The Mummy is a media franchise based on films by Universal Pictures about a mummified ancient Egyptian priest who is accidentally resurrected, bringing with him a powerful curse, and the ensuing efforts of heroic archaeologists to stop him. The franchise was created by Nina Wilcox Putnam and Richard Schayer.
The original series of films consisted of six installments, which starred iconic horror actors such as Boris Karloff (only in the original one, as Imhotep); Tom Tyler and Lon Chaney Jr. as Kharis; and lastly Eddie Parker, who played Klaris, a cousin of Kharis. The series of films is part of the larger Universal Classic Monsters series.
Year | Film | The Mummy actor |
---|---|---|
1932 | The Mummy | Boris Karloff |
1940 | The Mummy's Hand | Tom Tyler |
1942 | The Mummy's Tomb | Lon Chaney Jr. |
1944 | The Mummy's Ghost | |
The Mummy's Curse | ||
1955 | Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy | Eddie Parker |
When archaeologists awaken the tomb of the mummy Imhotep, he sets out to find the reincarnation of his long-lost love.
Steve Banning and his assistant Babe Jenson, who are being watched by spies, decide to fund an expedition. A magician and his beautiful daughter join the expedition, but when they awaken the tomb of the mummy Kharis, they don't know whether they're going to survive the expedition.
The mummy Kharis is back after he was lit on fire 30 years ago. After 30 years, Steve Banning has now become a famous archaeologist and is living in the peaceful town of Mapleton, Massachusetts. However the town becomes less peaceful when Steve is murdered by an unknown assailant. His son John tries to crack the case with some help from Babe Hanson, Steve's friend who helped defeat Kharis 30 years ago.
After Kharis is defeated by the Banning family, a new protagonist, Tom Harvey and his girlfriend Amina, who is the reincarnation of Princess Ananka, are in conflict with Kharis, who grows closer to Amina and wants to turn her immortal, while Tom and the police try to stop him.
25 years later after The Mummy's Ghost, an irrigation project in the bayous of Louisiana unearths the mummy Kharis from his sleep and is resurrected once again. Meanwhile, Kharis's lost love Ananka also forms from a swamp, causing the monster to embrace his 3,000 year old love after many years.
Freddie Franklin and his best friend Peter Patterson just want to go back to the states, but get caught up in the mummy's tale when Dr. Zoomer is murdered and they find a medallion, causing the police, a thief and her henchmen, a high priest and his henchmen, and the mummy Kharis to go after them.
The Mummy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Stephen Sommers (1–2) Rob Cohen (3) |
Screenplay by | Stephen Sommers (1–2) Alfred Gough (3) Miles Millar (3) |
Produced by | Sean Daniel James Jacks |
Starring | Brendan Fraser Rachel Weisz (1–2) John Hannah Arnold Vosloo (1–2) Oded Fehr (1–2) Patricia Velásquez (1–2) Freddie Boath (2) Dwayne Johnson (2) Maria Bello (3) Luke Ford (3) Jet Li (3) |
Edited by | Bob Ducsay Ray Bushey III Kelly Matsumoto Joel Negron |
Music by | Jerry Goldsmith (1) Alan Silvestri (2) Randy Edelman (3) John Debney (additional music, uncredited) (3) |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date | 1999–2018 |
Running time | 368 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | English Arabic Mandarin |
Budget | $323 million |
Box office | $1.415 billion |
Originally a proposed remake of The Mummy would have been directed by horror filmmaker and writer Clive Barker. Barker's vision for the film was violent, with the story revolving around the head of a contemporary art museum who turns out to be a cultist trying to reanimate mummies.[1][2] Barker's take was "dark, sexual and filled with mysticism",[3] and that, "it would have been a great low-budget movie".[1]
In 1999, Stephen Sommers wrote and directed a remake of The Mummy, loosely based on the original film of 1932. This film switches genres from the emphasis on horror to action, concentrating more on adventure sequences, special effects, comedy, and a higher element of Egyptian lore. The film became a box office success spawning two sequels, several video games, a spin-off series, and an animated television series. The first two films received mixed to positive reviews, while the third one received mostly negative reviews.
