1939. Bulldog Drummond is back in another gripping adventure. This time, just one day before his wedding, an absent-minded professor (so absent minded he wears winter clothes in August because his calendar says January) shows up at the Drummond house to explain that there are millions of pounds hidden in the catacombs below the castle. Adventure ensues. Among the highlights:
- Algy, the Watson to Drummond’s Holmes, gets his robe tangled in a suit of armor and then falls down the stairs. When he lands at the bottom, the helmet has landed on his head like in a Scooby Doo cartoon. Later, Algy bends down to peer into a hole in the wall and narrowly avoids being decapitated because Bulldog is about to chop down that very wall with his axe.
- ‘Tenny,’ Bulldog’s butler kicks ass. At one point, to mollify his fiance, Bulldog ostentatiously instructs Tenny to burn a code book–thus ensuring that Bulldog won’t pursue the mystery instead of attending to his wedding. The butler, who clearly knows which side his bread is buttered on, burns a phonebook instead and slips the code book back to Bulldog, who stays up all night working on the cipher.
- Phyllis’ aunt Blanche is particularly funny, with a feathered hat and a deep abiding hatred for Bulldog, who consistently misses being married by one mystery after another.
- How come professors are always depicted as absent-minded? It seems a pretty rude stereotype. On the other hand, come to think of it, I AM absent minded. Maybe next time Jenny scowls when I admit that I’ve forgotten to put the laundry in the dryer or some such error, I should just plead “deep thoughts.”
Worth my thirty-eight cents:
This is a seventy-four cent movie, certainly. I have two moments that are both so great I can’t decide. The first comes from the very beginning of the movie. Bulldog is driving with Phyllis and Aunt Blanche, arguing about how he certainly will marry Phyllis the next day (he doesn’t, by the way), when he starts playing chicken with a train. When he reaches the crossing, he jumps the tracks with no room to spare. In the two screenshots here, the first shows the moment just after the train roars by, and the second shows a moment or two later. Can you guess which person Aunt Blanche is? And check out the grin on Bulldog’s face: what an asshole!


The second moment from the movie that’s just awesome comes at the denouement, where the underground catacombs turn out to contain a secret room of spikes with a locking door. Check out these stills, and I’ll narrate at the bottom.

The cool iron door slams shut behind them. In the window above looms the villain and Phyllis who, of course, has been captured and fights valiantly to save Bulldog and pals.

The spikes begin to lower. Check out the lighting and mist. The creaking sound of the spike chains menaces.

This looks like something out of Anne Frank — listening to the sounds of Germans tromping around near the stairs below. It’s got a holy aspect that far exceeds the B-movie quality of the narrative.

Look at the terror on Algy’s face. Awesome.
The spikes creak lower, the iron portcullis opening occasionally as Phyllis manages to ratchet it open while the villain fights her off and begins lowering the spikes again. The people inside cower in terror, piling up a pitiful stack of rocks to hold back the spikes, only to see the rocks shatter without slowing the spikes at all. And the best part, just as the spikes start to drop, Terry says to Bulldog:
Pardon me, sir, but we’re in for a spot of trouble.