The Mysterious Doctor (1943) Poster

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7/10
Fogbound In Cornwall
telegonus1 June 2001
This not perhaps one of the great films but is yet the umpteenth example of how a well-made and nicely acted picture can work wonders even without a particularly outstanding script. A doctor on a walking tour in foggy Cornwall finds himself at a village inn. He has to knock hard to get someone to open the door, and when it does open he is greeted by a man with a black hood over his head. Once inside the stranger meets the customers at the bar, who are the usual dour, sullen, somewhat eccentric British types moviegoers are familiar with thanks to such lively and observant directors as James Whale. Whether such characters have ever existed in the real world is of course irrelevant. The actors are British enough, and the setting sufficiently evocative to satisfy even the most finicky moviegoer. We are in Hollywood's England of the forties, when Brittania ruled with an authority and prestige not seen since, and when dry ice fog and mists suggested a quaint and cozy never-never Albion out of Dickens and Doyle almost as well as the authors themselves had done. One of locals tells the doctor the tale of the headless ghost of Black Morgan, which many believe to still be haunting the village and local mine. For a while, due to the exceptionally suspenseful build-up and clever art direction, one might have expected a werewolf or two to show up before the picture ended. This alas does not happen, and the film, though satisfying in its way, never fulfills the promise of its early, expository scenes.

What follows is a mystery, reasonably well done, highly unoriginal, and unworthy of the actors and set designers, who deserved better for their sterling efforts. This film is highly recommended for its atmosphere, though as a story it contains few surprises. Director Ben Stoloff does a commendable job in the dramatic scenes, and has a feel for the nuances of mood in terms of psychology and setting, as the two interact well and properly, as they always should. Leading lady Eleanor Parker handles her generic role quite well and comes close to being convincingly British without any excessive mannerisms. John Loder is decent as the local 'Sir', and the various supporting players are credible if predictable in their routines. Lester Matthews makes a fine Dr. Holmes, and plays his part with an authority and empathy one does not expect in an English actor at this time and in this sort of film. Matt Willis is excellent as the chief suspect. He was always a fine actor, and was never given the parts he deserved in his brief film career. In what one might call the Laird Cregar (or Vincent Price) role he is in his very different way as good as they were, and far more natural. The film's final scenes are badly dated, but overall this is as finely polished a B gem as one can find, and might have been a masterpiece of its kind with a better screenplay.

Technically it is a virtuoso piece, suggesting at times Hitchcock, at other times Lang; there's a touch of Val Lewton in the sensitive use of second-hand sets; in its locale, concluding scene and one of its leading actors it is strangely reminiscent of Ford's How Green Was My Valley; and early on it feels like a horror film. Not a bad showing for a little under sixty minutes running time.
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6/10
Miners Losing Their Heads
BaronBl00d10 November 2006
Dark, foggy, lantern-lit settings abound in this 1943 second run feature about a headless ghost(no horse) that terrorizes an old mine, still laden with tin needed by the British against the Germans in WWII. Heavy on atmosphere and light on originality, The Mysterious Doctor comes off rather well due to its effective and crisp cinematography, solid character acting, and competent direction. Director Benjamin Stoloff moves with such a fast pace that the film's 57 minute length seems almost too short to have covered what this film covers. Don't expect any great and clever plot twists here as the film's hero and villain should be quite obvious shortly - especially if you remember what the title of the film is. Eleanor Parker is in the film as the female lead, but her role has little depth to it. There are some nice performances by John Loder, Lester Matthews, and I particularly liked the feeling and sincerity in Matt Willis's portrayal of the village idiot. Willis gives more than just a one-dimensional performance, and this is quite evident in the scene with the children goading him. But these actors and the fine, able group of terrified, pub-drinking villagers of Cornwall are far more defined by their aiding the atmosphere of the film - the film's chief character. Though their are a few grisly murders shown off-stage, the film has a rather light touch to it despite this and the foggy mood. Films like this were very formulaic, and it is important that one of its chief goals was to serve England in its battle with the Germans. Once you understand that, everything falls into place. Nonetheless, this is an interesting film with some style.
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6/10
Unoriginal but not bad
preppy-326 June 2003
The doctor of the title is Dr. Frederick Holmes (Lester Matthews). He comes upon a small, fog-bound English village in WWII England. It contains a tin mine--tin which is badly needed in the war against the Nazis. But the local men are terrified to go into the mine because of the headless ghost that roams the mine and kills people. The bodies start piling up and the village starts to get very panicked....

Strange combo of patriotism and horror story. The plot is totally predictable (although there were a few surprises at the end) and this has a cast of B actors (John Loder, Eleanor Parker) or total unknowns. Still, it's pretty good. The settings are fairly elaborate (I suspect they were shooting on the sets of other films), the constant fog provides a nice spooky atmosphere, the appearances of the ghost are kind of fun and the acting is pretty decent--Parker especially does wonders with her role as "the girl" and Loder is tall, handsome and seems to be really enjoying himself.

