Completed several years before its 1947 release,
Scared to Death is historically important as
Bela Lugosi's only color film (outside of his brief unbilled appearance in 1931's Fifty Million Frenchmen, which today exists only in black & white). Other than that, it's a dreary story of how a beautiful but treacherous young woman (
Molly Lamont) literally dies of fright. Anticipating
Sunset Boulevard by at least five years, the film is narrated by the deceased "heroine", meaning that suspense and surprise are hardly considerations here. It's a toss-up as to who's funnier: the film's official comedy relief, dumb detective
Nat Pendleton and dumber blonde
Joyce Compton, or the "odd couple" team of the caped-and-cloaked
Bela Lugosi and his dress-alike dwarf companion
Angelo Rossitto. For the record,
Lugosi plays a sinister hypnotist named Leonide, yet another of his myriad of "red herring" roles in the 1940s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide