should have been used more by 'Hammer' rather than just for landlords
and scared villagers and his performance here shows why.
John Phillips delivers a suitably blustering, bullying performance as the nasty Preston and even manages to break out of the rather one-dimensional bad guy role he's been given when Stanley is interacting with his Wife and son.

David Buck is given the closest thing to a hero role here as Paul and does a solid job and he delivers a barnstorming performance in the scene where he accuses his Father of arranging Sir Basil to be placed in the asylum.

Maggie Kimberly though (who was basically given no dialogue in Witchfinder General for a reason) lets the side down and delivers a rather poor performance, full of theatrical pouting, melodramatic turns to the camera and stilted line delivery. Luckily she is not given that much to do, but when she is she generally hurts the scene.
Thankfully Elizabeth Sellars gets us back on track and really shines in her later scenes as Barbaras normally caged dislike for her Husband smashes free to deliver some excellent interplay with Preston that generates some cold as ice scenes between the two as Barbara shows her disdain for the self-serving man who has obviously smothered her own feelings and personality under his own selfish bluster for far too long.
Andre Morell was always a reliable and solid actor who, like Peter Cushing,
always gave his all to a role.
As the weary, distressed, almost permanently ill Sir Basil he is underused here
but adds a seriousness to the film that is sometimes missing in some of the
out of place (though enjoyable) tongue in cheek, and even camp, performances,
from the support actors and their colourful roles (like Delgados Hasmid).
Talking of which a scene with a delightfully wizened old fortune teller (who
turns out to be Hasmids Mother!) is a melodramatic joy as the actress,
Catherine Lacey (The Sorcerers"), plays her role up for all it's worth.
The deadly serious finale to this same sequence though shows perfectly the hit
and miss blend of high melodrama, campness and straight ahead horror that plays
a big part in the make-up of "The Mummy's Shroud".
Something that ensures the film remains very entertaining between the scares
(or the wait for them, seeing as the Mummy does not go a hunting until the half
way mark) far more than most 'Hammer' films around this period (like the dull
as dishwater between the fangs "Dracula: Prince of Darkness"), but
at the same time it means the first half of the film is not quite as dark as
it perhaps should have been.

But it is all these many rich and interesting characters (actually very rare
in most 'Hammer' films away from the main villain or hero) which make "The
Mummy's Shroud" so damn watchable even when it moves away from its
horror elements.
And Director John Gillling (The Scarlet Blade,
The Flesh and the Fiends) brings energy to the Mummys assaults
as well as letting the character moments run at just the right pitch to make
a cohesive whole. Its certainly his best film for Hammer.
So despite the less than impressive looking Mummy and the dubious Egyptian
make-up and sets, the effective horror sequences, the mainly fine acting and
interesting characters ensure that "The Mummy's Shroud" is one of
'Hammer's' most satisfying, multi-layered and entertaining films.
Nice gutsy finale too and all in all this movie shows just how bad the later
(and quite laughable) "Curse of the Mummy's Tomb" was at delivering
everything that "The Mummy's Shroud" does so well. It's also (Lee's
make-up and the presence of Cushing aside) far more entertaining and engrossing
than the overly-lauded "The Mummy".
So the best 'Hammer' Mummy film (for that is what it is) is just waiting for
you to lift it's shroud and discover it's treasures within. So hunt it out.