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IMDbPro

Frankenstein Meets the Spacemonster

  • 1965
  • Unrated
  • 1h 19min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
3.8/10
1.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Curse of the Voodoo (1965)
Ver Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer1:58
1 video
28 fotos
Alien InvasionHorrorSci-Fi

Una princesa marciana y un médico sustituyen a las mujeres de Marte, destruido por la guerra atómica, asaltando Puerto Rico mientras un androide derribado aterroriza a todos.Una princesa marciana y un médico sustituyen a las mujeres de Marte, destruido por la guerra atómica, asaltando Puerto Rico mientras un androide derribado aterroriza a todos.Una princesa marciana y un médico sustituyen a las mujeres de Marte, destruido por la guerra atómica, asaltando Puerto Rico mientras un androide derribado aterroriza a todos.

  • Dirección
    • Robert Gaffney
  • Guionistas
    • R.H.W. Dillard
    • George Garrett
    • John Rodenbeck
  • Elenco
    • Marilyn Hanold
    • James Karen
    • Lou Cutell
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    3.8/10
    1.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Robert Gaffney
    • Guionistas
      • R.H.W. Dillard
      • George Garrett
      • John Rodenbeck
    • Elenco
      • Marilyn Hanold
      • James Karen
      • Lou Cutell
    • 73Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 50Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Official Trailer

    Fotos28

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    Elenco principal11

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    Marilyn Hanold
    Marilyn Hanold
    • Princess Marcuzan
    James Karen
    James Karen
    • Dr. Adam Steele
    • (as Jim Karen)
    Lou Cutell
    Lou Cutell
    • Dr. Nadir
    Nancy Marshall
    • Karen Grant
    David Kerman
    • Gen. Bowers
    Robert Reilly
    Robert Reilly
    • Col. Frank Saunders…
    Robert Alan Browne
    Robert Alan Browne
    • Martian Crewmember
    • (sin créditos)
    Robert Fields
    Robert Fields
    • Reporter
    • (sin créditos)
    Bruce Glover
    Bruce Glover
    • Martian Crewmember
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    Joe King
    • Lieutnenant Denny
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    Susan Stephens
    • Bikini Blonde
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Robert Gaffney
    • Guionistas
      • R.H.W. Dillard
      • George Garrett
      • John Rodenbeck
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios73

    3.81.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Dethcharm

    "And Now, Maximum Energy!"... "Our Electronic Purification Is Going Smoothly!"...

    FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE SPACEMONSTER introduces us to Princess Marcuzan (Marilyn Hanold) and her bald, pointy-eared, leering henchman, Dr. Nadir (Lou Cutell). Right away, we know these two are up to some shenanigans, as they're orbiting our planet, blowing up our missiles.

    Meanwhile, on Earth, Col. Frank Saunders (Robert Reilly), who is preparing for a flight to Mars, has some sort of breakdown. Actually, it's more of a malfunction, since Saunders is an android. After a quick tune-up, Saunders is off to the red planet.

    NOTE TO FUTURE SCHLOCK DIRECTORS: Always play awesome rock music during all liftoff stock footage!

    Oh no!

    Something goes wrong! Saunders' craft crash-lands, sending him on a dizzying rampage of doom! It's the princess and Nadir again. We know this because of Nadir's annoyingly sinister cackle. Forced to land on Earth themselves, Marcuzan's minions must face a gun-toting hillbilly! Luckily, they have a pet monster on board their ship. Somehow, this all leads to the showdown of the title.

    This is one funny movie! Cheap, but cheeeze-rich, Nadir steals the show with his hysterical speeches, packed with histrionic blather that is both intriguing and utterly nonsensical! His weird, dislocated stares are perfect, giving him an air of slight brain damage. The princess holds her own, mostly due to her magnificent headdress (a tablecloth with pipe-cleaners sticking out of it).

    As for Saunders, his melted face is pure magic!

    EXTRA CREDIT: For the aforementioned music, along with all of the glorious tunes in this film!

    Co-stars James Karen as Dr. Adam Steele, who nearly runs off with the movie during the sudden, "motor-scooter-of-love" sequence!