Nothing new or thrilling but competent and quick (59 minutes). There are worse ways to kill an hour.
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Did Warners make a film on the Universal lot?
clore_26 October 2003
It would sure look that way. Fog-shrouded forests are more akin to the Universal landscape of the Wolfman films or those of Sherlock Holmes than of the urban crime thrillers at Warners. While it starts out as a pure horror film, it soon settles nicely into a wartime thriller which may "cheat" a bit on the Grand Guignol, but it's still enjoyable and it's briskly paced at around an hour.

Lester Matthews, who was seen likely to inherit Valerie Hobson in "The Werewolf of London" is the doctor of the title. Some in the village think that he may be a spy who descended on the moors with a parachute and may be up to no good - he keeps asking about the tin mine. It's WWII time, and tin is a most needed commodity. But the locals are afraid to work the mine as there happens to be a headless ghost prowling around.

Matthews as Doctor Holmes (interesting choice of character names) goes to check out the mine, but meanwhile he's being checked out by the innkeeper - a man whose face is covered by a mask since he was involved in a mine explosion that horribly scarred his face. Meanwhile, checking them both out is the village idiot and a headless ghost - suddenly there's more mine traffic than anyone's seen in years.

This is one of those films in which one has to drop all questions - at 57 minutes, there isn't time to ask any, and just enjoy the atmosphere. Not only the moors and the mine, but the performances of a Britain as only Hollywood could conceive it and transplanted British actors could play it. The characters in the inn could well have come from Whale's "The Invisible Man" - or perhaps more aptly Beebe's "The Invisible Man's Revenge." No matter, they're colorful and led by local squire John Loder who had the pleasure of going home to Hedy Lamarr at the time. He lent a solid presence to several "B" horrors of the 40s - such as "The Brighton Strangler" and "A Game of Death." Also in the cast is a most youthful Eleanor Parker looking radiant. Matt Willis is the mentally challenged villager, and damned if he doesn't resemble Lon Chaney Jr's Lennie - just as he resembled Chaney's Wolfman in "Return of the Vampire."

The sharp cinematography is by Henry Sharp (a deliberate pun) who photographed Vidor's "The Crowd" as well as Lang's "Ministry of Fear" and the Technicolor opus "Dr. Cyclops." This was quite a talent to snare for a "B" film, one would want to credit the producer for such a coup, but for some reason there isn't one credited. Bryan Foy was over at Warners and in charge of their "B" unit, but his name isn't on screen. If someone thought the project unworthy, they were wrong - it may have had only slightly better than a PRC or Monogram budget, but the results were light years apart. It's closer to Val Lewton, or 20th-Fox' "The Undying Monster" and from this writer's perspective, that's praise indeed.
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7/10
Warner Brothers Pro-British, World War II Propaganda Potlboiler
zardoz-1317 June 2008
Warning: Spoilers
"The Mysterious Doctor" was a Warner Brothers' World War II era propaganda B-movie that entwined horror and espionage. Originally entitled "The Mystery Doctor," this mild horror chiller whodunit was helmed by "Secret Enemies" director Ben Stoloff between August 13, 1942, and late September 1942. "G.I. Honeymoon" scenarist Richard Weil penned the original screenplay.

"The Mysterious Doctor" qualifies as a solid melodrama with an adequate cast, and richly atmospheric sets and surroundings. Initially, the plot seems pretty minor, but you have to remember that B-movies rarely lasted no more than an hour, and Warner Brothers designed this movie to make our British allies look good. Despite its small potatoes storyline, the movie takes on added significance when you study its production history within the context of Hollywood censorship and Federal censorship.

Posing as a man the British Army has rejected for active duty, a mining engineer, Dr. Frederick Holmes (Lester Matthews of "Jungle Man-Eaters"), takes a week-long walking trip through Cornwall. The first time that we see Dr. Holmes, he is tramping about the foggy moors after dark and catches a ride with a peddler (Harold De Becker of "Crime Doctor") to Morgan's Head. He wants to know why local miners refuse to work a tin mine that could yield a valuable asset to the English war effort. Holmes learns that the villagers are not working the mine because they fear the ghost of a headless man who haunts the moors and the mine. Eventually, the engineer exposes the ghost as a hoax. As it turns out, the village benefactor, Sir Harry Leland (John Loder of "The Gorilla Man"), has been masquerading as the headless ghost. Sir Harry explains that he is the offspring of German nobility who came over back in the days of King George to supervise other Germans in the tin mines of Cornwall. He has turned the superstitious fears of the villagers against them to keep the mine out of operation. Sir Harry shoots a simple-minded villager who rushes him. Sir Harry attacks Holmes, they struggle, and Sir Harry falls onto knife and dies.

The Production Code Administration served as the Hollywood censorship organization. The PCA file on "The Mysterious Doctor" contains only one letter, an Analysis Chart, and a certification of release permit. In his August 6, 1942, letter, Joseph Breen warned Warner Brothers to exercise restraint in "the gruesomeness and horror angles of this story, not only from the angle of the Production Code, but also from the angle of political censorship." He warned the studio never to show the village alcoholic Hugh Penhryn as "offensively drunk, although he may be suggested as a bit high." Breen cautioned them about the mentally challenged character of Bart Redmond, "If he is indicated as being insane, it is possible that the British Board of Film Censors will delete the scenes in which he appears." Another "Mysterious Doctor" character named Simon, who owns the local inn and tavern, wears a black executioner's hood to conceal a face horribly scarred from an accident involving dynamite. The censor advocated "restraint be exercised as to the gruesomeness appearance of Simon." Breen also warned Warner Brothers about the mob scene when the unruly village children heckle Bart, because some political censor broads would cut them. Finally, the chief PCA censor instructed the filmmakers to suggest out of frame the business of a character being "clunked" over the head. Warner Brother bowed to Breen's demands in each instance, based on the final version of "The Mysterious Doctor" that received its certification of approval on October 15, 1942.

