CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.1/10
1.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un científico que hace experimentos con fetos descubre un método para acelerar el crecimiento humano alcanzando la madurez en unos días. El resultado es una hermosa mujer que quiere encontra... Leer todoUn científico que hace experimentos con fetos descubre un método para acelerar el crecimiento humano alcanzando la madurez en unos días. El resultado es una hermosa mujer que quiere encontrar un remedio contra el envejecimientoUn científico que hace experimentos con fetos descubre un método para acelerar el crecimiento humano alcanzando la madurez en unos días. El resultado es una hermosa mujer que quiere encontrar un remedio contra el envejecimiento
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Joyce Brothers
- Dr. Joyce Brothers
- (as Dr. Joyce Brothers)
Sharri Zak
- Nurse
- (as Sherri Zak)
Bob Reynolds
- Doctor
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Entertaining nonsense where Rock Hudson learns the secret of growing fetuses to adulthood with the offspring super-fast learners, highly skilled and super intelligent.
The Doberman which is the first successful offspring is a fabulous character (like the diabolical dog in The Omen.) She is beautifully trained and does some great stunts, and is chilling in other scenes. The second success is Victoria (Barbara Carrera) who - surprise - is a stunning beauty. Carrera is good in the role and creates a believable character.
Diane Ladd provides great support as Rock's cynical sister-in-law/live-in assistant who is suspicious of Victoria, and hates the dog. The most chilling (and high camp) scene has Ladd's character, who has been away, return to Rock's estate to rummage through the attic and retrieve a hideous frog-shaped lamp, only to be followed by the snarling dog the entire time. The dog carefully escorts Ladd from the premises, clearly glad to be rid of the ugly light fitting.
The opening scenes are rather dull, padded out with Rock endlessly recounting plot exposition into his refrigerator sized reel to reel tape recorder. The film really begins to feel like a TV movie with its tiny cast and few locations. But once Victoria's up and talking (and disrobing) the pace and interest picks up.
The Doberman which is the first successful offspring is a fabulous character (like the diabolical dog in The Omen.) She is beautifully trained and does some great stunts, and is chilling in other scenes. The second success is Victoria (Barbara Carrera) who - surprise - is a stunning beauty. Carrera is good in the role and creates a believable character.
Diane Ladd provides great support as Rock's cynical sister-in-law/live-in assistant who is suspicious of Victoria, and hates the dog. The most chilling (and high camp) scene has Ladd's character, who has been away, return to Rock's estate to rummage through the attic and retrieve a hideous frog-shaped lamp, only to be followed by the snarling dog the entire time. The dog carefully escorts Ladd from the premises, clearly glad to be rid of the ugly light fitting.
The opening scenes are rather dull, padded out with Rock endlessly recounting plot exposition into his refrigerator sized reel to reel tape recorder. The film really begins to feel like a TV movie with its tiny cast and few locations. But once Victoria's up and talking (and disrobing) the pace and interest picks up.
I think this movie was WAY ahead of it's time. Very few people were aware of the scientific manipulations that could be done for development of new life.
Also it doesn't hurt that the leading actors are absolutely gorgeous. Barbara Carrera has nude scenes that even a woman can appreciate. What a goddess!
If you like sci-fi from olden times that mimics the life we are living now, you'll love this one.
That said, I agree with the other reviewer who noted that it was absolutely ridiculous to put in the scene about the natural language query to a computer that came back with a good answer. I worked with mainframes in 1976, and we were still feeding trays of punch cards into readers to run programs. CRT's were still command line interfaces.
There are a bunch of hater's for this movie for resistance to scientists assuming the role of gods.
I happen to be a Monsanto HATER, ABHORER, LOATHER, DESPISER!
Did ya'll know they "own," legally, but NOT morally IMO, a terminator gene, that renders their seeds unable to reproduce? Imagine if that gene got loose and started mutating flora and fauna. That could be the absolute end of life on our planet. Fortunately, our government, stupid and clueless as it is, has so far denied Monsanto the ability to deploy such a dangerous assault against us.
