I mean, Boris Karloff is fantastic in the makeup but the makeup was also cool. From Wordnik.com. [Benicio del Toro Interview THE WOLFMAN – Collider.com] Reference
Boris Karloff is the narrator of the seasonal television special “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”. From Wordnik.com. [21 Amazing Facts About Nintendo] Reference
The invisible ray Boris Karloff movie poster print. From Wordnik.com. [SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 6082] Reference
Tv-Boris Karloff Thriller : the cheaters skip to main. From Wordnik.com. [Tv-Boris Karloff Thriller : the cheaters] Reference
MONSTER WORLD #5 (1965) Hammer films, Dracula, Karloff~. From Wordnik.com. [Hammer Monster | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles] Reference
Yesterday, John McElwee saluted Boris Karloff on his 119th. From Wordnik.com. [GreenCine Daily: Shorts, 11/24.] Reference
Boris Karloff “THE SORCERERS” great horror flick poster. From Wordnik.com. [SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 6082] Reference
Lee, Hitchcock, and Karloff aren't the only ones to hold that view. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2010-03-28] Reference
Boris Karloff even became a legendary name in horror movies history. From Wordnik.com. [Friday Horror | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles] Reference
Regardless, anything with Boris Karloff might make for a great rental. From Wordnik.com. [Monster Mash : Scrubbles.net] Reference
The Huntsman: Doris Karloff & The Vigilantes skip to main | skip to sidebar. From Wordnik.com. [Doris Karloff & The Vigilantes] Reference
Boris Karloff as the Monster, substituting a less successful Lon Chaney, Jr. From Wordnik.com. [The Ghost of Frankenstein] Reference
Karloff was visibly upset; perspiration dotted his brow, he was almost babbling. From Wordnik.com. [Cyberbooks]
Universal therefore featured Karloff as the Creature in two more Universal films, The. From Wordnik.com. [Frankenstein, 1931] Reference
– Voices-in-the-Dark: Devoted to audio from Price, Lorre, Karloff, Lugosi and others. From Wordnik.com. [Homemade Hollywood is Up for a Rondo Award! | Fan Cinema Today] Reference
It was only the dripping homoerotic subtext between Legosi and Karloff that saved it for me. From Wordnik.com. [Sandra Shulman: The Brides of Devil´s Leap] Reference
Mummy movies were another popular genre, pre-dating the 1932 Karloff version by two decades. From Wordnik.com. [Watch Like an Egyptian] Reference
Boris Karloff as a guy who bricks his wife up in a wall (but why then does she keep talking?). From Wordnik.com. [The Sudden Curve:] Reference
I tend to trot out the "Karloff Boots" gag every convention because someone always wants a copy. From Wordnik.com. [Karloff Boots] Reference
Well, here's the big reveal: Karloff appears as a mummy for about five minutes, in the first scene. From Wordnik.com. [Stefan Beck: Wrap Party: Freund's The Mummy and Baba Ghanoush] Reference
Bela Lugosi and John Carradine had turned down the role for its lack of dialogue, but Karloff accepted. From Wordnik.com. [Boris Karloff] Reference
Karloff reprised his role as the Monster in The Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and The Son of Frankenstein. From Wordnik.com. [Boris Karloff] Reference
That Little Round-Headed Boy is no fan of horror, but that won't keep him from appreciating Boris Karloff. From Wordnik.com. [GreenCine Daily: Horrors, 10/30.] Reference
Apart from the opening scene, for which Karloff nearly suffocated, there are virtually no special effects. From Wordnik.com. [Stefan Beck: Wrap Party: Freund's The Mummy and Baba Ghanoush] Reference
As early as 1933, the Whale-Karloff production (1931) had transmuted into such cartoon derivatives as Betty Boop's. From Wordnik.com. [Comic Adaptations] Reference
Boris Karloff (whose animated voice might be recognizable from How the Grinch Stole Christmas) Paul Frees narrated. From Wordnik.com. [The Children's Collection] Reference
Whale brought in a relative unknown, Boris Karloff, whose career was newly launched with the success of the picture. From Wordnik.com. [Frankenstein, 1931] Reference
This was the deciding moment in his career, and throughout the thirties and forties Karloff was a widely sought actor. From Wordnik.com. [Boris Karloff] Reference
Pierce and Karloff worked together three hours a day for three weeks to create a prototype of the Monster's appearance. From Wordnik.com. [Jack Pierce] Reference
Its members included Boris Karloff, Errol Flynn, and David Niven (who appears in the movie version of Thank You, Jeeves). From Wordnik.com. [The Honorable Schoolboy] Reference
I must have read that it was Boris Karloff elsewhere and — darn it! — our lazy blog fact-checker didn't catch the error. From Wordnik.com. [Multimedia Midweek: Daniel Pinkwater edition] Reference
Karloff, Lugosi, Satanism, human skinning and corpse-strewn, art deco sets: all contribute to the overriding sense of dread. From Wordnik.com. [Ten films for Halloween] Reference
I mentioned needing a breather: Now consider the makeup session Karloff called "the most trying ordeal I have ever endured.". From Wordnik.com. [Stefan Beck: Wrap Party: Freund's The Mummy and Baba Ghanoush] Reference
Sadly, Bela's career was on the wane at this point, and "Snatcher" would mark Karloff and Lugosi's last screen outing together. From Wordnik.com. [John Farr: The Best Under-Exposed Horror Movies by Farr] Reference
Arsenic and Old Lace, although Frank Capra was unable to convince Karloff to take the role in the 1941 film version (released 1944). From Wordnik.com. [Comic Adaptations] Reference
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