"The Mysterious Doctor" file in the U.S. Government's Office of War Information film collection at the National Archives in Maryland contained only the Feature Viewing analysis. The agency judged "The Mysterious Doctor" as "an average horror story which has been filmed against a timely background of England at war." Although the analysts admitted that the film presented a few useful points to Washington's war information program, they observed that it could have told its story without any reference to the war. The OWI took the filmmakers to task for their failure to examine either Nazi ideology or the greater issues of the war. As "another example of the use of the war as a backdrop for a melodramatic story," "The Mysterious Doctor" made only minor contributions to the OWI's war information program. The officials complemented the film for (1) its emphasis on the importance of raw materials to the war effort, (2) that everyone should contribute in some way to the war, (3) its images of an England at work, (4) the timely importance of raw materials geared to war production without delay, and (5) "a partial recognition of what is a stake in this war." The analyst lamented, however, that Warner Brothers offset all these positive contributions because "The Mysterious Doctor" "casts suspicion unnecessarily on all person of German descent." According to the OWI, this story element impugned the loyalty of millions of British and Americans whose ancestors hailed from Germany. Worse, the analyst argued, this ideology gave a false impression of the enemy. The OWI echoed their own ideology from the Government Information Manual, "We are not fighting Germans unto the fourth and fifth generation; we are fighting a system of force and militarism which threatens to enslave the earth."

Director Ben Stoloff generates atmosphere, suspense, and mystery with "The Mysterious Doctor." The only real flaw is the surprise at the end when we learn that the fellow whose face had been blown off was a plot contrivance so that the hero could work undercover. The headless fiend outfit is pretty neat.
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6/10
The mysterious mine
AAdaSC17 May 2016
Lester Matthews (Dr Holmes) wanders into a foggy Cornish village and heads to the local inn. He is greeted by a weirdo bartender who runs the inn and does everything with a sack on his head. Matthews learns the story of a headless ghost that wanders around and kills anyone who enters the local tin mine. As a result, no-one goes near the tin mine. Well, the next day, that's exactly where Matthews heads off to. There is definitely someone walking around with no head because we see him. But is he really a ghost? What is going on in this village?

It's a whodunit mystery type of film with a helping of horror atmosphere. There is lots of fog and it zips along at a good pace. The story is pretty unconvincing if you think about it. So don't. Just go with it and it carries you along to its conclusion. The film ends up being something different to what it starts out as. Given the year that the film was made, it is no surprise that there is a war element to things.
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5/10
Fog Equals Atmosphere
abooboo-230 May 2001
A few chills and some decent atmosphere (atmosphere usually meaning fog) but the modest storyline takes a back seat to war time "rally 'round the troops, boys" sentiment. Seen with that in mind it does possess a certain degree of charm. I like the early shot of the mysterious headless "ghost" wandering through the fog, but it rather quickly becomes apparent that there is a very earth-bound, prosaic explanation. It's all a bit of a mess of course, but quite understandably America and Great Britain had more important things on their mind at the time. Eleanor Parker is porcelain beautiful in one of her early roles.
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6/10
Tales of he "Headless Miner"
sol-kay29 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
(There are Spoilers) Srange combination horror/war movie that has to do with the ghost of Black Morgan a miner who lost his head years ago and has been hunting the deserted Morgan's Head tin mine ever since looking for it. Taking a three week walking tour of Scotland Dr. Fredrick Holmes, Lester Matthews, hitches a ride and is dropped off at the Running Horse Inn owned by a faceless, he 's always wearing a black execution hood, Simon Tewksbury, Frank Mayo, who's head was badly scared in a mining explosion

Having a drink on him for all the patrons in the inn Holmes is later accused by a number of locals of being a spy from the Germans who was secretly parachuted into the area. With the towns top official Sir. Henry Leland, John Loder, dropping in to check on the rumor's of a German fifth columnist in their mist Holmes shows evidence that he's really who he says he is Dr. Fredrick Holmes British citizen and patriot. Later war hero Lt. Kit Hilton, Bruce Lester, just back from the North African campaign drops into town to first see his girlfriend Letty, Eleanor Parker, but also to whip up support for the war effort among the local miners who haven't worked the local tin mine since the war began.

The miners are more terrified at working in the Black Morgan Mine then facing Hitler's Whermacht and Luftwaffe in that the headless Back Morgan is haunting the mine and has already killed, by decapitation, some dozen persons who dared to enter it. Kit Hilton wants the miners to overcome their baseless superstitions about Black Morgan and go into the mine to dig up the tin in it thats desperately needed for the war in defeating Hitler. That's saying a lot since Black Morgan is to strike again, this time against both Simon and Holmes, who are foolish enough to enter his hunted mine.

