The Black Abbot (1934) Poster

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5/10
Pound a foot
malcolmgsw20 July 2016
This is an archetypal quota quickie made by the studios that specialised in making quota quickies for distribution by American film companies thereby circumventing the protectionist provisions of the 1928 Quota Act.So this film is 56 minutes long which will mean that Twickenham would have been paid £5600 by Radio Pictures.So Twickenhams profit would be that amount less the actual cost of production.So every method that could be used would be adopted to cut costs.These are all evident here.A thriller in a country house where the action takes place at night means that sets used previously can be fertilized.Editing is cut to a minimum.This means that actors are grouped together so when it comes time for them to say their lines they walk towards the camera,say their lines and walk back to their original marks.It is a bonus to add in an American character actor,in this case Ben Welden.This merely impresses the British audience as there is no chance that RKO Radio will release it in the states.The title is the most sinister aspect of this film.
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5/10
Certainly not for every taste, but I found it charming, if plotless.
mark.waltz26 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
With an eccentric bird like aunt who tweets constantly and a maid who seems like she's going to have a sneezing fit any moment, this has a great ensemble in what is essentially a filmed stage play minus the meat of a strong story. The story, what is of it, deals with an apparent ghost (the title) and a kidnapping. You barely notice the kidnapping of wealthy Englishman (Richard Cooper) occur, so engrossed in the nonstop clucking of the wacky ensemble where a good majority of the men are more effeminnate than the women. The use of some amusing malopropisms creates more laughs, overshadowing the premise of the presence of the ghost and the kidnapping. A few chills because of some spooky photography adds to the atmosphere, much more interesting than the romantic subplot involving young heiress Judy Kelly and stuffy John Stuart. The ending, of course, seems like a complete cop-out.
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5/10
Watchable enough, but very talky.
Sleepin_Dragon28 October 2022
A gang of dodgy crooks use the legend of The Black Abbott to hide a crime.

Zero action, it's like a stage play, it's sixty minutes of dialogue, some of it good, some of it really dreary. It's amusing in parts, arguably thanks to two characters in particular.

Mary Hillcrist was a funny character, so quirky and eccentric, Drusilla Wills certainly had charisma, best of all though, The Maid and her runny nose, she stole it for me, she was so amusing.

The plot is non existent, it's almost as if a group of actors were given a few loose threads, and told to play out a scenario to the best of their abilities. When The End finally appears, you'll be scratching your head trying to work out what it was all about.

It looks decent, it's full of atmosphere, and for 1934, it's a really clean looking film.

5/10.
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Old dark mansion comedy-mystery that is too talky
wrbtu19 February 2000
A rather silly British comedy-mystery that takes place in an old mansion & an adjoining monastery which is supposedly haunted by the Black Abbot. There is too much talk (often in the form of isolated, stagy vignettes, & too little plot. Some of the smaller roles are juicier than the major roles. For example, the parts of Aunt Mary (played by Drusilla Wills) & the maid (played by an unknown actress who keeps wiping her nose) are well done.
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5/10
Minor British Quota Quickie; Fine If You Like This Sort of Thing; Otherwise, Pretty Mealy
mmipyle8 January 2021
"The Black Abbot" (1934) is a minor British quota quickie made by Real Art Productions (54 quota quickies made between 1931-1935), and this one was released through Radio Pictures (RKO in Britain at that time) in Britain. I watched this several years ago, remembered that it was something I liked somewhat because Judy Kelly was in it, but I'd forgotten its premise. Well, this is - as I said - a minor "Locked-Door Mystery" (as called by another reviewer), a take-off of the Old Dark House style mystery, where a man in black (supposedly the ghost of an old abbot who was in the monastery that's being restored for living quarters) traipses about doing...well...it's a mystery, isn't it? And, in mysteries, there's usually either a murder or an attempted one.

This one stars John Stuart, Richard Cooper, Judy Kelly, Ben Welden, Edgar Norfolk, and others whose names are basically unknown today. It's rather simple, rather straightforward, and is interrupted often with dribble between two of the liveried servant people who are in love. I'd say 'madly-in-love', but the one, the male, is more interested in his rare species of flower that looks on screen like a cactus plant, while the female has an unchanging cold which makes her talk, not only through her nose, but through her sniffles.