    EXTRA-EXTRA CREDIT: For the "pool-party-alien-assault" scene! The dancing! The music! It rivals the hootenanny in THE CREEPING TERROR! If only the girl in the gold pants could have been involved!...
    5SheliakBob

    Low-Budget but fun Schlock.

    A low budget, low brain-power film that is nevertheless quite entertaining. This film was a staple of late night and afternoon horror/SF movie shows when I was growing up. I never missed it. Disappointing at first, since there is no "Frankenstein" to speak of, only the android "Frank". But the Spacemonster is low-budget gruesome. The crash-burned android looks sufficiently frightening but is still sympathetic. The Martian invaders are something out of a low-grade exploitation film and make me giggle every time I watch the film. If you're looking for production values and crisp scripting, you probably ought to look somewhere else. If you're looking for a light-weight romp, something to swill soda and eat popcorn to on a rainy evening, then you could do much worse.
    Ken S.

    Cheesy Sci-Fi Fun

    This is one of those movies you have to watch with an open mind. I remember seeing it during the 70s on the local television show "Creature Feature" and marveled at how something so cheap be so bad, yet fun.

    The only real name here is James Karen, however Lou Cutell is an accomplished character actor in several movies. I only wish they would show this movie more as I haven't seen it in more than 20 years. I remember the monster the Martians had was big, furry and ugly and later the "Creature Feature" would use his mug in the stills promoting the show.

    Since the plot is pretty much covered by other posters, I'll spare my interpretation, however I will add that the Play-Do ears on Cutell's effeminate character (he looks like a crazed, pedophilac Vulcan) make the movie along with Frank's "Two-Face" part.

    All in all good fun to watch. Just don't take it seriously.
    9gsh999

    IGNORE the low rating on this 60's sci-fi classic. Excellent entertainment!

    This is a really low-budget b/w movie but it is very entertaining. This movie has really aged well. Many sci-fi fans that see this movie for the first time will know what I'm talking about. I saw this 1965 movie for the first time in 2006 and loved it. I guess this one fits into the category "so bad it's great." But I consider this a damn good effort, especially considering the budget.

    The movie is tons of laughs. The alien invaders have an Uncle Fester-looking adviser to a hot-looking queen, who looks kind of like Barbara Steele. They come invading Earth and run into a cyborg ("Frank") built by the good old USA to explore space. This movie even has a helicopter air assault in vintage transport choppers! AWESOME! They had to send the Army to help the cyborg defeat the bat-people aliens and their weapon of last resort - a fanged monster that the aliens themselves can barely control!!!!! This movie has EVERYTHING and any fan of classic sci-fi and 60's bikini party horror should really love it.
    5Hey_Sweden

    Let me be Frank.

    The science and the military plan to send astronaut Frank Saunders (Robert Reilly) into space to do some exploring; the catch is that Frank is actually a robot. However, Martian villains, led by icy Princess Marcuzan (Playboy Playmate Marilyn Hanold, "The Brain That Wouldn't Die") and her elfin toady Dr. Nadir (Lou Cutell, a.k.a. Amazing Larry from "Pee-wee's Big Adventure"), have arrived on Earth. The women of their planet have been decimated, and they need Earth women for breeding stock. But they didn't count on Frank, who's turned into a monster after receiving damage from a Martian weapon.

    "Frankenstein Meets the Spacemonster" is fairly amusing 1960s cheese, and is reasonably entertaining for any schlock lover. It can be dull and talky at times, but it does have some fun moments. Of course, ANY movie that features the late, great James Karen (beloved for playing Frank in "The Return of the Living Dead") as a heroic, Vespa-riding scientist CANNOT be all bad. One of a few people from this production who managed to have a solid career after this, Karen is typically solid. Nancy Marshall is mostly just cute as his associate Karen Grant. Hanold and Cutell are entertaining baddies in the schlock movie tradition. Reilly is adequate as the "Frankenstein" of the title. Another great character actor, Bruce Glover ("Diamonds Are Forever"), has two of his earliest screen roles as he plays both one of the Martians and their pet "spacemonster" Mull (wearing a hilarious, fanged and shaggy costume).

    A fair amount of stock footage mixes with new material in what is pretty enjoyable material, at least as far as this kind of movie goes. Ultra-cheap sets and special effects likewise make this endearing to the bad movie fanatic. The makeup on Frank (done by John Alese) isn't bad for a movie filmed over 53 years ago on a $60,000 budget.

