Classic Film and TV Cafe is sponsoring a Dogathon -- movies about or featuring some of the most memorable canine actors. My contribution is a little tribute to a dog that scared me to death. My first Sherlock Holmes movie experience as a little girl was 1939's
The Hound of the Baskervilles. I fell in love with Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce as Holmes and Watson, a love that continues. I fell in love with Baskerville Hall and the bleak, eerie English moors. As for the Hound -- I have always been afraid of big dogs, and he was a BIG dog.
The Hound was played by a 156-pound Great Dane. His real name was Blitzen (German for flash or lightning), but in 1939, when Hitler was beginning his devastating march across Europe, 20th Century Fox decided that a name with such a Teutonic overtone was not acceptable. His name was changed to Chief -- personally, I think Gargantua would have suited him better.
Despite my best efforts, I was not able to find any kind of bio of Chief. I don't know if he ever played in other movies. To me, though, he was the most unforgettable movie dog ever. I did learn that Great Danes, despite their huge size and dominating look, are actually called gentle giants. Chief was certainly a giant, but he did not look gentle as the Hound. He was terrifying.
There have been other versions of the The Hound of the Baskervilles, some very good, one or two probably even better, but this one lives in my memory as my introduction to the beloved team of Rathbone and Bruce, one of the best movie sets of the moors, my love for the shadowy beauty of black and white film, and Chief, the Hound that scared a little girl who still watched the movie any time it was on.