Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Film / HouseOfWax1953

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/house_of_wax_1953_poster.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350: '''Jarrod:''' ''I'm going to give the people what they want: sensation, horror, shock... Send them out in the streets to tell their friends how wonderful it is to be scared to death.'' ]]
3
4''House of Wax'' is a 1953 American horror film starring Creator/VincentPrice, whose career then took a turn primarily towards horror films.
5
6A remake of ''Film/MysteryOfTheWaxMuseum'' (1933), this was the first 3-D color feature film from a major American studio, following the independently-produced ''Bwana Devil'' the year before; these two movies together sparked the UsefulNotes/ThreeDMovie boom of the 1950s (interestingly enough, this film's director, Andre De Toth, was blind in one eye and thus couldn't see the effect).
7
8Price plays Professor Henry Jarrod, a devoted wax {{sculptor|s}} with a museum in 1910s New York. When his greedy financial partner, Matthew Burke (played by Roy Roberts), suggests that they burn the wax museum down in order to get the insurance money, Jarrod tries to stop him, only to be beaten unconscious and left for dead in the burning museum. Escaping with intense burns that leave his hands half-crippled and himself horribly disfigured, Jarrod enlists the aid of a deaf-mute sculptor named Igor (played by Charles Buchinsky, who would soon become better known as Creator/CharlesBronson) and builds a new House of Wax that showcases historical and contemporary crimes, including the murder of his former business partner. However, all is not what it seems in Jarrod's wax museum, and a friend of Burke's fiancée Cathy (played by Creator/CarolynJones) is about to make a horrifying discovery...
9
10Another remake was released in 2005, also called ''[[Film/HouseOfWax2005 House of Wax]],'' though it borrows more plot elements from ''Film/TouristTrap'' than from this film.
11
12The film is also the TropeNamer for PaddleballShot.
13----
14!! "Tropes of Wax":
15
16* AdaptationNameChange: The characters are renamed entirely with Ivan Igor, Professor Darcy and Hugo becoming Henry Jarrod, Leon Averill and Igor respectively for just three examples.
17* AdaptationalVillainy: Amazingly enough, a rare "villain gets worse with the adaptation" variety. In contrast to Joe in the original ''Film/MysteryOfTheWaxMuseum'', who burned the museum down because they had run completely out of money, Matthew is making a steady profit off of Jarrod's museum. He just isn't satisfied with how much profit he's getting, and wants to get the insurance money for a "new business deal"... which is soon after implied to be a lie for how he wants extra cash to impress his latest girlfriend, [[GoldDigger Cathy]]. And while Joe did leave his partner to die, he merely ran off after setting the fire... Matthew also attempts to kill Jarrod after setting it, even staying behind a bit to try and finish him off when Jarrod does his best to extinguish the fire.
18* TheAlcoholic: Leon, who is a gifted artist, and "a periodical drunk".
19* AntiVillain: It's hard not to sympathize at least a little bit with Jarrod, who thinks of his artworks as "children" and has to watch them go up in flames before being horribly disfigured himself. Even after he's gone bad, he seems more crazy than evil.
20* ArtisticLicenseBiology: Jarrod doesn't seem to do anything to preserve the bodies other than covering them in wax, so it's hard to see how the deception would hold up once decomposition started to set in. At the very least people might get curious about the smell...
21* AssholeVictim: Matthew. He's shallow, lecherous and by far worst of all greedy (to a murderous extent), and implied to be stringing along Cathy, who thinks he has marriage plans, though granted she is herself a GoldDigger. He gets fittingly murdered by Jarrod, his death is disguised as a suicide and his body ends up being coated in wax and used to recreate said faked suicide.
22* AxeBeforeEntering: At the climax, the cops use a prop sword from the museum to get through a locked door.
23* BattleAmongstTheFlames: Jarrod and Burke fight each other as the museum burns around them in the early minutes of the film.
24* BerserkButton: Don't ask Jarrod about some crazy ideas like... burning down his beloved wax figures.
25* BornInTheTheater: The paddleball guy, who's been swatting his paddleball at various people entering the exhibit, turns to look straight at the camera, says "There's someone with a bag of popcorn!", and swats his paddleball right at the viewer.
26* BreakingTheFourthWall: The paddle ball barker addresses the audience and sends his paddleball in their direction.
27* ButLiquorIsQuicker: Cathy is onto the guy who tries this on her, though.
28* CareerEndingInjury: Jarrod's burns to his hands make it impossible for him to continue his work by himself.
29* CelebrityResemblance: In-universe; Igor happens to look like William Kemmler, the first man executed by electric chair.
30* ChairmanOfTheBrawl: A chair is thrown across the air during the fight between Jarrod and Burke.
31* ChaseScene: One breaks out after Sue finds Cathy's corpse and has to evade the perpetrator.
32* CompositeCharacter: 3-into-2 instead of the usual 2-into-1. ''Mystery of the Wax Museum'' has the heroine, a victim she didn't know who becomes Joan of Arc, and her best friend who almost becomes the Marie Antoinette victim. Sue is a composite of the heroine and the Marie Antoinette victim, and Cathy is a composite of the best friend and the Joan of Arc victim.
33* DamselInDistress: Sue in the climax.
34* DeadGuyOnDisplay: Jarrod starts killing people and using their bodies as "statues" in his {{wax museum|morgue}}.
35* DramaticUnmask: A pretty great example. ([[FridgeLogic But how could he keep his features so mobile?]]) And oddly enough, in both cases we'd already seen the horribly disfigured face under the mask; it just wasn't clear that they were the same person.
36* DrivenToVillainy: Jarrod after his corrupt business partner burns down his museum and destroys his ability to sculpt.
37* DropDeadGorgeous: When [[spoiler:Jarrod steals Cathy's body from the morgue]], we get a good look at Cathy's lovely face.