It is the year 1923 and Rick O'Connell, an American explorer and treasure hunter, has discovered Hamunaptra, the city of the dead. Three years later, he meets with a beautiful librarian, Evelyn "Evy" Carnahan and her brother, Jonathan. When Evy accidentally revives the mummified corpse of an Egyptian priest, Imhotep, the pair must find a way to kill him before he rises back into power and destroys the world.
In 1933, Rick O'Connell and Evelyn Carnahan are married with an 8-year-old son, Alex. When Alex triggers a curse and Imhotep is resurrected, Rick and Evy must once again try to save the world and fight both the mummy and the Scorpion King.
Set in 1946, the film continues the adventures of Rick O'Connell, his wife Evy, and his son Alex against a different mummy, the Dragon Emperor (Jet Li) of China.
After Tomb of the Dragon Emperor was released, actress Maria Bello stated that another Mummy film would "absolutely" be made, and that she had already signed on.[4] Actor Luke Ford was signed on for three films as well.[5] In 2012, Universal Pictures cancelled the film and later developed a reboot of the series.
This spin-off series is set before the events of Sommers's Mummy franchise. It follows the adventures of the Mathayus of Akkad, later known as the Scorpion King within the series's timeline, and an antagonist in The Mummy Returns. The films are as follows:
Set in 3067 BC, the film reveals the origins of Mathayus and his rise to power as a legendary hero. The film starred Dwayne Johnson in his first lead role.
A direct-to-video prequel to The Scorpion King. Young Mathayus witnesses the death of his father at the hands of an evil military commander. Mathayus's quest for vengeance transforms him into the most feared warrior of the ancient world.
A direct-to-video sequel. Set after the events of The Scorpion King, the film continues the story of Mathayus, now an assassin-for-hire, and portrays his battle to stop the tyrant Talus from claiming the Book of the Dead.
A direct-to-video sequel. Mathayus is betrayed and framed by his friend for the murder of the king of Norvania. Mathayus and his friends band together to stop his opponent from obtaining an ancient power.
A direct-to-video sequel. Mathayus is joined by the warrior Tala in a hunt for an ancient relic known as the Book of Souls in an effort to stop an evil warlord.
Film | Critical | Public | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | CinemaScore[6] | ||
The Mummy | 62% (105 reviews)[7] | 48 (34 reviews)[8] | B | |
The Mummy Returns | 46% (141 reviews)[9] | 48 (31 reviews)[10] | A− | |
The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor | 13% (176 reviews)[11] | 31 (33 reviews)[12] | B− |
In 2012, Universal Studios announced a reboot of the series with writer Jon Spaihts, and with Sean Daniel returning as producer.[13] Universal also signed a two-year deal to produce the film with K/O Paper Products.[14] Len Wiseman was hired to direct the film.[15][16] The Hunger Games writer Billy Ray was hired to write a competing draft against Spaihts's written script.[17] Wiseman later left the film project the following year due to schedule conflicts.[18] Mama's director Andrés Muschietti was in talks to direct the film.[19]
The screenwriter Roberto Orci hinted at the time that both The Mummy and Van Helsing reboots would have a shared universe.[20] Universal set the film to release on April 22, 2016.[21] Director Muschetti left the film due to creative differences.[22] Universal tapped Alex Kurtzman and Chris Morgan in 2014 to develop all classic movie monsters which include Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolf Man, Creature from the Black Lagoon, The Invisible Man, Bride of Frankenstein, and The Mummy.[23] The first film they developed together was The Mummy, for which they had begun the meetings.[23] Kurtzman was later set to direct the film.[24] The film's release date was pushed back to March 27, 2017, when Universal announced the April 22 for its new film The Huntsman. The film's plot is set in Iraq and follows a Navy SEAL and his team that battle mummies led by Ashurbanipal.[25]