With the townspeople now up in arms over the latest killing they single out village idiot Bart Redmond, Matt Willis, as somehow being in league with the headless miner Black Morgan since he's been seen in and around the mine just before Holmes, or was it Simon, was murdered. Captured and then escaping with his life Redmond hides out in the Morgan Mine where Letty, who knows that the big and lovable slub is innocent, secretly brings him food and water. It's on a visit to Bart that Hetty is confronted by the headless Morgan and is rescued by Bart who risking his life bring Hetty back to town where he's almost shot by Kit Hilton but again gets away and escapes back into the mine.

Hetty later that night is contacted by the fugitive Bart who urges her to come with him back to Morgan's Mine in that he found out what's really behind all these headless killings. As Bart takes Hetty back to the Morgan Mine he leads her to this secret room thats hidden deep in the mine-shaft that reveals what's really behind all these "Headless Miner" stories and it doesn't at all have to do with the headless miner!

Typical WWII propaganda flick that has to do with the enemy within, not without, and for once didn't depict the Nazis as the helpless and comical buffoons as were used to seeing them in movies like this but as very dangerous and conning adversaries as they were in real life. At the end of the movie with the secret of the headless Black Morgan reviled as a Nazi plot to disrupt the war British effort, by preventing the tin from being mined, we see dozens of Morgan's Head citizens proudly marching to work to mine the tin that will in the end bring Hitler's war machine to a halt and singing patriotic and feel-good songs, like "Whistle while we Work", as their doing it.
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5/10
An interesting time-passer that just seems a bit rushed
planktonrules31 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This was a truly bizarre little British propaganda film made during the Second World War. It's so odd because it looks initially like a B-movie horror film (with talk about ghosts and headless ghouls walking about), but then unexpectedly becomes an anti-Nazi film about German attempts to destroy tin production in Britain!! Talk about strange plot-twists! However, despite the creativity of the plot, the film has quite a few problems that prevent it from being anything more than a silly time-passer. One problem, and it is relatively minor, is that the whole gimmick of the guy with a hood over his head is just silly. He didn't look all that bad without it and it's frightfully easy to guess what they would do with that character. A much bigger problem is that there really isn't much mystery about the film because it is just way too rushed. The suspense is never given a chance to build and the film makers were obviously too constrained by the unwritten rule that B-movies should be 50-70 minutes long,...period! And in this case, this meant ill-developed plot elements and a way too quickly solved mystery. As a result, the film never really jells into a coherent or memorable film. Nice try, though, but a film that is very skip-able.
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7/10
neat little programmer
blanche-211 October 2005
"The Mysterious Doctor" is an enjoyable, atmospheric B movie about a unmine-able tin mine in Morgan's Head, England, due to the presence of a headless ghost. It's wartime and the country needs the tin, but no amount of persuading can get the workers back after so many people have been killed by the spirit, which goes back to a local legend in the town.

It sure feels and looks British, and the cast includes a young, vibrant Eleanor Parker who fits right in with actors John Loder and others.

This is an excellent little wartime gem. Don't miss it when it's on TCM.
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2/10
Badly dated and cheap clumsy paranoid propaganda
bkoganbing23 September 2017
It's always been my opinion that in the matter of wartime B pictures with a propaganda bent the British were far better than the Americans. Especially with a lot of British players from our British colony in Hollywood participating in this potboiler that has not aged well.

With all that mysterious fog it's only natural that the the people of a Cornwall village react suspiciously to Lester Matthews who says he's on a walking tour. Folks just didn't do that in wartime Great Britain.

What Matthews finds is that there's an abandoned tin mine that the locals won't work because of a mysterious ghost who chops people's heads off because he doesn't have one himself and that ain't fair. Some real decapitations occur.

At the same time British RAF officer on leave Bruce Lester and the local squire John Loder are saying we got to beat Hitler and the King needs that tin.

What happens is that one of the villagers is a traitor and he's been doing the killings and spreading the rumors. Like Sherlock Holmes and the Voice Of Terror these Germans plan for the long haul even before there was a Nazi party.

Shame on those from the British colony who spread this paranoia about. It's about as sensible as some of the worst anti-Communist films. In fact the Royal Family in the last World War had to change it's House name from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to the more British sounding Windsor. The British players knew that even if we didn't.

