Chandu on the Magic Island (1935) Poster

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4/10
Re-editing the Second Half of an Above Average Serial
wes-connors28 June 2010
To deliver another adventure featuring "Chandu" the radio hero, they cobbled this together as "Chandu on the Magic Island". It is parenthetically subtitled "A Sequel to 'The Return of Chandu'." Both look like they were re-edited from serial footage; as usual, the soundtrack music is a dead giveaway. It's unfortunate film preservations don't restore serials, because you can see this was exciting stuff for the time with above average visuals for the genre. At the time, Bela Lugosi and Clara Kimball Young were considered big stars passing their prime; with some fresh faces and supporting veterans, they add up to a good cast.

**** Chandu on the Magic Island (1935) Ray Taylor ~ Bela Lugosi, Maria Alba, Dean Benton, Clara Kimball Young
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5/10
Do You Believe in Cats?
BaronBl00d15 July 2007
Second feature made out of the serial The Return of Chandu picking up the second half of the serial as Bela Lugosi, playing Chandu, his niece, nephew, and sister, travel to the ancient island of Lemuria where the beautiful Princess Nadji as been taken to be sacrificed to the god(s) of the cat worshipers inhabiting the isle. This edited feature suffers many of the same problems of the first edited feature: continuity concerns from bad editing, questionable character motivations from bad editing, poor direction in general, and inferior special effects, but this second feature, coming in at a whopping 70 minutes, does indeed have the resolution to the serial included and much more action. If you miss the first half, you can easily involve yourself in this film as the story is very easy to follow. Again, Lugosi is fun to watch as the hero.
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3/10
Meh
arfdawg-12 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
The current prints of this film are dismal. The movie itself is pretty bad.

The movie is 65 minutes in length -- not the 70 that IMDb says. You'll be glad it's 5 minutes shorter cuz this film is slow going.

The movie was distributed by Sol Lesser Productions which had a history of bigger budgets and production values. This film is not a great example.

The real problem is it's so freaking slow. The 60 minute running time feels like 3 hours.

Here's the synopsis:

On the mystic island of Lemuria, the cult of Ubasti seek the Egyptian Princess Nadji to sacrifice so that their goddess Ossana, whose soul resides in Nadji's body, may be resurrected by Black Magic.

Nadji is located in the Far East port of Suva, but shielded by the White Magical powers of Frank Chandler, an American raised by Eastern mystics who is also known as Chandu.

When Chandu takes a voyage alone, however, the evil Voice of Ubasti is able to magically spirit her to Lemuria, where Black Magic reigns supreme.

Chandu sets out in pursuit with his sister Dorothy, niece Betty and nephew Bob; but, shipwrecked on the magic island, Chandu finds his family also held prisoner for sacrifice while he is plunged into an endless maze of caverns beneath the evil temple.
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Mostly Worth Seeing For Lugosi
Snow Leopard5 December 2005
This Chandu feature, edited from the serial, is mostly worth seeing for Bela Lugosi in the title role, which gives him a chance to play the good guy for a change. The movie as a whole is watchable, and it has a fair amount of action and suspense, but most of the rest of it is hardly on a par with Lugosi's performance.

The 1930s Chandu features can be just a little confusing to sort out. In the original movie, "Chandu the Magician", Lugosi played Chandu's evil antagonist, but in the following serial - listed here in the database as "The Return of Chandu" (1934/I) - Lugosi was given the role of the heroic magician himself. The serial was also edited into two feature length movies, with the first part released as "The Return of Chandu" (1934/II) and this second part as "Chandu on the Magic Island".

So this feature picks up towards the middle of the story, although the important points are easy enough to grasp right away. Chandu is contending with a group of cat worshipers who have decided to capture and sacrifice the Egyptian princess Nadji, in the belief that this will bring back their own long-dead goddess. They also menace Chandu's sister, nephew, and niece as a means of discouraging him.

Because it was edited from a serial format, the story has a number of stops and starts from the chapter breaks. There are frequent predicaments, with most being of a similar nature. As a full-length movie, it gets just a bit repetitive after a while for that reason. Lugosi is always able to carry his scenes, though, and he had the screen presence and the mannerisms to pull off even the most banal lines of dialogue.

