Reblog of Edgar Allan Poe: Swinging Like A Pendulum Do
August 26, 2018 at 8:27 pm (Culture, Entertainment, Film, History, Horror, Literature, Movies, Mystery, Mystery/horror, Short stories, Short Story, Television, The Supernatural) (Anna May Wong, Asshole Boyfriend Johnson, Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, Edgar Allan Poe, Robert Osborne, TCM, TCM Hosts, TCM's Robert Osborne, The Pit and The Pendulum, Turner Classic Movies)
Here’s a short story I wrote almost 2 years ago.
It’s a short story featuring the late great TCM Turner Classic Movies host Robert Osborne:
Edgar Allan Poe: Swinging Like A Pendulum Do
It was an old movie from the 1930s on television. Johnson had heard of the film The Pit and The Pendulum based on a short story by Edgar Allan Poe.
But he wasn’t familiar with the 1930s version. He had only heard of a movie version from the 1960s with Vincent Price.
But this 1930s version was totally new to him and here he was a big classic horror movies fan. The Pit and The Pendulum from 1936 with Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff.
Try as he might, he could not recall Karloff and Lugosi ever making such a film. Lugosi had made The Black Cat with Karloff. He had made The Raven. He had made Murders In The Rue Morgue. All based on works by Poe.
But Johnson had never heard of Lugosi doing a movie version of Poe’s The Pit…
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Haiku About Boris Karloff
November 14, 2016 at 5:16 pm (Film, Horror, Poetry) (Boris Karloff, films, haiku, horror films, poems)
Haiku About Boris Karloff
Gentleman in life
A conveyor of horror
in film and on stage
Edgar Allan Poe: Swinging Like A Pendulum Do
October 28, 2016 at 3:58 pm (Film, Horror, Literature, Movies, Mystery/horror, Short stories, Short Story, Television, The Supernatural) (Anna May Wong, Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, classic films, Edgar Allan Poe, Halloween, horror movies, Poe, Robert Osborne, TCM, The Pit and The Pendulum, Turner Classic Movies)
Edgar Allan Poe: Swinging Like A Pendulum Do
It was an old movie from the 1930s on television. Johnson had heard of the film The Pit and The Pendulum based on a short story by Edgar Allan Poe.
But he wasn’t familiar with the 1930s version. He had only heard of a movie version from the 1960s with Vincent Price.
But this 1930s version was totally new to him and here he was a big classic horror movies fan. The Pit and The Pendulum from 1936 with Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff.
Try as he might, he could not recall Karloff and Lugosi ever making such a film. Lugosi had made The Black Cat with Karloff. He had made The Raven. He had made Murders In The Rue Morgue. All based on works by Poe.
But Johnson had never heard of Lugosi doing a movie version of Poe’s The Pit and The Pendulum. Much less one made with Boris Karloff.
But when he flipped through the channels on his new High Definition Home Theatre sized TV, there it was listed on TCM – The Pit and The Pendulum (1936) with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi.
Five minutes ahead of the program starting, Johnson had googled the film The Pit and The Pendulum (1936) with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi.
But he found no information about it which was strange.
He put on the TV tuned to TCM. TCM host Robert Osborne began the introduction to the film with his trademark classic line, “Hi, I’m Robert Osborne.”
“Yeah? Tell me something I don’t know, Robert,” Johnson remarked sarcastically.
“All right,” Osborne answered him from the screen, “You’re an obnoxious self-centered arrogant egotistical prick.”
“What?” Johnson was astounded.
“Tonight’s film is a relatively unknown one. In fact, most people don’t even know it was made,” Osborne explained.
“You can say that again,” Johnson scratched his stomach and belched.
“I’d rather not, you uncouth slob,” Osborne smiled at the camera.
“What?” Johnson was again astounded.
“That’s because this film was made privately for a San Francisco based Chinese millionaire called Sun Wong,” Osborne elaborated, “who wanted his own private film with Lugosi and Karloff that the rest of the world wouldn’t be able to see.”
“Wong huh?” Johnson scratched his head.
“That’s right, Wong,” Osborne chuckled, “please excuse the pun.”
“Pun?” Johnson scratched his head again.
“Try not to think about it too hard, you pea-brained bozo,” Osborne again smiled at the camera, “We don’t want you putting too much strain on your little head now, will we?”.
“What the fuck?” Johnson gazed at the screen.
“No more for you,” Osborne saluted the camera, “from 1936, The Pit and The Pendulum with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi.”
The movie was extremely scary, Johnson found. Usually most horror films from the 1930s he laughed at finding them somewhat corny by today’s standards.
But this one had Johnson gripping the edge of his chair.
When Lugosi had Karloff chained to the flat rock in the pit of his dungeon and the pendulum started swinging down on the latter, Lugosi laughed an evil sinister laugh.
“Wow, this is great,” Johnson thought as he reached for some more popcorn.
“May I call you Johnson?” Lugosi asked Karloff.
“Johnson?” Johnson stopped eating his popcorn.
“You are a dirty filthy little rat who cheated on me with my best friend,” Lugosi continued.
“Is this a gay Lugosi/Karloff film?” Johnson wondered to himself.
“No,” Bela Lugosi metamorphosed into the noted 1930s Asian-American actress Anna May Wong.
As the film changed from black and white into colour, Miss Wong wore a golden dragon emblazoned Asiatic style red dress slit up the sides showing lovely and shapely pantyhose clad legs that were accentuated by red super spiked stiletto high-heeled shoes.
“My God,” Johnson suddenly noted the resemblance, “she looks like…”
“That’s right, you cheating bastard,” Miss Wong exclaimed.
Suddenly Johnson found his hands handcuffed to the chair, ropes came out of the back of the chair and tied him up. The chair went backwards and Johnson found himself looking up at the ceiling where a rather large pendulum started swinging down towards him.
Miss Wong stepped out from the TV screen.
Johnson had indeed noted for the very first time the resemblance between the 1930s actress Anna May Wong and his ex-girlfriend Charlotte April Wong.
“Don’t piss off a Dragon Sister,” Miss Wong screamed as a dragon breathed fire from the top of the ceiling above the pendulum.
As the pendulum came down within a quarter inch of his throat and neck, Johnson thought this probably answered his buddy Tom’s question, “Why would your ex buy you a 72 inch screen high definition TV when you cheated on her in such a cruel fashion?”.
Johnson would never get the chance to answer Tom’s question as the pendulum cut off his head.
-A short story
written by Christopher
Saturday October 1st
2016.