Eleanor Parker was one of the few Americans in the movie and I'm sure she shuddered at the mention of it. Well, a girl has to start somewhere.
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8/10
The fog shrouded moors and dark mood help sell a war time mystery tale
dbborroughs25 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Beginning with a truly stunning image- what appears to be a headless corpse walking along the foggy moors, this is a neat little wartime thriller about the weird goings on in a small English village that has had the local tin mine shut down because of weird visions-headless visions- and the tragedies that strike those who go in the mine. ASolidly enjoyable hour long film this has mood to burn. As my friend Lou says about the film "it has everything you'd put on a list of things you need for a great 'old dark house film'". I agree. While the film isn't perfect, the mood has to be shifted to one side because there is, after all a plot, its still a great film to watch on a dark and stormy night or late at night curled up under the covers.
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6/10
THE MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR (Benjamin Stoloff, 1943) **1/2
Bunuel197623 January 2010
I cannot say I was aware of this one before our own Michael Elliott gave it a thumbs up not that long ago; actually emerging as only borderline horror, it effectively mingles a traditional plot – an English village, complete with hulking idiot and disfigured bartender hiding his features behind a hood(!), lives in fear of an ancient curse involving a headless ghost – with topical (i.e. WWII) concerns. The village mine was being utilized to produce tin for the Allied cause so the Axis powers apparently felt the need to send out one of their own to intermingle in the community and recreate by night the legend of The Headless Ghost, thus curtailing the mining operations which are subsequently abandoned. The prerequisite foggy atmosphere is thickly laid on, the plot is fairly engaging and the modest but pleasing cast – squire John Loder, the lovely Eleanor Parker, title character Lester Matthews, dim-witted Matt Willis, etc. – is sympathetic to the material at hand. Besides, being a compact 57-minute 'B' flick, it is essentially comparable in quality and effect to the likes of Fox's DR. RENAULT'S SECRET and THE UNDYING MONSTER (both 1942).
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5/10
No Scooby or Shaggy around, but it's about the same premise.
mark.waltz3 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The fog machine here is the star, presenting Hollywood's vision of the Cornwall mines, and presenting a story that is predictable but fun thanks to its chilling atmosphere. A headless ghost joins the creature of "Sh! The Octopus!" in presenting some chills, especially since you see the ghost right off, walking silently as it haunts the Cornwall night. A doctor named Holmes (Lester Matthews) shows up mysteriously, creating suspicion as all strangers seem to, and before long, he is found allegedly murdered, stabbed by the headless ghost while inspecting local iron mines. Before long, the townspeople are out to lynch town halfwit Matthew Wills in a scene straight out of "Frankenstein", but the pretty Eleanor Parker arranges for him to escape before the determined drunken townsmen do their worst. Of course there's more to the story than just a ghost, and being during World War II, it's easy to figure out.

Why this was not packaged with a series of Warner Brothers murder mystery horror comedies on DVD is a bigger mystery then what happens in the film. It has every element, and then some, that was prevalent in the others, and at under an hour, is a perfect part of a double or triple bill of similar films. John Loder, Bruce Lester and Forrester Harvey are also featured, with a great exposure of the real villain and believable explanations that correspond with history and the importance of the mine. Parker shows some spark in one of her earlier films, but it would take a dozen or more of these B films to move her into A leading lady status. This is an enjoyable rainy day / late night film, with the lights off of course, and you don't need to fog up your living room to enjoy it for the fog on screen.
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Very Good
Michael_Elliott12 March 2008
Mysterious Doctor, The (1943)

*** (out of 4)

Strange horror/mystery from Warner has a small town living in fear that a headless ghost stalks their fog filled town. Legend has it that the ghost haunts a local tin mine and will kill anyone who goes close. This is a rather unique little film because of what was going on in the real world at the time. We all know that WW2 was going strong and a lot of war talk often made its way into movies but very few horror films had this. That's not the case here as this film features plenty of talk about the war and Hitler, which is used to show that other fears can cause people to hide when they should be out fighting. The actual story isn't all that original but with these added fears it makes for an interesting film. The mystery aspect of the movie also works quite well as the truth behind the legend is never really known. The atmosphere is another bonus as it really comes off and feels like a Universal film from the period. John Loder, Eleanor Parker, Bruce Lester and Lester Matthews turns in good performances in this forgotten gem, which desperately needs to be released to DVD.
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6/10
Movie Review
tomwal16 March 2015
Having seen this film at the tender age of nine, the images of a "headless ghost" walking around, conjured up nightmares for many nights to come. For a "b" film running a bit under one hour, The Mysterious Doctor manages to convey the proper amount of chills. While not in the Val Lewton class, the cast of Lester Matthews John Loder, Elenor Powell and a standout performance by Matt Willis,atmospheric photography of fog shrouded moors and an eerie score all combine to perhaps take the film up a bit from an average " b" thriller. The ending might seem sugary to todays viewers, but one must take into account that these were the war years.Having just recently seen it again on line, I still enjoyed the movie after all these years!
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6/10
Predictable.... but Still Enjoyable
jhenderson32 December 2018
I happen to catch this little programmer on TCM the other day and set in to my DVR for later viewing. Finally was able to view the film, short as it is, and certainly derivative of any Universal semi-classic. There's the fog shrouded locations to be sure and the headless ghost in place of the vampire or werewolf that graced every picture with a cast well worth repeating. Also fairly obvious is the hero's name- a Dr. Holmes which is something of an amalgam of Nigel Bruce and Basil Rathbone's best characters. A number of Sherlock's adventures in those years were the requisite war propaganda and this one follows form quite nicely. What you get for viewing is predictable but steady. Not a lot of filler in this little gem as it runs under an hour, but it likely is an hour worth anyone's time. Also present is the Warner Brothers' hand gun fired sound effect. Every film fan should be able to recognize that for what has identified every Warners effort from before that time to the classic westerns of the 50s. Hearing that alone is worth the price of admission.
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7/10
Interesting Urban Legend Haunting a Mine
Reviews_of_the_Dead31 August 2023
This is a movie that I discovered when looking for horror from 1943. It took a bit of tracking down, but I did find it on Dailymotion. Outside of knowing that it fell in genre, I came into this one blind. I used the cast list and the director to ensure it was correct, since the title pulled up other things. The runtime was another piece of information. My assumption was that this would be a mad scientist movie. That isn't the case though.

