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El experimento del Dr. Quatermass

Título original: The Quatermass Xperiment
  • 1955
  • A
  • 1h 22min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
8 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El experimento del Dr. Quatermass (1955)
Professor Bernard Quatermass' manned rocket ship returns to Earth, but two of the astronauts are missing and the survivor seems ill and unable to communicate.
Reproducir trailer2:12
1 vídeo
76 imágenes
Ciencia ficción espacialCiencia ficciónTerror

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaProfessor Bernard Quatermass' manned rocket ship returns to Earth, but two of the astronauts are missing and the survivor seems ill and unable to communicate.Professor Bernard Quatermass' manned rocket ship returns to Earth, but two of the astronauts are missing and the survivor seems ill and unable to communicate.Professor Bernard Quatermass' manned rocket ship returns to Earth, but two of the astronauts are missing and the survivor seems ill and unable to communicate.

  • Dirección
    • Val Guest
  • Guión
    • Richard H. Landau
    • Val Guest
    • Nigel Kneale
  • Reparto principal
    • Brian Donlevy
    • Jack Warner
    • Richard Wordsworth
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,6/10
    8 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Val Guest
    • Guión
      • Richard H. Landau
      • Val Guest
      • Nigel Kneale
    • Reparto principal
      • Brian Donlevy
      • Jack Warner
      • Richard Wordsworth
    • 126Reseñas de usuarios
    • 80Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:12
    Trailer

    Imágenes76

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    + 70
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    Reparto principal53

    Editar
    Brian Donlevy
    Brian Donlevy
    • Prof. Bernard Quatermass
    Jack Warner
    Jack Warner
    • Inspector Lomax
    Richard Wordsworth
    Richard Wordsworth
    • Victor Carroon
    Margia Dean
    • Mrs. Judith Carroon
    Thora Hird
    Thora Hird
    • Rosemary 'Rosie' Elizabeth Wrigley
    Gordon Jackson
    Gordon Jackson
    • BBC TV producer
    David King-Wood
    • Dr. Gordon Briscoe
    Harold Lang
    Harold Lang
    • Christie
    Lionel Jeffries
    Lionel Jeffries
    • Blake
    Sam Kydd
    Sam Kydd
    • Police Sergeant Questioning Rosie
    Jane Aird
    • Mrs. Lomax
    • (sin acreditar)
    Margaret Anderson
    • Maggie
    • (sin acreditar)
    Jane Asher
    Jane Asher
    • Little Girl
    • (sin acreditar)
    Harry Brunning
    • Night Porter
    • (sin acreditar)
    Ken Buckle
    • Police Driver
    • (sin acreditar)
    Eric Corrie
    • Maggie's Boyfriend
    • (sin acreditar)
    Edward Dane
    • Station Policeman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Gron Davies
    • Charles Green
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Val Guest
    • Guión
      • Richard H. Landau
      • Val Guest
      • Nigel Kneale
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios126

    6,68K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    6claudio_carvalho

    Creepy Alien Invasion

    In the countryside of London, a rocket crashes on a farm and Professor Bernard Quatermass (Brian Donlevy) and Scotland Yard Inspector Lomax (Jack Warner) arrive in the spot. The rocket was launched by Prof. Quatermass with the astronauts Victor Carroon (Richard Wordsworth), Greene and Reichebheim; however only Carroon is found very sick in the cabin. He is transported to a private clinic to stay under observation despite the protests of his wife Mrs. Judith Carroon (Margia Dean). She bribes a nurse to bring Carroon to her and she finds that he is transforming into a monster. Carroon escapes killing people and animals during his metamorphosis while the Scotland Yard is hunting him down and Dr. Quatermass discovers that his process is an alien invasion.

    "The Quatermass Xperiment" is an early sci-fi from Hammer with a creepy alien invasion. Despite the low-budget, the screenplay is very well written and the film entertains, specially fans of sci-fi from the 50's. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "Terror que Mata" ("Terror that Kills")

    Note: On 12 Dec 2019, I saw this film again.
    9jamesraeburn2003

    "An important film in the development of British horror cinema."

    POSSIBLE SPOILERS Government scientist Professor Bernard Quatermass (BRIAN DONLEVY) sends a rocket into space containing three astronauts. Radio contact is lost and later it crash lands in the English countryside. Two of the crew members are missing, but the survivor, Victor Carroon (RICHARD WORDSWORTH) is slowly being taken over by an alien fungus that feeds on the blood of animals and human-beings.

