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Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA wrongfully accused South Seas prince is executed, and returns as a walking tree stump.A wrongfully accused South Seas prince is executed, and returns as a walking tree stump.A wrongfully accused South Seas prince is executed, and returns as a walking tree stump.
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In the 1950's, we had giant bugs, animals and dinosaurs, so it was a matter of time before somebody came up with the idea of a killer tree. Here is the result.
On a South Seas island, a man is wrongly accused of murder and vows to get revenge. He does in the form of a killer tree known as Tabanga, a local native spirit. A pair of American scientists, a man and a woman first notice something strange coming up from his grave, which turns out to be Tabanga. After uprooting him, they take the tree back to their lab for tests and they discover a heart beat and the following morning, the tree has escaped. The tree is also radioactive. It then starts to kill people and an attempt to burn the tree to death by natives is unsuccessful and the tree continues to kill people until one of the Americans shoots it and it falls to its death into a swamp and sinks. Through all this, the two American scientists fall in love with each other.
The cast is mostly unknowns, including Tod Andrews and Tina Carver as the scientists.
Despite the cheap looking tree monster and low budget, this movie was rather enjoyable and also unintentionally funny, especially some of the walking tree scenes. I taped this when it came on Channel 5 during the early hours of the morning.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
On a South Seas island, a man is wrongly accused of murder and vows to get revenge. He does in the form of a killer tree known as Tabanga, a local native spirit. A pair of American scientists, a man and a woman first notice something strange coming up from his grave, which turns out to be Tabanga. After uprooting him, they take the tree back to their lab for tests and they discover a heart beat and the following morning, the tree has escaped. The tree is also radioactive. It then starts to kill people and an attempt to burn the tree to death by natives is unsuccessful and the tree continues to kill people until one of the Americans shoots it and it falls to its death into a swamp and sinks. Through all this, the two American scientists fall in love with each other.
The cast is mostly unknowns, including Tod Andrews and Tina Carver as the scientists.
Despite the cheap looking tree monster and low budget, this movie was rather enjoyable and also unintentionally funny, especially some of the walking tree scenes. I taped this when it came on Channel 5 during the early hours of the morning.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
Atomic fallout in the 50's had been blamed for many destructive forces, generally in the form of huge giant animal mutations such as ants in Them!, a Praying Mantis in Deadly Mantis, and the penultimate live wrecking machine Godzilla himself. But in this film - From Hell It Came - the atomic fall out causes a tree-like creature to wreak its revenge on a small island and its natives. This is a tree that has grown from a human corpse buried in a wooden casket...a casket that somehow germinates into this killing sapling called Tobanga. This film is a classic of its type. It has very poor production values, and the natives all have thick New York accents(being sure to lend the proceeding a complete air of unreality). Add some very unbelievable special effects and a far-out story - and of course a group of lead actors that would make ed Wood proud, and you have the core of this film. Despite its many shortcomings, the film is highly enjoyable as a piece of Le Bad Cinema. The most annoying aspect is the actress playing Mrs. Kilgore. After hearing her Australian accent and corny dialogue for what seemed an eternity....I was ready to get an axe!
I remember watching this oldie-but-goodie when I was growing up--I think it was on Creature Features.
It was intriguing in its own appealing-to-nine-year-olds sort of way. I remember the scientists trying to save its life by putting it on their operating table, and then realizing they need to find some green blood. And I recall at least one scene where a woman was drowning in quicksand. (Quicksand--remember that? It was the bane of horror for male kids back then. Whenever my friends and I would be playing "War" or "Jungle" in the fields behind my house, one of us would always end up flailing away in quicksand.)
But the memory that stays with me the strongest is a nightmare I had some time after seeing this flick. That horrible face on the tree stump was silly when you watched the Tabanga walking around, but disembody it in your unconscious mind and it acquires a new, more terrifying dimension. I suppose I'll always remember that one dream.
One thing I never understood about the title, though--the prince who died and was reincarnated as the tree stump was good, so assuming he went to heaven after dying, why does the title say that he came from Hell?
It was intriguing in its own appealing-to-nine-year-olds sort of way. I remember the scientists trying to save its life by putting it on their operating table, and then realizing they need to find some green blood. And I recall at least one scene where a woman was drowning in quicksand. (Quicksand--remember that? It was the bane of horror for male kids back then. Whenever my friends and I would be playing "War" or "Jungle" in the fields behind my house, one of us would always end up flailing away in quicksand.)
But the memory that stays with me the strongest is a nightmare I had some time after seeing this flick. That horrible face on the tree stump was silly when you watched the Tabanga walking around, but disembody it in your unconscious mind and it acquires a new, more terrifying dimension. I suppose I'll always remember that one dream.
One thing I never understood about the title, though--the prince who died and was reincarnated as the tree stump was good, so assuming he went to heaven after dying, why does the title say that he came from Hell?
This movie is ultra low budget, has ultra low budget acting, and ultra low budget special effects, even for 1957. And the storyline is perhaps the most ridiculous in the history of the cinema. Why then would I grace this movie with an "average" five star rating? Quite simply, it is hilarious! Come on, you have to admire any filmmakers nerve when he makes a movie about a walking killer tree stump! The only thing that comes close in my mind is the killer bulldozer aka "Killdozer" from the mid seventies. Watching the murderous tree stump lumbering across a field in search of prey is about the funniest thing in my movie memory. I first saw this film sometime in the seventies on one of those late night horror film festivals, and I'll never forget it! How can something so bad feel so good?
I was 4 or 5 when we saw this. It would be another thirteen years or so before it would be shown again on television, but my brother and sister and watched it that night back in the mid-70's. What a hoot!
Around that same time acquired a full-sheet poster of the movie from a now-defunct movie warehouse in Philly. Wished now I would have kept it, but I traded it for some awesome old western lobby cards.
The "Tobonga" is one of my favorite childhood monsters. I remember the next day after watching it the first time I rode my tricycle up over the hill beyond where we lived to join another group of kids. My brother pointed to a stump that was part of a fence post and warned me about the tree-monster! I turned and pedaled all the way home as fast as I could! That old stump is still there! That was in '64 or 65'.
Loved the quicksand! Always been a fan of jungle flicks, so I must credit this awful little film for that!
Around that same time acquired a full-sheet poster of the movie from a now-defunct movie warehouse in Philly. Wished now I would have kept it, but I traded it for some awesome old western lobby cards.
The "Tobonga" is one of my favorite childhood monsters. I remember the next day after watching it the first time I rode my tricycle up over the hill beyond where we lived to join another group of kids. My brother pointed to a stump that was part of a fence post and warned me about the tree-monster! I turned and pedaled all the way home as fast as I could! That old stump is still there! That was in '64 or 65'.
Loved the quicksand! Always been a fan of jungle flicks, so I must credit this awful little film for that!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaStan Lee got the idea for Groot from this movie.
- ErroresThe scientists are discussing the nuclear fallout radiation the natives were exposed to. One says the radiation was only 3 Roentgen, about the same as a Chest Xray. In reality, 3 Roentgen would be the equivalent of 300 Chest Xrays.
- Citas
Dr. Arnold: Terry, will you stop being a doctor first and a woman second? Let your emotions rule you, not your intellect.
- Créditos curiosos"Introducing Linda Watkins." (Ms. Watkins had actually appeared in six previous feature films.)
- ConexionesFeatured in Arson for Hire (1959)
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- How long is From Hell It Came?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 11 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was From Hell It Came (1957) officially released in India in English?
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