Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA millionaire leads an expedition into a remote jungle to find his wife's long-lost brother, but instead the group finds a mad scientist who has created a fungus monster that feeds on the lo... Alles lesenA millionaire leads an expedition into a remote jungle to find his wife's long-lost brother, but instead the group finds a mad scientist who has created a fungus monster that feeds on the local inhabitants.A millionaire leads an expedition into a remote jungle to find his wife's long-lost brother, but instead the group finds a mad scientist who has created a fungus monster that feeds on the local inhabitants.
Duane Grey
- Lino
- (as Duane Gray)
Charles H. Gray
- Jim Wheatley
- (as Charles Gray)
George American Horse
- Native
- (Nicht genannt)
Bill Baldwin
- Reporter
- (Nicht genannt)
Benjie Bancroft
- Crew Member
- (Nicht genannt)
Charles Cirillo
- Native
- (Nicht genannt)
Tom Coleman
- Reporter
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I remember seeing this as a kid on local TV and being somewhat put out by the fact that you never got a clear look at the infected natives (probably for good reasons) and that the killer fungus monster at the finale was obviously tons of soap suds mixed in with a little dry ice fog. Oddly enough it stuck with me and soon I was putting shampoo in my hair and screaming "The fungus,the fungus!" Still,the leads all do a good straight faced job and the script doesn't contain the amount of Ed Wood style howlers you'd expect it to.As far as I know this is also the last horror film to present calypso singer Sir Lancelot who had appeared in the Val Lewton Films I walked with a Zombie and Curse Of The Cat People. The song "You Got To Suffer To Be Born Again is a mix of genius and absurdity. Highly recommended to anyone who likes old B movies.
6.1/2 stars. Far better acting then often seen in B 1950s American sci-fi horror, and more moments of reasonably decent dialogue than one would expect. Similarly, the score is more serviceable then expected. The climactic sequence, which lasts longer than is often the case in this kind of low-budget feature, is full of fun if simple special effects.
Naturally, the movie, being very much a product of its time, contains liberal doses of sexism and racism, so be forewarned.
Naturally, the movie, being very much a product of its time, contains liberal doses of sexism and racism, so be forewarned.
It's the old "rescue my stupid brother who went somewhere he shouldn't have" bit. His sister sets up a rescue effort to bring him back from a South American cave. Of course, we know we're in trouble when we find that the cave is called "The Cave of Death." So off they go. The natives are a bunch of primitives. They are embraced by an evil doctor who has been messing around with a fungus that is taking over, not just the area but the entire world. The down side is that the fungus looks like dish washing detergent on steroids. How do you keep soap suds from dissolving you.
An explorer looking for the legendary "Cave of the Dead" doesn't return. So his sister, "Gina Matthews" (Mala Powers) and her husband, "Dan Matthews" (John Howard) decide to set out to look for him. Before they depart, a former acquaintance of both named "Pete Morgan" (Paul Richards) convinces them to let him come with them since he is an experienced spelunker. When they get to the village in South America where the cave is supposed to be near, they meet a strange American doctor, "Dr. Ramsey" (Gerald Milton) who denies knowing anything about it. At any rate, rather than detailing the entire story I will just say that this horror film is an obvious product of its time. And even though it is clearly a B-movie it isn't that bad. That said, while it isn't that scary it does manage to keep the suspense going for the most part. Recommended only for those who enjoy B-movies from the 50's.
Charles Marquis Warren was a western specialist; he directed nearly all this except two horror films, this one and BACK FROM THE DEAD, an adventure thriller: FLIGHT TO TANGIERS and a Foreign Legion movie DESERT HELL, now totally unavailable. Unfortunately. So this one is a pretty good surprise, especially in LBX excellent copy. The story itself is not really exceptional but from a film maker for whom it was not the speciality, this is for me a tour de force, a very good B picture. I dream to purchase all the Regal movies in LBX from this period: late fifties and early sixties. Many and many gems to find.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis was one of the low budget films shot in anamorphic widescreen by Regal Films for use by Twentieth Century Fox as the bottom of a pre-packaged double feature with one of Fox's CinemaScope releases. In San Francisco, Fox Theatre bookers drew the line by rejecting this puppy, so it was dumped on the rival Golden Gate Theatre, doubled up with another Regal Films reject, Back from the Dead.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Creature Features: Bride of the Monster (1971)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Terror desconocido
- Drehorte
- Leo Carrillo State Beach - 35000 W. Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, Kalifornien, USA(cave near Lifeguard Tower 3)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 17 Min.(77 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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