    Partly set in Puerto Rico, although largely filmed in Cocoa Beach, Florida.

    Costume designer Anna Hill Johnstone went on to bigger and better things; her 1970s credits include "The Godfather", "Serpico", and "Dog Day Afternoon".

    Five out of 10.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Written by Virginia-based university writers R.H.W. Dillard, George Garrett and John Rodenbeck, this film was originally conceived as a comedy and a parody of the science fiction and horror genres, but the producers, while they were amused, wanted a serious science fiction/horror film instead. Comedic elements from the film's script that were cut from it included Col. Frank Saunders/Frankenstein being partially made from transplanted human parts, including the legs of a dead tap dancer (and, as a result, whenever he heard the song "Sweet Georgia Brown" he would immediately start to tap dance and not stop, no matter what the situation was).
    • Errores
      When the girl in the bikini is first captured on the beach by the Martians, her bikini is black, yet when she is shown on the Martian spaceship, it is a lighter color.
    • Citas

      Dr. Adam Steele: Gentlemen, we have just returned from our last meeting with our science advisors, and I'm happy to report that the launch is ready to go on schedule. The countdown will begin at 0800 tomorrow. And now, gentlemen, I want to introduce the astronaut chosen for this mission... Colonel Frank Saunders. Colonel Saunders will answer any questions that you might have. Frank?

      [shows Saunders to the podium]

      Col. Frank Saunders: Dr. Steele is an optimist. What he means is I'll *try* to answer your questions.

      Reporter #1: Colonel, aren't you just a little concerned about making a trip of 49 million miles alone? And when you *do* get to Mars, you still expect to be alone, or... you expect to find other life?

      Col. Frank Saunders: I'm completely trained and ready for this mission, I'm not concerned. Now, fear is either physiological, or the result of ignorance and superstition. I'm in good physical condition, and haven't had the time to get superstitious. On the basis of all available data, it would be impossible to determine conclusively whether or not there is life on Mars. That's one of the things I expect to find out.

      Reporter #1: Colonel, we understand that the radio telescope located on the down range island complex has been receiving signals in answer to their transmissions. It should maybe be from another civilization or a space vehicle itself.

      Col. Frank Saunders: These signals could come from several sources. There's been no official agreement as to their origin, nor has there been anything to prove that they were sent by other intelligent beings.

      Reporter #2: Colonel, how did you get picked for this project? Aren't there more experienced astronauts available?

      Col. Frank Saunders: My career in the military, prior to this mission, was in test flight operations. Now, as I understand it, all the data on available test pilots was fed into a computer, and the results seem to indicate that I am the most likely candidate. Of course, I'm proud and happy to have been chosen, but I make it a rule never to question the decisions of my superiors.

      Reporter #1: Colonel, I, uh, I've been covering the space program for *quite* a long time, yet, uh, prior to the day, I've never even heard of you. How do you explain that?

      [Doctor Steele, Karen Grant and General Bowers look at each other nervously]

      Col. Frank Saunders: [smiles] I guess I'm the shy type!

      [Saunders, still smiling, suddenly freezes perfectly still and does not move at all, much to the reporters' confusion]

      Reporter #1: [chuckling nervously] Colonel? Colonel?

      Dr. Adam Steele: Gentlemen, the Colonel wasn't kidding, he really *is* shy! He, um... it's been a long day and we're all rather tired.

      [Doctor Steele and Karen Grant take the stiff and unmoving Saunders out of the conference room]

    • Conexiones
      Featured in It Came from Hollywood (1982)
    • Bandas sonoras
      To Have And To Hold
      Written by L. Russell Brown (as Larry Brown) and Raymond Bloodworth

      Performed by The Distant Cousins

      Courtesy DVX Records

      A Bob Crewe Production

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 22 de septiembre de 1965 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Frankenstein Meets the Space Men
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Patrick Air Force Base - 1201 Edward H. White II Street, Cocoa Beach, Florida, Estados Unidos(Rocket Garden in opening scene.)
    • Productoras
      • Futurama Entertainment Corp.
      • Vernon-Seneca Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 60,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 19 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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