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In this episode of The Introverted Obelisk, we swoop into The Vampire Bat (1933), a film that asks the daring question: what if the vampire menace terrorizing a small European village wasn’t supernatural at all—just the work of an overzealous mad scientist with a blood fetish and questionable ethics? Set in the eternally torch-lit town of Kleinschloss, the movie mixes gothic paranoia, mob mentality, and early-’30s science-gone-mad melodrama. I walk through the story of Lionel Atwill’s quietly deranged Dr. von Niemann, Fay Wray’s ever-endangered heroine, and Dwight Frye’s tragic simpleton, Herman Gleib, who just really likes bats—unfortunately, at the worst possible time. As always, I dissect the film’s quirks, budget shortcuts, and its habit of borrowing sets from Frankenstein and The Old Dark House like a cinematic raccoon. Expect commentary on early horror tropes, the studio’s desperate attempt to cash in on vampire fever without actually showing one, and a few lovingly exasperated observations about 1930s villagers and their instant torch-wielding instincts. The Vampire Bat may not sparkle—or even bite—but it’s a fascinating relic from an era when horror was still figuring out just how weird it wanted to be.

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26 episodes