An Egyptian high priest travels to America to reclaim the bodies of ancient Egyptian princess Ananka and her living guardian mummy Kharis. Learning that Ananka's spirit has been reincarnated into another body, he kidnaps a young woman of Egyptian descent with a mysterious resemblance to the princess. However, the high priest's greedy desires cause him to lose control of the mummy...

Kharis

Yousef Bey

Tom Hervey

Amina Mansouri

Inspector Walgreen

Andoheb, High Priest of Arkan

Prof. Matthew Norman

Sheriff Elwood

Coroner

Doctor Ayad

Ella Norman

Museum Watchman

Tom's Classmate (uncredited)

Radio Announcer (uncredited; voice)

Townsman (uncredited)

Museum Tourist (uncredited)

Townswoman (uncredited)

Policewoman (uncredited)
This film belongs to a suitably maniacal John Carradine as "Yousef Bey" who has been charged by the gods to empower the mummified body of the High Priest "Kharis" (Lon Chaney Jr. but it might as well have been anyone) to reunify with the Princess Ananka who appears to have reincarnated in the guise of "Amina" (the glamorous but terribly static Ramsey Ames). Who can stop this? Well that task falls to Robert Lowery ("Tom") who has to thwart the increasingly ambitious plotting of Carradine and his embalmed enforcer. I quite enjoyed it, but it has little of merit to recommend it; the action scenes are as lumbering as Chaney doing the cha-cha; the dialogue likewise and but for Carradine's eyes and a few scenes from George Zucco as the modern day High Priest, it would fall entirely by the wayside.
July 7, 1944

Kharis

Yousef Bey

Tom Hervey

Amina Mansouri

Inspector Walgreen

Andoheb, High Priest of Arkan

Prof. Matthew Norman

Sheriff Elwood

Coroner

Doctor Ayad

Ella Norman

Museum Watchman

Tom's Classmate (uncredited)

Radio Announcer (uncredited; voice)

Townsman (uncredited)

Museum Tourist (uncredited)

Townswoman (uncredited)

Policewoman (uncredited)
This film belongs to a suitably maniacal John Carradine as "Yousef Bey" who has been charged by the gods to empower the mummified body of the High Priest "Kharis" (Lon Chaney Jr. but it might as well have been anyone) to reunify with the Princess Ananka who appears to have reincarnated in the guise of "Amina" (the glamorous but terribly static Ramsey Ames). Who can stop this? Well that task falls to Robert Lowery ("Tom") who has to thwart the increasingly ambitious plotting of Carradine and his embalmed enforcer. I quite enjoyed it, but it has little of merit to recommend it; the action scenes are as lumbering as Chaney doing the cha-cha; the dialogue likewise and but for Carradine's eyes and a few scenes from George Zucco as the modern day High Priest, it would fall entirely by the wayside.