Synopsis: the citizens of a tiny Cornish village are tormented during World War II by a headless ghost which is haunting the local tin mine.

We start this with Dr. Frederick Holmes (Lester Matthews). He's walking the moors and it has gotten dark out on him before he could make the next village. It is quite foggy as well. He is saved by a carriage driver. Dr. Holmes is taken into town, but the driver refuses to stay. Our doctor is left at a tavern called The Running Horse. He knocks at the door and Simon Tewksbury (Frank Mayo) answers. He wears an executioner's hood. This spooks the doctor, but he is admitted in.

To be friendly, Dr. Holmes buys everyone a drink. Through chatting we learn that this town is called Morgan Head. It is a former mining town. Simon wears the hood due to being disfigured in an accident. The mine is also closed due to a duel between two families. It is now thought to be haunted by the headless ghost of Black Morgan. Another important aspect is Bart Redmon (Matt Willis) is a simple man who walks the street at tonight, playing an instrument. He is bullied by the children. Sir Henry Leland (John Loder) also shows up and makes friends with Dr. Holmes.

Something to point out from the synopsis, this takes place during World War II, so everyone is on edge. There is talks of someone parachuting into the area. Immediately, that makes everyone suspicious of Dr. Holmes. He has proof that it wasn't him. He is also going to prove it by exploring the mine and showing that there is no ghost. He is followed there by Simon and a young woman, Letty Carstairs (Eleanor Parker), hears about him going so she wants Bart to protect him. This doesn't happen as we see a headless figure attack Dr. Holmes.

The next day we meet Letty's boyfriend of Lt. Christopher 'Kit' Hilton (Bruce Lester). It turns out the report of the parachute person didn't happen. He is called to the base though. When he returns, he wants the mine to reopen. The problem is that the village refuses, for fear of the ghost. They won't even go into it when searching for Dr. Holmes who is missing. Sir Leland and Kit do go in and find his body. They also find Bart who Kit believes killed the doctor. He is taken into custody.

Letty doesn't believe that Bart is capable of what he is accused. She wants to prove this while protecting him from vigilant justice. Things aren't as they seem here and the ghost might not be exactly what the town thinks it is.

That is where I'll leave my recap and introduction to the characters. Where I want to start is that this is an interesting film. I've seen similar ones before where we have a small town holding to the belief of an urban legend. What makes this even more interesting is that this is from the United States. It feels like a propaganda film for the United Kingdom though. Kit wants the mine to reopen so they can supply the military with tin. The people have patriotism, but they're afraid to die to work in the mine. There is a Scooby-Doo feel to how things play out, but being the era that this is set. I'm fine with that. It feels similar to another movie, Haunted Gold.

This idea is where I'll delve a bit more. Backstory here is that this movie runs 56 minutes. They do well in filling this time though as we have the undercurrent of the war looming. That would be a scary time so that adds atmosphere. There is the fear of this man who just showed up in the middle of the night, Dr. Holmes. When the rumor of someone parachuting in, I'd be leery of him too. He has an alibi, but that still doesn't clear him in the eyes of the townspeople. I do like that we get this idea of mob mentality here. There are good character elements along with it.

What helps is the acting. I thought that Loder does well as Sir Leland. There is an arrogance about him, but he's willing to go into the mine when others won't. I like where his character ends up, even though it does feel a bit heavy handed. Parker is good as this person who stands up for Bart. She even pushes back against who boyfriend who has his mind made up. Lester is good in that role. He is a good man at heart, but also stubborn. I liked Matthews as Dr. Holmes. Willis was also good as Bart. There is a bad performance and the rest of the cast rounds this out for what was needed.

All that is left then is filmmaking. The cinematography was good. What I like the best is the atmosphere. They build this through the idea of the war looming. There is also fog thanks to the nearby moors. The mine is also a good setting. What ends up getting pulled in late is the idea of the 'old dark house'. I'm always a sucker there. There aren't a lot in the way of effects. The look of the headless ghost was interesting. Credit to Leo White who does that effect. I also like the look of Simon's scarred face. Not something I expected to see. Other than that, the soundtrack was fine for what was needed.

In conclusion, this is a decent little film. Despite it having a low runtime, I thought we had an interesting story. There are subplots that get pulled in thanks to the war. Having a ghost haunting the mine is an interesting concept. It does go a bit 'Scooby-doo' with it though. Being the era it is from, I'm forgiving. The best part of this is the acting though. Credit to Loder, Parker, Lester, Matthews and Willis. I'd say this is made well enough. The atmosphere helps there along with the limited effects. Not one that I can recommend to everyone. If you're a fan of the era, then give this a watch.