    In a bid to win audiences away from their TV sets (something that was a real threat to cinemas at the time), Hammer elected to film the popular BBC serial THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT (the E was replaced with X in order to emphasise it's X certificate), which was the creation of writer Nigel Kneale. The gamble payed off and Hammer had a box office hit on their hands in 1955.

    Seen today, THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT is obviously very tame in comparison to modern day sci-fi and horror films, most of it's shock sequences occur off screen with the camera cutting away and harping back on reaction shots. Yet it is a milestone in the development of British horror cinema and along with the company's THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, it spawned this country's horror boom of the 1950's and 60's. Richard Wordsworth's Carroon is one of the most sympathetic monsters in British horror and there is a classic scene at the London docks where the former is hiding out in an abandoned boat and is awakened by a little girl who is having a pretend picnic with her dolly. Unaware of the true horror that's going on, the little girl naively asks Carroon if he wants to join them. One can see that Carroon is fully aware of what would happen if the girl touches him and runs away accidentally breaking her dolly.

    Wordsworth is brilliant as Carroon and so is Brian Donlevy as Quatermass while director Val Guest's documentary approach gives the picture a sense of conviction.
    7Theo Robertson

    Rather Simplified But Still Effective

    Unfortunately Nigel Kneal had absolutely no input into the film version of THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT . Out goes the philosophy and long discussions of the human condition and in comes the more formuliac and streamlined plotting of a hostile alien endangering the human race , but to be fair to Richard Landau he also jettisoned many underdeveloped subplots from the serial ( When episode one of TQE was broadcast on television Kneale was still writing episode 5 so some subplots were abandoned by Kneale in order to meet the deadline ) and - unlike film viewers in 2002 - the oft used premise of an alien entity coming back to Earth from a spaceship would still be very new to cinema audiences in the mid 50s. I might even be right in saying this is the first time this idea had appeared in cinema .

    Director Val Guest treats THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT as SF film noir and brings in a heavy dose of mood and atmosphere especially during the night time zoo sequence. Unlike QUATERMASS 2 there`s no feeling that the night scenes were achieved by sticking a dark filter over the camera . Guest is less successful with his cast . Donlevy is relatively good at playing double crossing mobsters in the likes of THE BIG COMBO but he`s utterly unconvincing as a rocket scientist and it doesn`t help that he keeps pronouncing his name as " Qittermiss ", Margia Dean is utterly appalling as Judith Carroon , but Richard Wordsworth is outstanding as Victor Carroon even if he doesn`t have a single line of dialogue.

    The BBC serial of THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT shocked the viewers of Britain when it was broadcast and in its own way the film version is almost as groundbreaking , it was a big hit at the UK box office which led to Hammer Films to concentrate solely on horror films something they would excell at for the next 10-15 years .

    Trivia point 1 - The montage scenes of soldiers searching for Carroon at night time are actually culled from another British SF flick - SEVEN DAYS TO NOON

    Trivia point 2- The last four episodes of the BBC serial were shown live on television but because of an industrial dispute they weren`t - unlike the first two episodes - recorded onto film which means no one will ever see the complete BBC QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT
    9timdalton007

    A Tense, Realistic, And Gritty Science Fiction Classic.

    Before a little British company called Hammer became famous for Dracula and Frankenstein, there were the adventures of Professor Bernard Quatermass. Based on the live BBC serial from 1953, The Quatermass Xperiment put Hammer on the film world map. How that happened it obvious from this tense, realistic, and gritty science fiction classic.

    The film is immensely helped by an excellent cast. Brian Donlevy's Quatermass is the archetype science fiction film scientist: a scientist obsessed with their quest for science before turning having to deal with the consequences of that quest. Donlevy plays Quatermass to perfection as a scientist who is both horrified and fascinated by the events he has set in motion. It's a strong performance filled with realism. fascination and horror. The cast also includes terrific performances from Jack Warner as Scotland Yard's Inspector Lomax, Margia Dean who takes the potentially clichéd Judith Carroon and puts flesh and blood on the character, and David King-Wood as Quatermass's fellow scientist Doctor Briscoe. The best performance of the film may well be from the character who never speaks: Richard Wordsworth as Victor Carroon. Wordsworth perfectly plays both the horror of the lone surviving astronaut and also sympathy as the worst off victim of the Quatermass experiment. This is especially true in a scene where Caroon finds himself at a dock where a little girl approaches him with her doll. It reminds one of the scene from the Universal Frankensein where the seemingly innocent takes on a darker meaning. Overall, the film has a terrific cast of actors bringing it to life.