The production values are uneven, with some special effects that work fairly well but other action sequences with too many seams showing. As the princess, Maria Alba is very nice to look at, but otherwise the supporting cast does not contribute all that much. Yet many of these old serials have a certain appeal, regardless of quality, to fans of old movies, and this feature gives you a chance to see the whole story at once.
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4/10
A rather limp follow up to THE RETURN OF CHANDU
planktonrules3 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The original film, CHANDU THE MAGICIAN (1932), was an exceptional adventure film starring Edmund Lowe as a swami with amazing psychic powers. The evil villain was Bela Lugosi and for the genre, it was a wonderful film.

Oddly, two years later, the series was revived. However, this time the movie was a serial entitled THE RETURN OF CHANDU and Lugosi starred as the good guy Chandu!! Talk about an odd casting choice. Unfortunately, the magic of the original film was mostly missing and the studio later decided to re-release the serial as two separate movies--THE RETURN OF CHANDU and CHANDU ON THE MAGIC ISLAND. Of these two films, CHANDU ON MAGIC ISLAND is definitely the worst film in the series.

So why is this film rather poor? Well, first off, pretty much everything that happened in THE RETURN OF CHANDU happens all over again. The same cat worshiping cult that wants to kill the princess is back and it all seems obviously derived from the same serial. Second, and this part made little sense, most of Chandu's magical powers were somehow absent. Instead of using his mental powers to cloud mens' minds, he mostly got beat up and knocked about--needing his old master to come and save the day. This just confused me, since in the original Chandu movie, the hero was super-human--here he just seemed like a bit of a putz.

Despite the word "magic" in the title, don't expect a lot here. The franchise is starting to look a bit worn in this film and it's ultimately a rather forgettable film for anyone but a die-hard Lugosi fan.
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5/10
The role of Chandu is now being played by the actor who wants to play his worst enemy.
mark.waltz27 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Basically a retread of Chandu the Magician where Bela Lugosi once played the role of the villain, this gives him the opportunity for once to play the hero. Lugosi is somewhat subdued, only over-emoting in the more serious scenes.

Once again, Chandu is out to protect his family from an evil psychotic, and again the target is his pretty niece. a series of torturous traps stop slow go soon as he tries to do right in bringing down the evil genius and is ironic he will go see physically doing the same things to reach the same and that Edmund Lowe had just done a couple of years before.

Of course, enough elements have been changed to prevent libel between the cheap B grade studio and Fox who had made the original film. Some moments care truly cheesy while others are truly exciting. I would be curious to see how this differs from the actual aerial from which this was edited, but I think that if I paced myself, I would definitely see the difference.
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6/10
A Nice Fantasy Film
Rainey-Dawn9 November 2015
The first film is Chandu the Magician (1932), second is The Return of Chandu (1934) and "Magic Island" is the 3rd film in the Chandu film series starring Bela Lugosi.

While this 3rd film is not quite as good as the first two films, you will want to watch it if you have gotten interested in the series - it's worth your while to watch.

This time, Chandu is on the mystical island of Lemuria. Chandu is trying to help his family escape the island but finds that is mortal and magical strengths are gone - useless on the island that is powered by black magic and run by the cult of Ubasti.

6.5/10
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Two Feature Versions of Serial
Michael_Elliott11 March 2008
Chandu on the Magic Island (1935)

** (out of 4)

Second feature film made from the serial The Return of Chandu. A woman is kidnapped by a jungle tribe in order to be sacrificed so it's up to Chandu (Bela Lugosi) to rescue her. The most interesting thing is seeing Lugosi play the good guy/hero but he doesn't do too much with the role. He's pretty flat throughout the film and some of his dialogue is quite laughable. The ending is quite nice and action packed and the thing is edited down quite nicely but it doesn't work most of the time.

Return of Chandu, The (1934)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Chandu (Bela Lugosi) has to fight off black magic in order to save a Princess who has been chosen for a sacrifies. This is the second feature version of the 15-chapter serial, which also goes by this title. The first feature version, Chandu on Magic Island has a lot more action but this version here is the overall better movie because istead of going for the "cliffhanger" sequences, this one here goes for a more character driven tale. This creates some slowness but it's nice seeing Lugosi play the good guy even though he really doesn't pull it off too well.
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