Son of Dr. Jekyll is interesting, not because it's a particularly great film (it isn't), but because of the way the monster transformation (singular - there was only one) was achieved. Hayward (Jekyll) changes without any camera stopping, lap dissolves, etc. because the Hyde makeup is painted on in red greasepaint, then filtered lighting (or a filtered camera lens) works an effect only possible in black and white.
The technique had been around for many years in film. In the 1927 silent
Ben-Hur, lepers were healed this way. Here is a clip from the 1932 version of
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde with Fredric March:
![[Linked Image]](http://38.media.tumblr.com/94c66c6e43ff37e422613f94030f1641/tumblr_nbgam9vK1A1rxuv4uo1_250.gif)
And from 1937's
Sh! The Octopus:
![[Linked Image]](https://i.imgur.com/JNK9A1j.gif)
Curious as to how it's all done? Check this out:
![[Linked Image]](https://i.gifer.com/47vj.gif)
The red lighting cancels out the red makeup, and when the lighting changes, the blue light and the red makeup mix together and you get a blackish-purple instead of red. And remember, that all this would be seen in black & white, not color.
Fascinating stuff.
Signor V.