Fun for 56 minutes if you're a fan of the early 30s stuff of this ilk. If you've never encountered it, be aware of English silly-asses and humor where suspense probably should be and suspense that can be figured out from behind the corner a mile away. You may not be able to guess whodunit, but you'll do it fine just sittingthroughit. If you don't think you can make it all the way - don't watch it.
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4/10
No Abbot
boblipton4 May 2017
This is one of those British quota quickies in which the only name I recognize is cinematographer Ernest Palmer. It starts out with John Stuart getting engaged to Judy Kelly, some talk about the household ghost, the Black Abbot, then Miss Kelly's father is kidnapped.

It's a lesser variety of the British Locked Room mystery, with silly-ass humor and servants canoodling each other. Palmer's camera-work is wonderful -- lots of moving shots --but the performances are all over the shop, indicating that director George Cooper either couldn't afford to hire decent actors for the smaller roles, or couldn't direct actors for beans. At 54 minutes it's bearable, but I won't be revisiting.
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4/10
Unfunny comic mystery
Leofwine_draca15 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This 'old dark house' movie misses the mark by quite a wide berth, given that it goes for the comic approach throughout but just isn't very funny. Much of the humour here is rather broad and laboured, and some characters - like the maid with the runny nose - are intensely irritating rather than amusing.

THE BLACK ABBOT follows your usual template of having assorted characters holed up in a mansion and assailed by a mysterious figure. The usual round of disappearances and criminality ensues, with some characters acting suspiciously and others adopting the mantle of amateur sleuth.

I was intrigued by the horror-sounding aspects of the title, half expecting this to be an Edgar Wallace adaptation, but the titular figure is a red herring and barely appears and the rest of it is barely adequate.
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5/10
The Black Abbot
CinemaSerf24 July 2023
John Stuart doesn't really have much to do in this rather routine, gently comedic, haunted house mystery. His "Brooks" character finds himself trying to identify a phantom that inhabits an old monastery and who has an habit of terrifying - or worse - the other occupants. Those range from the upper class nitwits to the loved-up servants - and he has to get a move on before there is no-one left to help discover who's up to all of this mischief and why? It's all a bit too verbal, and at just under the hour, there is still quite a fair degree of padding too. It's still watchable enough if you like an early example of a British-made thriller that uses the gloominess of the scenario and a minimum of wattage to help present the thinnest of stories in quite an eerie style.
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5/10
Abbot without Costello
jimjamjonny3920 October 2022
This is a comedy of its day that isn't what I'd call as funny today. It's got its gags that would have caused a titter or two but it's mainly the individual characters that help it along, not that it really did move along. I don't want to criticise it as there were a few things that were uttered that made me laugh. For one, I like the maid in it; there's one scene she's telling her fella about her last master who came to the kitchen & offered to 'butter me parsnips!' It made me laugh.

There's a very pretty lady, Judy Kelly, her eyebrows are so thin, I thought that she must've painted them on. I don't see women today, with similar brows although the shapes have changed in nearly a hundred years.
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6/10
The Black Abbott review
JoeytheBrit30 April 2020
A slight but entertaining quota quickie in which a group of stereotypical upper-class types gather in an old mansion when the owner is kidnapped and held to ransom. The working class comic relief prevent things from being too serious.
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6/10
Good but too much talk
dbborroughs4 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Long winded tale that is not based upon, but similar to an Edgar Wallace or Bryan Edgar Wallace tale about the events in a house that was once a monastery. Not long after the daughter of the owner gets engaged to the owner of the home said owner goes missing and its believed that perhaps he was taken by the spectral Black Abbott said to haunt the grounds. Its the sort of fancy tale where everyone is dressed in tuxes no matter what is going on. An okay thriller the film suffers from padding and in all likelihood you could probably chop out 15 minutes of pointless talk with out ever touching the story. Not bad once it gets going, and recommended with the caveat that it picks up once it gets going.
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