My Rating: 7 out of 10.
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6/10
The Barber Cut His Hair Too Short
Hitchcoc25 September 2021
This is a propaganda film with a supernatural element. A village in Cornwall has a tin mine that has stopped production. The miners deserted it when a headless ghost was spotted. One night a doctor shows up at the inn and he has a secret. There is a mentally handicapped man who is abused by the townspeople. Not a horrible movie. It has some nice atmosphere.
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8/10
pretty good WW II film.. brit point of view
ksf-230 October 2018
John Loder and Eleanor Parker star in this wartime film from Warner Brothers. Right at the beginning, we see a headless man walking about in the fog. Holmes (Lester Matthews) gets a ride to the town inn. This inn turns out to be full of surprises and mystery, and we hear the entire, sordid tale. The miner who had lost his head years ago is apparently still walking around town, looking for his head. Sir Harry (John Loder) pops in, although the credits call him Henry, and is the stately gentleman, watching over the town. everyone seems to know more than they tell. then the mysterious Holmes turns up dead, so HE can't be the headless man. why does someone want the old mine to stay closed? Made during WW II, we see gas masks carried about in some scenes. Directed by Ben Stoloff. It's a pretty good suspense story. in old british style. It is a bit silly.... Letty (Parker) has the chance to clear Bart's name, but doesn't, for some reason. Then the mystery is solved, and it all comes out. Pretty good film. Rarely shown.
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6/10
The Mysterious Doctor
coltras356 November 2023
A traveling doctor finds himself in the spooky English village of Morgan's Head; its foreboding name comes from the headless spirit that haunts the area. According to legend, the unfriendly apparition is the ghost of town founder Black Morgan, who doesn't want residents to reopen the local tin mine. While this explanation satisfies some, local girl Letty (Eleanor Parker) suspects there's something more devious going on -- especially when a strange murder turns the villagers into a raving mob.

Swirling fog is used to great effect in this crime/horror b-thriller- it's a compact and atmospheric film that has some decent suspense and a sympathetic view of a man with a mental condition, though the boyfriend of Eleanor Parker's character was lacking detective brains when latching on to this man as the killer. But maybe the boyfriend wasn't so stupid in the end and was fooling the real killer. Wish there were more suspects as I guessed who the "headless" ghost was. Still, a pleasant viewing to see with the lights off. Eleanor Parker makes a gutsy heroine.
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A Tiny-tiny-tiny Spoiler...Maybe!
Stormy_Autumn17 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
"The Mysterious Doctor" (1943) is a fun, fairly predictable WWII propaganda film. Lots of fog and fear in and around the English village of Morgan's Head.

A stranger comes out of nowhere, steps out of the fog and flags down a horse and cart for a free ride into town. The driver is willing as long as it's a pick-up and delivery. He won't be staying.

The stranger is Dr. Frederick Holmes. (Sherlock's little brother?) He arrives at the Inn and learns the story of the closed tin mine, the village of "Morgan's Head" and the headless ghost who came into being when 2 miners fight to the death. When it's finished Black Morgan loses his head. Since then several miners have died the same way.

Next the village squire enters and meets their visitor. He learns that Dr. Holmes' has decided to stay longer and explore the closed mine. (On the spur of the moment? Oh sure. Uh-uh. Whatever!) The next day the good doctor heads out and disappears and a headless corpse is found in the mine. Hmmm, could it be that the story has lost one of it's heroes already? Considering it's 1943 WWII movie at least he died for his country. (Or somebody's anyway.)

***The Spoiler***About the participants suspicious or otherwise: We know right away that Letty is OK. She takes care of and protects 'Slow Bart'. Kit, the loyal soldier, must be OK because he loves Letty. Is 'Slow Bart' who he seems to be? Is Dr. Holmes on the right side or just dead? How about Sir Henry where does he spend his time when away from "HIS" village? Who is left? How about the list of other usual suspects in the crowd? Could they be involved? Hmmm.

Cast: John Loder as Sir Henry Leland, Eleanor Parker as Letty Carstairs (born in Cedarville, Ohio, Eleanor does a great job with the British accent), Bruce Lester as Lt. Christopher 'Kit' Hilton, Lester Matthews as Dr. Frederick Holmes, Matt Willis as Bart Redmond (the mentally challenged villager) does very well.
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7/10
Neat little horror mystery
jordondave-2808518 September 2023
(1943) The Mysterious Doctor HORROR/ MYSTERY

Quite effective moody piece from Warner Brothers, even though the first 30 minutes is conventional about a passerby walking through some misty English village and doubting the villagers warning about a dead headless ghost man who chops peoples heads upon whoever enters an abandoned cave- so upon going there, he becomes missing as well turning it into a whodunnit with plot holes that wouldn't be effective right now compared to back then! A little outdated despite it's running time limit of no more than 57 minutes, the mystery part and the superficial ending which is the reason why I liked this kind of film experience! Has similar styles to "Mark of the Vampire" made in 1935 which also starts off as a horror before turning it into a mystery.
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6/10
Britain needs tin!
BA_Harrison25 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In the Cornish village of Morgan's Head, the superstitious locals refuse to work the tin mine for fear that they might run into the murderous headless ghost of Black Morgan. When Dr. Frederick Holmes, a visitor to the area, is found decapitated in the mine, the locals initially blame the ghost, but eventually suspect Bart Redmond (Matt Willis), the village idiot, of the crime. However, this being a wartime movie, the real villain of the piece turns out to be an undercover German agent who is trying to ensure that the tin mine never goes into production. The moral-boosting finalé seeing the goose-stepping Nazi defeated, the locals returning to the mine to play their part in the war effort.