Kurtzman and Spaihts had two scripts with a male and a female mummy villain.[26] Tom Cruise was in talks to star in the film,[27] while Sofia Boutella was in talks for the female Mummy role in the reboot.[28] Both were ultimately confirmed to star in the reboot with a June 9, 2017, release date.[29] Annabelle Wallis and Jake Johnson were in talks for a role of an archaeologist and a member of the military respectively.[30][31] The film began production on April 3, 2016 in Oxford, England.[32][33]
The film became a critical and commercial failure, causing all the future planned films in the Dark Universe to be cancelled.[34]
Continuity | Number | Title | Release date | Director |
---|---|---|---|---|
Universal Classic Monsters | 1 | The Mummy | December 22, 1932 | Karl Freund |
2 | The Mummy's Hand | September 20, 1940 | Christy Cabanne | |
3 | The Mummy's Tomb | October 23, 1942 | Harold Young | |
4 | The Mummy's Ghost | July 7, 1944 | Reginald Le Borg | |
5 | The Mummy's Curse | December 22, 1944 | Leslie Goodwins | |
6 | Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy | June 23, 1955 | Charles Lamont | |
Stephen Sommers series | 7 | The Mummy | May 7, 1999 | Stephen Sommers |
8 | The Mummy Returns | May 4, 2001 | ||
9 | The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor | August 1, 2008 | Rob Cohen | |
Dark Universe | 10 | The Mummy | June 9, 2017 | Alex Kurtzman |
This section includes characters who will appear or have appeared in the franchise.
Character | Universal Classic Monsters | Stephen Sommers series | Dark Universe | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Mummy | The Mummy's Hand | The Mummy's Tomb | The Mummy's Ghost | The Mummy's Curse | The Mummy | The Mummy Returns | The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor |
The Mummy The Animated Series |
The Mummy | |
1932 | 1940 | 1942 | 1944 | 1999 | 2001 | 2008 | 2001–2003 | 2017 | ||
Imhotep The Mummy |
Boris Karloff | Boris KarloffA | Arnold Vosloo | Jim Cummings | ||||||
Ankh-es-en-Amon / Anck-su-namun Helen Grosvenor / Meela Nais |
Zita Johann | Patricia Velásquez | Lenore Zann | |||||||
Ardeth Bay | Oded Fehr | Nicholas Guest | ||||||||
Frank Whemple | David Manners | |||||||||
Sir Joseph Whemple | Arthur Byron | |||||||||
Ralph Norton | Bramwell Fletcher | |||||||||
Dr. Muller | Edward Van Sloan | |||||||||
Kharis The Mummy |
Tom Tyler | Lon Chaney Jr. | ||||||||
Steve Banning | Dick Foran | |||||||||
Babe Hanson (née Jenson) | Wallace Ford | |||||||||
Professor Andoheb / The High Priest | George Zucco | |||||||||
Dr. Charles Petrie | Charles Trowbridge | |||||||||
Marta Solvani | Peggy Moran | |||||||||
The Great Solvani | Cecil Kellaway | |||||||||
Mehemet Bey | Turhan Bey | |||||||||
Dr. John Banning | John Hubbard | |||||||||
Isobel Banning (née Evans) | Elyse Knox | |||||||||
Professor Norman | Frank Reicher | |||||||||
Yousef Bey | John Carradine | |||||||||
Tom Hervey | Robert Lowery | |||||||||
Princess Ananka Amina Mansori |
Ramsay Ames | Virginia Christine | ||||||||
Inspector Walgreen | Barton MacLane | |||||||||
Sheriff Elwood | Harry Shannon | |||||||||
Dr. James Halsey Dr. Jenny Halsey |
Dennis Moore | Annabelle Wallis | ||||||||
Betty Walsh | Kay Harding | |||||||||
Pat Walsh | Addison Richards | |||||||||
Dr. Ilzor Zandaab | Peter Coe | |||||||||