    At a time when science fiction films were defined by the clichéd and outrageous monster and alien invasion films, this film (and its TV counterpart) went in the exact opposite direction. Director Val Guest choose to do the film not in the style of the time but in a near documentary style. That's why the film work's fifty years later: it seems real in that it is a product of its time are place. If Britian had started the space race in the mid-1950's, one feels this is how it would have been.

    The film is also helped by two very strong elements: the black and white cinematography and the music score. Doing the film in black and white adds atmosphere to a film that is part alien invasion and part manhunt. It helps especially in the film's fiery finale. The music score by James Bernard is terrific in adding to the atmosphere of the film and it never intrudes, but just helps to bring one a little bit closer to the edge of one's seat. The film wouldn't be the same without either one of these two elements.

    Yet as much as I would like to call this film perfect, it isn't. There is one thing that the film hits and misses on: special effects. The downside of the film being so much a product of its time is that when the special effects are looked back at from a distance, they look primitive. That's not to say that the special effects are bad. The prosthetics work in particular looks good even by today's standards as far as I'm concerned. The finale of the film is the most obvious spot where the special effects are a bit of a let down by modern standards. Then again, it is hard to compare special effects from one era to another so this is an issue for the viewer to decide on.

    While the special effects may hamper the film for some, one must admit that The Quatermass Xperiment is a classic of the genre. From the terrific performance (espeically of Donlevy and Wordsworth), to the realistic style and tone, to the excellent cinematography, to the dark score by Jame Bernard, The Quatermass Xperiment is a tour de force for the more intelligent and less action based science fiction films. If you can put aside the mid-1950's special effects, you're going to find a tense, realistic, and gritty science fiction classic.
    8chexmix

    Richard Wordsworth is extraordinary

    Horror/science fiction films have rarely been singled out for the quality of the acting in them. Over the decades, a couple of "monsters" have been tapped for praise: Fredric March won an Oscar for his turn at Jekyll and Hyde, & Jeff Goldblum was rightly seen as an example of "inspired casting" in David Cronenberg's remake of _The Fly_.

    But I think Richard Wordsworth has them both beat.

    I enjoy _The Creeping Unknown_ overall, but it is Wordsworth's performance as Victor Caroon that lifts it into the stratosphere for me. I mean, sheesh, _look_ at him! This is an incredibly painful and, yes, passionate portrait of a man whose _body_ is being taken over and is changing into something else, even as he fights to retain possession of it. What might such a battle _feel_ like? Wordsworth lets you know, and in doing so anchors an almost cliché science-fiction "what if ...?" in raw human nerve endings. Watch him battle the frightening desires that overcome him; watch him try to stay ... human. He's first class, and why his career never really took off ...

    I am probably all alone on a windswept plain in this, but I think Wordsworth's acting here is as frenzied and solid as that of Klaus Kinski in any of the great movies he did with Werner Herzog. So shoot me! :)

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    Intereses relacionados

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    Terror

    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      The film achieved notoriety Stateside when in 1956 the parents of Stewart Cohen attempted to sue Chicago's Lake Theater and distributors United Artists for negligence after their nine-year-old son died of a ruptured artery at a double-bill of this and El sueño negro (1956) on Sunday 28th October, during the opening sequence of the Hammer movie. Cohen entered the Guinness Book of Records as the only known case of someone literally dying of fright at a horror film (he had been unknowingly living with an undiagnosed heart condition): pathologist Dr Albert Baugher officially found that "The boy died of a heart collapse after extraordinary tension while watching a film."
    • Pifias
      Volkswagen Bus en route to the crash site is not the same Volkswagen Bus that arrives through the gate at the crash site. VW badge is larger, chrome trim is missing and license plate is different.
    • Citas

      Prof. Bernard Quatermass: There's no room for personal feelings in science, Judith!

    • Versiones alternativas
      The original 1955 "Quatermass Xperiment" print has the closing caption "The End"; the reissued version (with a still bearing the new title "The Quatermass Experiment" inserted into the opening credits) replaces this with "A Hammer Production Produced at Bray Studios".
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Frances Farmer Presents: The Creeping Unknown (1959)

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    • How long is The Quatermass Xperiment?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • mayo de 1957 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • L'experiment del Dr. Quatermass
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Chessington Zoo, Chessington, Surrey, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(zoo scenes)
    • Empresa productora
      • Hammer Films
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 1h 22min(82 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1(original/negative aspect ratio, alternative theatrical ratio)

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