IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
9442
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die Davises erwarten ein Baby, das sich als ein Monster entpuppt, das die fiese Angewohnheit hat, Menschen zu töten, wenn es Angst hat. Und es ist leicht zu erschrecken.Die Davises erwarten ein Baby, das sich als ein Monster entpuppt, das die fiese Angewohnheit hat, Menschen zu töten, wenn es Angst hat. Und es ist leicht zu erschrecken.Die Davises erwarten ein Baby, das sich als ein Monster entpuppt, das die fiese Angewohnheit hat, Menschen zu töten, wenn es Angst hat. Und es ist leicht zu erschrecken.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
John P. Ryan
- Frank
- (as John Ryan)
Nancy Burnett
- Nurse
- (as Mary Nancy Burnett)
Patrick McAllister
- Expectant Father
- (as Patrick Macallister)
Herbert Winters
- Expectant Father
- (as Gerald York)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The pregnant Lenore Davis (Sharon Farrell) tells her husband Frank Davis (John Ryan) that she is in labor to have the baby. They leave their eleven year-old son Chris (Daniel Holzman) with their friend Charley (William Wellman Jr.) and they head to the Community Hospital. Lenore feels that something is wrong and delivers a monster that kills the team in the delivery room and escapes through a skylight. Lieutenant Perkins (James Dixon) comes to the hospital to investigate the murder and the press divulges the identity of the parents of the monster. Frank loses her job of executive in public relationship and accepts the offer of a university that wants to research the corpse of the baby to discover the reason for the mutation. Meanwhile the baby continues to kill people in town. Out of the blue, Frank discovers a dark secret about Lenore and the baby.
A couple of days ago I saw the awful remake of "It's Alive" and I decided to watch again the 1974 B-movie of Larry Cohen to reevaluate it in the present days. The original film is better and better than the lame remake of 2010. The analogy of Frank with Dr. Frankenstein is one of the good dialogs of this film. The madness process of Lenore Davis is more plausible than the ridiculous behavior of Lenore Harker of the new version. My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "Nasce um Monstro" ("A Monster is Born")
Note: On 25 March 2016, I saw this film again.
A couple of days ago I saw the awful remake of "It's Alive" and I decided to watch again the 1974 B-movie of Larry Cohen to reevaluate it in the present days. The original film is better and better than the lame remake of 2010. The analogy of Frank with Dr. Frankenstein is one of the good dialogs of this film. The madness process of Lenore Davis is more plausible than the ridiculous behavior of Lenore Harker of the new version. My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "Nasce um Monstro" ("A Monster is Born")
Note: On 25 March 2016, I saw this film again.
Director Larry Cohen creates a thoughtful script about the effects of our environment on our reproductive systems in this thoroughly predictable yet immensely entertaining film. A father and a mother expecting rush to the hospital to have their second child. The only snag is that when the baby comes out of the womb it has razor-sharp fangs and claws with which it kills every doctor and nurse in its reach before fleeing the scene. The special effects are nothing too special, particularly by today's standards, but the film is full of insights and revelations as to what may be someday as we abuse our environment and use chemicals to sustain life. The father has a conversation in the waiting room with other expecting fathers. This conversation covers the ill-effects of pesticides, drugs, and other additives we use in our daily lives. The film uses the baby as a means to move action. With a distorted camera lens, we see things in the world through the eyes of this mutated infant. Initially the father wants to kill his beastly progeny. The police want to pump it full of lead. The doctors and drug companies want it destroyed to negate any possible backlash. A university professor wants the carcass for study when captured. Cohen shows us the underbelly of humanity. The people surrounding this infant are often no better than the child. All they want is gain...and it matters not at whose cost. John Ryan plays the introspective dad and does a fine job with this rather difficult role. He plays an ad executive who begins seeing the good in things and then slowly sees only the stark horror of his own life, his family life, his job, and his child. The other actors all do credible jobs. Cohen obviously likes horror as he names the wife Lenore and has the father talk at length about the novel Frankenstein. The production values and budget are minimal, but the film has a lot of heart where it counts.
"It's Alive" is one of those cult horror films that I had heard a lot of great things about but didn't get around to seeing until just recently. I have to say that I was bored with it throughout most of the film, but started to catch on to its vibe as it got closer toward the end. I truly support what this movie has to say about the somewhat totalitarian world of medicine, and ended up liking "It's Alive" a lot more when I realized that it wasn't just some dumb movie with no real point or scares at all. I still have to admit that the movie didn't scare me at all, but it generated some good, healthy suspense, and the point is such a good one (and is so well done) that I do have to hand this movie some major support. It was more sad than anything else, but it wasn't too bad at all.
A fantastically focused and engaged socio-horror film from the last golden age of the 1970s. Anchored around a most committed and persuasive performance from John Ryan and Larry Cohen's empathetic and savvy direction, It's Alive might display some raggedness and lapses in style, but it more than makes up for this with searing intelligence, sharp and sad gallows humour and a beating heart on the side of the ostracized and ridiculed. A fine example of what genre movies can really do.
Yes, this movie features a baby of a different kind...the kind that crawls and kills!!! Yes, a killer baby that for some reason me and my family watched quite a few times when I was a kid. Somewhat creepy and somewhat cheesy at the same time as parts of it are easily made fun of. The movie has a couple of kills in it, but it really is not all that gory compared to an Italian horror movie. The story is okay and it does not try to explain things to much, unlike the later "It's Alive" movies would do. The movie ends in a rather different fashion too as it is somewhat surprising what the man does at the end. Still, the thought of a killer baby is kind of creepy and kind of funny and that is why this movie somewhat works. More gore and such would have made it better and more sewer scenes too, for some reason I find the sewer to be a very good horror backdrop that is used somewhat in movies, but not not enough for my tastes. All in all though this movie is not boring and somewhat fun to watch and in some parts make fun of.
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- WissenswertesDie Wiege des Bösen (1974) was filmed and edited simultaneously with another Larry Cohen film, Heiße Hölle Harlem (1973), which was shot on the weekends during the production of Die Wiege des Bösen (1974). This means that many of the same cast and crew put in consecutive seven-day work weeks to create both of these films.
- PatzerDuring the film's closing scenes, Frank is carrying the baby while walking; however, his pace abruptly changes with each edit, making it obvious that multiple takes were haphazardly pieced together to create the scene.
- Zitate
Lieutenant Perkins: Hunting and killing babies doesn't seem to be my specialty.
- VerbindungenEdited into Die Wiege des Satans (1978)
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- 500.000 $ (geschätzt)
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