Ragheb | Martin Kosleck | |||||||||
Cajun Joe | Kurt Katch | |||||||||
Rick O'Connell | Brendan Fraser | John Schneider | ||||||||
Evelyn O'Connell (née Carnahan) / Princess Nefertiri |
Rachel Weisz | Maria Bello | Grey DeLisle | |||||||
Jonathan Carnahan | John Hannah | Tom Kenny | ||||||||
Pharaoh Seti I | Aharon Ipalé | |||||||||
Beni Gabor | Kevin J. O'Connor | |||||||||
Dr. Allen Chamberlain | Jonathan Hyde | |||||||||
Dr. Terrance Bey | Erick Avari | |||||||||
Isaac Henderson | Stephen Dunham | |||||||||
David Daniels | Corey Johnson | |||||||||
Bernard Burns | Tuc Watkins | |||||||||
Warden Gad Hassan | Omid Djalili | |||||||||
Captain Winston Havlock | Bernard Fox | |||||||||
Alexander "Alex" Rupert O'Connell | Freddie Boath | Luke Ford | Chris Marquette | |||||||
Mathayus The Scorpion King |
Dwayne Johnson | |||||||||
Baltus Hafez | Alun Armstrong | |||||||||
Lock-Nah | Adewale Akinnuoye- Agbaje |
|||||||||
Izzy Buttons | Shaun Parkes | |||||||||
Red Willits | Bruce Byron | |||||||||
Jacques Clemons | Joe Dixon | |||||||||
Jacob Spivey | Tom Fisher | |||||||||
Han The Dragon Emperor / The Mummy |
Jet Li | |||||||||
General Yang | Anthony Wong | |||||||||
Lin | Isabella Leong | |||||||||
Mad Dog Maguire | Liam Cunningham | |||||||||
Professor Roger Wilson | David Calder | |||||||||
General Ming Guo | Russell Wong | |||||||||
Zi-Yuan | Michelle Yeoh | |||||||||
Sgt. Nick Morton Set / The Mummy |
Tom Cruise | |||||||||
Princess Ahmanet The Mummy |
Sofia Boutella | |||||||||
Cpl. Chris Vail | Jake Johnson | |||||||||
Dr. Henry Jekyll / Mr. Eddie Hyde |
Russell Crowe | |||||||||
Col. Gideon Greenway | Courtney B. Vance |
Crew / detail | Film | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Universal Classic Monsters | Stephen Sommers series | Dark Universe | ||||||||
The Mummy (1932) |
The Mummy's Hand (1940) |
The Mummy's Tomb (1942) |
The Mummy's Ghost (1944) |
The Mummy's Curse (1944) |
The Mummy (1999) |
The Mummy Returns (2001) |
The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008) |
The Mummy (2017) | ||
Director(s) | Karl Freund | Christy Cabanne | Harold Young | Reginald Le Borg | Leslie Goodwins | Stephen Sommers | Rob Cohen | Alex Kurtzman | ||
Producer(s) | Carl Laemmle, Jr. | Ben Pivar | Oliver Drake Ben Pivar |
Sean Daniel James Jacks |
Sean Daniel James Jacks Bob Ducsay Stephen Sommers |
Sean Daniel Alex Kurtzman Roberto Orci Chris Morgan | ||||
Writer(s) | Screenplay: John L. Balderston Story: Nina Wilcox Putnam & Richard Schayer |
Griffen Jay Maxwell Shane |
Story: Neil P. Varnick |
Griffin Jay Henry Sucher |
Leon Abrams Dwight V. Babcock |
Screenplay: Stephen Sommers Story: Stephen Sommers, Lloyd Fonvielle & Kevin Jarre |
Stephen Sommers | Alfred Gough Miles Millar |
Jon Spaihts | |
Composer(s) | James Dietrich | Frank Skinner (uncredited) |
William Lava Paul Sawtell |
Jerry Goldsmith | Alan Silvestri | Randy Edelman | Brian Tyler | |||
Editor(s) | Milton Carruth | Philip Cahn | Milton Carruth | Saul A. Goodkind | Fred R. Feltshans Jr. | Bob Ducsay | Bob Ducsay Kelly Matsumoto |
Joel Negron Kelly Matsumoto |
Paul Hirsch | |
Cinematographer | Charles Stumar | Elwood Bredell | George Robinson | William A. Sickner | Virgil Miller | Adrian Biddle | Simon Duggan | Ben Seresin | ||
Production companies | Alphaville Films | Relativity Media The Sommers Company Alphaville Films |
K/O Paper Products Sean Daniel Company | |||||||
Distributor(s) | Universal Pictures | |||||||||
Runtime | 73 minutes | 67 minutes | 61 minutes | 61 minutes | 62 minutes | 125 minutes | 130 minutes | 111 minutes | 110 minutes | |
Release date | December 22, 1932 | September 20, 1940 | October 23, 1942 | July 7, 1944 | December 22, 1944 | May 7, 1999 | May 4, 2001 | August 1, 2008 | June 9, 2017 |