38* {{Fainting}}: One of the customers faints as Jarrod gives a tour through his museum. Sue also faints at the DramaticUnmask.
39* {{Fanservice}}: At one point, Sue and Scott take in a can-can show, and the camera spends quite a while lingering over the girls' legs (also showing off the 3-D with their kicking). Early in the film, Sue helps Cathy (in a [[OfCorsetsSexy snugly-laced corset]] and Edwardian-era lingerie dress for her date by first lacing Cathy up (see OfCorsetHurts below), then buttoning up Cathy's boots.
40* GRatedDrug: More of a PG Rated Drug here -- the cops are able to track down Jarrod after depriving an alcoholic assistant of his of booze during the interrogation. In ''Mystery of the Wax Museum'', it is strongly implied to be something much stronger (an injected drug like morphine, cocaine, or heroin).
41* GoldDigger: Implied. Cathy is going out with (and suggesting marriage to) Matthew Burke, a wealthy businessman who is Jarrod's first victim, and she doesn't give a damn about it (she doesn't get to enjoy the inheritance). It's subtly implied that she's a whore looking to marry someone wealthy and get out of the life.
42* IdenticalStranger: Sue just so happens to look ''exactly'' like Jarrod's beloved model of Marie Antoinette, that was destroyed in the fire. Presumably Jarrod based said model off another real woman, but it's still a bit of a ContrivedCoincidence.
43* IdiotBall: Sue realizes the Joan of Arc statue really is Cathy, because Jarrod didn't bother to remove her original blonde hair and merely hid it under a dark wig.
44* TheIgor: Jarrod's helper, named... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Igor]]. Played by Creator/CharlesBronson.
45* InsuranceFraud: The reason why Matthew burns down Jarrod's original museum.
46* ItsPopularNowItSucks: InUniverse: Jarrod comes to believe this and decides that his rebuilt museum will mostly give the public the sensationalism it wants, while still retaining a historical aspect.
47* LatexPerfection: Or rather Wax Perfection.
48* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: The carnival barker Jarrod employs for opening night frequently performs his schtick directly to the audience, as though they are physically present.
49* MadArtist: Jarrod is obsessed about his wax works, especially about the restoration of his past works.
50* MaskingTheDeformity: [[spoiler: Henry Jerrod's mask covers the burns he acquired during the wax museum fire that opened the film]].
51* MistakenForExhibit: On first entering the exhibition, Sue mistakes a real policeman for one of the wax figures. Invoked deliberately moments earlier, when an apparent wax figure of a woman standing by the entrance suddenly turns and hands Scott one of the programs from the table next to her.
52* MythologyGag: Beyond the various little facts that inevitably come with a true remake film, Jarrod's deaf-mute assistant is named "Igor" -- which was the name of the mad wax sculptor from the original ''Mystery at the Wax Museum''.
53* NeverSuicide: Matthew's murder is staged to look like a suicide.
54* NobodyHereButUsStatues: At one point, Igor disguises himself as one of several heads on a shelf.
55* NoOSHACompliance: The wax workshop.
56* ObfuscatingDisability: Played with. Jarrod pretends to be wheelchair bound and with ruined hands but otherwise unscarred; in reality, he has horrible facial scarring, but can walk and use his hands fine (if not with the same skill as before).
57* OfCorsetHurts: Mentioned twice -- the heroine's [[TheDitz ditzy]] friend Cathy Gray has Sue lace her up until she can barely breathe, and a woman has trouble breathing prior to fainting, in Jarrod's Chamber of Horrors.
58-->"Is it your corset?"
59-->"No, my stomach; it turned over."
60* OfCorsetsSexy:
61-->'''Cathy Gray:''' Oh that's all right, I don't need much breath anyway--as my late friend Matty used to say, if a girl don't watch her figure the men won't.
62* PaddleballShot: The TropeNamer. A carnival barker doing paddleball tricks at the museum entrance at one point turns to the audience and bounces the ball directly at the screen. (This was a 3D effect in the theatrical release.)
63* PerpSweating: Police use Leon's alcoholism to get information out of him.
64* RailingKill: Jarrod is killed when he is knocked over the railing and into the vat of wax he prepared for Sue.
65* ReallyGetsAround: Cathy only thinks about (wealthy) men, even if she is actually engaged.
66* TheRemake: From a 1933 Technicolor film with Fay Wray.
67* SceneryCensor: Sue while she's {{strapped|ToAnOperatingTable}} naked beneath the vat. At least Fay Wray got wrapped in a shroud-like cloth.
68* SceneryGorn: The burning wax museum.
69* StrappedToAnOperatingTable: Sue in the climax.
70* ToThePain: Of course, Jarrod doesn't think he's torturing her but ''comforting her''.
71-->'''Jarrod:''' The end will come quickly, my love. It is a pain beyond pain, an agony so intense, it shocks the mind into instant oblivion.
72* TheVoiceless: Hugo in the 1933 film, Igor in the 1953 film.
73* WakingUpAtTheMorgue: Subverted twice -- the first time, a corpse sits up due to cadaveric spasm, but is still dead. The second time -- well, the character was just HiddenInPlainSight.
74* WaxMuseumMorgue: The 1953 film is the TropeCodifier.
75* WhamShot: As Jarrod attempts to force Sue into the wax, she pounds on his face... which suddenly breaks apart, revealing Jarrod and the disfigured man carrying out the murders are the same person.
76* WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds: Jarrod. The museum he adored and poured his heart and soul into is destroyed because of his partner's greed; he himself is horribly disfigured and while he doesn't totally lose use of his hands, can't sculpt the way he used to.
77* YoureInsane: Jarrod's response to Burke's plan to burn their museum.

Top