Tod Slaughter

Tod Slaughter

Tod Slaughter took to the stage in 1905 and made a name for himself as the star villain of numerous Victorian melodramas which he toured around England. Many of these were filmed cheaply in the 30s and 40s by quota-quickie tzar George King. His ham performances are perfectly suited to the material and the best of his films give the impression that if the Victorians could have made features they would have looked like this

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street - PulpMovies
Crimes at the Dark House - PulpMovies
Tod Slaughter at Home - PulpMovies
Puzzle Corner Number Fourteen - PulpMovies
Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror - PulpMovies
Song of the Road - PulpMovies
London After Dark - PulpMovies
Spring-Heeled Jack - PulpMovies
Pots of Plots - PulpMovies
The Face at the Window - PulpMovies
A Ghost for Sale - PulpMovies
The Ticket of Leave Man - PulpMovies
Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn - PulpMovies
King of the Underworld - PulpMovies
The Greed of William Hart - PulpMovies
The Crimes of Stephen Hawke - PulpMovies
Darby and Joan - PulpMovies
It's Never Too Late to Mend - PulpMovies
The Curse of the Wraydons - PulpMovies
The Curse of the Wraydons - PulpMovies
Bothered by a Beard - PulpMovies
Murder at the Grange - PulpMovies
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