Two video game adaptations of The Mummy (1999) were developed by Rebellion Developments and published by Konami in 2000: an action adventure game for the PlayStation and PC[35] as well as a Game Boy Color puzzle game.[36] Dreamcast version was announced but later cancelled in the late 2000. The Mummy Returns was released in late 2001 for the PlayStation 2 and developed by Blitz Games and the Game Boy Color version was developed by GameBrains; both versions were published by Universal Interactive. The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor was released in 2008, developed by Eurocom for the PlayStation 2 and the Wii, the Nintendo DS released was developed by A2M, all versions were published by Sierra Entertainment. In March 2012, a massive multiplayer online game known as The Mummy Online was released. In 2017 was released The Mummy Demastered based on the film of the same year.
In April 2023, it was announced that The Mummy and characters from the franchise would be featured in the upcoming video game, Funko Fusion, set to be released in 2024. The game is set to include, at least, Evelyn Carnahan.[37][38]
In May 2001, Chaos! Comics released the first of a three-issue series inspired by the film, titled The Mummy: Valley of the Gods.[39] The plot was supposed to take place between the first film and The Mummy Returns. Rick and Evelyn are on their honeymoon in Egypt and end up embarking on yet another adventure where they must unravel the mysteries of the Orb of Destiny and discover the location of the Valley of the Gods hidden beneath the sands. However, the second and third issues were never published.[40] This was most likely due to Chaos later filing bankruptcy in 2002 and selling the rights to all their titles at that time. Years later in 2008, another Mummy comic series was released by IDW Publishing, spanning four issues. This series was titled The Mummy: The Rise and Fall of Xango's Ax. Unlike the preceding comic series, all of the planned issues were published.[41]
From 2001 until 2003, an animated series simply titled The Mummy was made by Universal Animation Studios where it was based on the Stephen Sommers series of films. The series was later renamed in the second season as The Mummy: Secrets of the Medjai.
The film also inspired a roller coaster ride named Revenge of the Mummy in Universal Studios Theme Parks, Florida.[42] Similar rides can also be found in Hollywood and Singapore.[43]
In 1959, the franchise was rebooted, starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Though the title suggests Universal Pictures' 1932 film of the same title, the film actually derives its plot and characters entirely from two 1940s Universal films, The Mummy's Hand and The Mummy's Tomb, with the climax borrowed directly from The Mummy's Ghost. The character name Joseph Whemple, the use of a sacred scroll, and a few minor plot elements are the only connections with the 1932 version.
In 1895, British archaeologists find and open the tomb of Egyptian Princess Ananka with nefarious consequences.
British archaeologists and their American investor ship an Egyptian mummy's sarcophagus to London but someone has the amulet to revive the mummy that will then kill all those who disturbed its tomb.
In 1920 an archaeological expedition discovers the tomb of an ancient Egyptian child prince. Returning home with their discovery, the expedition members soon find themselves being killed off by a mummy, which can be revived by reading the words off the prince's burial shroud.
An archaeological expedition brings back to London the coffin of an Egyptian queen known for her magical powers. Her spirit returns in the form of a young girl and strange things start to happen.