Not that I would wish to diminish Sturges's contribution, but the 'rural comedy' flavour is already very much present in Wells's novel (all the slapstick stuff of villagers chasing a flying shirt), making it the lightest of his early 'scientific romances'. In fact, although it cuts out at least one significant character and crowbars in the obligatory hetero romance, the film strikes me as a pretty faithful adaptation of the book.knives wrote:If you really want to see Sturges shine through in something where it makes no sense for it to you have to check out The Invisible Man. He didn't get any credit for it, but he doctored the whole script into this grand comedy (nuts in May) that fits Whale like a glove.
Like you, I'd like to include The Invisible Man*, but there isn't really enough room for it, what with Bride of Frankenstein and The Mummy already on the list. The Old Dark House is another Whale title full of brilliant moments, but it strikes me as a bit uneven over all. I still hold out hope for Remember Last Night? and Show Boat, neither of which I've yet seen.
*[Finally shifting to the convention of bolding titles, rather than italicising them. I'd noticed that Zedz and I were two of the few who did the latter: it'd be the standard convention in written prose, but on a screen one must admit that bold does stand out more.]