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Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff

Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff

  • Status: Released
  • 26-05-1949
  • Runtime: 84 min
  • Score: 6.5
  • Vote count: 54

Lost Caverns Hotel bellhop Freddie Phillips is suspected of murder. Swami Talpur tries to hypnotize Freddie into confessing, but Freddie is too stupid for the plot to work. Inspector Wellman uses Freddie to get the killer (and it isn't the Swami).

Bud Abbott

Casey Edwards

Lou Costello

Freddie Phillips

Boris Karloff

Swami Talpur

Lenore Aubert

Angela Gordon

Gar Moore

Jeff Wilson

Donna Martell

Betty Crandall

Alan Mowbray

Melton

James Flavin

Insp. Wellman

Roland Winters

T. Hanley Brooks

Nicholas Joy

Amos Strickland

Mikel Conrad

Sgt. Stone

Morgan Farley

Gregory Milford

Victoria Horne

Mrs. Hargreave

Percy Helton

Abernathy

Claire Du Brey

Mrs. Grimsby

Harry Hayden

Lawrence Crandall

Vincent Renno

Mike Relia

Murray Alper

Joe, Reporter (uncredited)

Bobby Barber

Dry Cleaning Man (uncredited)

Marjorie Bennett

Second Maid (uncredited)

Gail Bonney

First Maid (uncredited)

Harry Brown

Medical Examiner (uncredited)

Jack Chefe

Barber (uncredited)

Eddie Coke

Reporter (uncredited)

Beatrice Gray

Woman (uncredited)

Billy Gray

Boy With Bow and Arrow (uncredited)

Patricia Hall

Manicurist (uncredited)

Arthur Hecht

Photographer (uncredited)

William H. O'Brien

Room Service Waiter (uncredited)

Ed Randolph

Bootblack (uncredited)

Phil Shepard

Bellboy (uncredited)

Billy Snyder

Reporter (uncredited)

Frankie Van

Bozzo (uncredited)

John Chard

Tidy comedy, great mystery! Bud & Lou find themselves at the center of a murder mystery, the chief suspect? Why Lou Costello of course. As a comedy, Meet The Killer offers nothing fresh to what we haven't seen before from the boys prior to this 1949 offering, not that the comedy doesn't deliver, because it does, very much so. Be it Freddie (Costello) being too stupid to be hypnotised by the shifty Swami (Boris Karloff), or a wonderful sequence of events down in the creepy caverns, it's fun and very diverting. However, the strength in "Meet The Killer" is that it works very well as a whodunit mystery, a ream of characters, all acting oddly, come and go to keep the viewer guessing right through to the cheery pay off. It's entertaining on two fronts and has a cast clearly having fun into the bargain. Super shadowy photography by Charles Van Enger as well. Enjoy! Now, about that Tortoise? 7/10