George Zucco
19 titles
Filmography
19 results

The Mad Ghoul
(1943)
The Black Raven
(1943)A group of strangers are brought together in an old dark house and must contend with two murders and $50,000 in stolen money.

Fog Island
(1945)A released convict whose wife was mysteriously murdered rigs his house with booby traps at his island estate for the very suspects he’s invited over.

The Flying Serpent
(1946)An archaeologist’s maniacal instincts turn deadly when he finds a flying serpent creature and tragically puts his wife in the monster’s raging path.

Dead Men Walk
(1943)The evil twin brother of a village doctor returns from the grave as a vampire to seek vengeance after he is murdered for worshipping the the devil.

The Mad Monster
(1942)After a bitter doctor avenges his downfall with a serum that turns people into killer wolf-men, his daughter turns to a reporter to stop the rampage.

Voodoo Man
(1944)A desperate doctor who has become unhinged in a race to save his wife’s life sends his ragtag helpers to entrap young women for brain experiments.

Scared to Death
(1947)Held against her will in an insane asylum by her doctor husband, a young woman’s bizarre end comes at the hands of a motley crew of characters.
My Favorite Blonde
(1942)Nazi spies chase a vaudevillian (Bob Hope), his trained penguin and a British spy (Madeleine Carroll) from New York to Hollywood.

New Moon
(1940)Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy pair up once again in the film version of the popular Sigmund Romberg operetta about a Parisian belle who becomes involved with a political prisoner. In 18th century Louisiana, haughty plantation owner Marianne de Beaumanoir (MacDonald) and her handsome bondservant Charles (Eddy), who is actually a French nobleman in disguise, are thrown together when Charles commandeers a ship carrying Marianne and a cargo of mail-order brides. Romance, adventure--and the French Revolution--ensue. The soaring Romberg musical score includes such favorites as "One Kiss," "Stout-Hearted Men," "Lover Come Back to Me," "Softly as in a Morning Sunrise," and "Wanting You."

Sherlock Holmes in Washington
(1943)Sherlock Holmes mystery. The British sleuth travels to America's capital to trap spies during World War II. Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce star. (1943) (67 mins)

Desire Me
(1947)During World War II, a woman receives news that her husband has died in a Nazi concentration camp. She falls in love with another man, who was in the army with her husband and imprisoned with him. But the new man in her life is actually a psychotic who escaped from the concentration camp, leaving her husband for dead . . . but he is not.

The Mummy's Hand
(1940)In this acclaimed follow-up to the popular original, an expedition of American archaeologists, headed by Steve Banning (Dick Foran) and Baby Jenson (Wallace Ford), travels to Egypt in search of the undiscovered tomb of the Princess Ananka.

The Mummy's Tomb
(1942)Ancient Egyptian Mummy, Kharis (Lon Chaney Jr.) and High Priest Mehemet (Turhan Bey) wreak vengeance on the family who defiled the sacred tomb of his beloved Princess Ananka.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
(1939)The super sleuth's master foe Professor Moriarty sends Holmes and Watson off on a wild goose chase - investigating a young woman plagued by a family curse - while he executes a plot to steal the Crown Jewels.

The Pirate
(1948)It's a fun-filled and musical case of mistaken identity when lonely Judy Garland ("The Wizard of Oz," "A Star is Born," "Meet Me in St. Louis") mistakes traveling clown Gene Kelly ("An American in Paris," "Singin' In the Rain") for a famed Caribbean pirate. With songs by the great Cole Porter, Oscar-winners Garland and Kelly light up the screen. Nominated for Best Score.

The Mummy's Ghost
(1944)Kharis (Lon Chaney Jr.) is given a sacred potion that grants him eternal life to search for his lost love, Princess Ananka, despite the unending curse that haunts them.

The Barkleys of Broadway
(1949)After 10 years apart, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers reteam in their final film pairing, cleverly written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green and smoothly directed by Charles Walters. The story, per many sources, mirrors real-life creative tensions the two shared. Astaire plays driven hoofer Josh Barkley. Rogers is his wife, Dinah, who longs to forsake the clackety-clap-tapping of Bouncin' the Blu...

The Black Swan
(1942)Tyrone Power stars in this swashbuckler as a buccaneer ordered to capture two notorious pirates, but instead, he kidnaps a beautiful woman to keep her from marrying a nobleman.