There's no shortage of creepy fun to be had with this film, from the foggy Cornish moor, to the ominous shadowy mine, to the pitchfork-wielding angry villagers, to the scary innkeeper, so hideously disfigured in an explosion that he wears a hood over his head. Where the film does prove somewhat disappointing is with the ghost, so clearly a case of Scooby Doo-style subterfuge, the villain wearing an unconvincing 'headless' disguise that makes one wonder how he can see where he is going whilst wearing it, let alone be able to overpower a man. Hell, he doesn't even bother giving it a coat of fluorescent paint for that eerie, supernatural glowing effect. Old man Smithers would have made the effort.

An atmospheric piece of propaganda, The Mysterious Doctor is often implausible but entertaining enough for the duration (the film clocking in at just under an hour). 5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for IMDb.
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7/10
Eleanor Shines In Her Second Film
ferbs5412 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A seeming meld of fog-shrouded Universal horror and the rah-rah wartime propaganda films that were so prevalent during the era, the Warner Brothers offering "The Mysterious Doctor" turns out to be a minor concoction that should just manage to please modern audiences. Released in March 1943, during the darkest days of World War 2, the picture provides some chilling escapism while at the same time inspiring its target audience to greater productivity in the War effort. For today's viewer, the film works as an efficient little chiller and as a showcase for its ingenue female star, Eleanor Parker, who here evinces great charm and ability (and beauty, natch) in this, her second role on screen.

The film manages to engender a chilling mood from its very opening moments, in which the viewer beholds a very tall AND HEADLESS personage stalking through a mist-enveloped woodland. We soon meet the mysterious doctor of the film's title, one Dr. Frederick Holmes (Lester Matthews, who would go on to appear in the Eleanor Parker film "Between Two Worlds" one year later), who is taking what he calls a "walking tour" of the Cornwall region. He stops overnight at the lonely little village of Morgan's Head and learns why the hamlet has been so named. Years earlier, two of the villagers had fought one another over the rights to a local tin mine, and Morgan had been vanquished. He had been killed with a boulder and then had his head lopped off by his opponent. Ever since then, it is said, his headless ghost has been terrorizing the region, and none of the locals has ever since been able to muster the courage to go anywhere near the mine, a fact that is severely hampering the English war effort. The local, uh, head man, handsome Sir Henry Leland (John Loder), cannot force them to go back to work, and when the murders begin again with the decapitation death of Dr. Holmes, the eternal scapegoat/simpleminded "village idiot" Bart Redmond (Matt Willis) is held to be in cahoots with the ghost itself. Fortunately for Bart, he has a defender in young Letty Carstairs (our Eleanor), the only person who seems to have the requisite grit, spunk and bravery to explore the local mine and get to the bottom of things. (Letty is the niece of the local pub owner, whose face is covered by an executioner's mask after having been disfigured in a mining accident; another element of horror in the film. Disappointingly, when we DO get to see the supposedly hideous mug of this man, it is not nearly as horrible as we expect.) But will those three admirable qualities be sufficient, as the literal head count begins to rise?

"The Mysterious Doctor" has been well directed by someone named Benjamin Stoloff, who helms his film in a no-nonsense fashion and really keeps things moving along. Cheaply made as it is, the film looks just fine, abetted by some very nice B&W cinematography from one Henry Sharp. And as I mentioned, this is a remarkably compact affair, clocking in at a mere 57 minutes. (The art of creating a solid motion picture entertainment of so brief a duration seems to truly be a lost art, although it is doubtful that an audience of today would be willing to plop down $15 for a movie that didn't even last one hour!) It features a similarly taut and briskly moving script from Richard Weil, although its story line is more than a tad predictable. Indeed, it would take the most dim-witted of children to NOT figure out where this story is headed, or what the purpose of the headless ghost is, or even who the main villain of the piece is (the culprit telegraphs evil intentions early on, just with a narrowing of eyes). Still, watching the film go through its paces remains an enjoyable experience, and the film IS at times quite atmospheric. And a great part of the joy to be had here is watching young Parker, already coming off like a seasoned pro after having been in only one previous film before this, 1942's "Busses Roar." She easily steals the show from her more experienced actors, and even gets to give us one very convincing shriek as she glimpses the headless ghost in a foggy cavern. What a scream queen Eleanor could have been, a la the great Fay Wray! It almost makes one regret that she didn't do more films in the horror genre, and indeed, viewers would have to wait a good 26 years, until 1969's "Eye of the Cat," to see her perform in anything nearly as spooky. Parker would have another half dozen or so roles to go before finally "breaking through," in 1945's "Pride of the Marines," but this early film of hers is surely a testament to her great potential. "The Mysterious Doctor" is certainly a minor piece of work, all told, but you could surely find worse ways to kill an hour. Still, I can't help wondering why Mr. Weil did not title his film "The Headless Miner," surely a more intimidating proposition....
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