Watch "Bitter Harvest" with Ron Howard to see some of the corporate antics this toxic multinational corporation gets up to: contaminating (getting loose on) neighboring farms with their genetically modified seeds and pollen, then suing them for stealing their patented stuff. They get away with it, and have put many hard-working people out of business and off their land.
Also it doesn't hurt that the leading actors are absolutely gorgeous. Barbara Carrera has nude scenes that even a woman can appreciate. What a goddess!
If you like sci-fi from olden times that mimics the life we are living now, you'll love this one.
That said, I agree with the other reviewer who noted that it was absolutely ridiculous to put in the scene about the natural language query to a computer that came back with a good answer. I worked with mainframes in 1976, and we were still feeding trays of punch cards into readers to run programs. CRT's were still command line interfaces.
There are a bunch of hater's for this movie for resistance to scientists assuming the role of gods.
I happen to be a Monsanto HATER, ABHORER, LOATHER, DESPISER!
Did ya'll know they "own," legally, but NOT morally IMO, a terminator gene, that renders their seeds unable to reproduce? Imagine if that gene got loose and started mutating flora and fauna. That could be the absolute end of life on our planet. Fortunately, our government, stupid and clueless as it is, has so far denied Monsanto the ability to deploy such a dangerous assault against us.
Watch "Bitter Harvest" with Ron Howard to see some of the corporate antics this toxic multinational corporation gets up to: contaminating (getting loose on) neighboring farms with their genetically modified seeds and pollen, then suing them for stealing their patented stuff. They get away with it, and have put many hard-working people out of business and off their land.
This film has aged as gracefully as Mickey Rourke. The special effects are hilariously bad, the lab equipment belongs in a museum and the plot is dubious to say the least. And yet, these are the very things that make "Embryo" such entertaining viewing.
I think it's only fair to judge special effects in old movies by the technology available to the filmmakers at the time. However, even by 1970s standards, the special effects in this film are remarkably unconvincing. The obvious use of dolls for babies, the fluffy toy that doubles for a dog and the mesmerising plastic canine foetus are all memorable. Personally, I find these kind of effects utterly charming. They inject humour into the film (albeit unintentionally) and due to their lack of authenticity, make the subject matter of experimenting on foetuses more palatable.
Technology junkies will love the bus sized computers and pre-historic lab equipment. The film's heartening lack of moralising is almost as much of its time as the outdated hardware. I hate to think how preachy this film would be if it were made today.
This film is a bizarre and amusing time capsule of 1970s technology and morality. See it, if only for the bewildering dog foetus.
I think it's only fair to judge special effects in old movies by the technology available to the filmmakers at the time. However, even by 1970s standards, the special effects in this film are remarkably unconvincing. The obvious use of dolls for babies, the fluffy toy that doubles for a dog and the mesmerising plastic canine foetus are all memorable. Personally, I find these kind of effects utterly charming. They inject humour into the film (albeit unintentionally) and due to their lack of authenticity, make the subject matter of experimenting on foetuses more palatable.
Technology junkies will love the bus sized computers and pre-historic lab equipment. The film's heartening lack of moralising is almost as much of its time as the outdated hardware. I hate to think how preachy this film would be if it were made today.
This film is a bizarre and amusing time capsule of 1970s technology and morality. See it, if only for the bewildering dog foetus.
i really enjoyed this movie.i thought the acting was very good,and the storyline well developed.i'm sure the movie was inspired by past literary works and movies,but i think it also inspired other movies and novels.so,obviously it's not wholly original,but it does have its own original elements to it.it's a cautionary tale for sure and it's just as relevant today, probably more so .the only negative thing i can say about it is that it can be a bit slow,and the first half has an almost clinical feel to it.by this i mean at times it's a bit dry and almost too scientific.overall,though i think it was a well done movie.i give Embryo a 7/10
I just saw this film for the first time now. The film has a weird intro with the opening credits playing over pictures of unborn fetus's. That was a little uncomfortable to watch but I sat through the rest anyways.
It's a little slow at times, but all in all it's not too bad. The ending is a little over the top but can still give you chills.
If you've never seen it & you're a movie buff, sure...watch it. Otherwise, it's not really one for the young crowd.
It's a little slow at times, but all in all it's not too bad. The ending is a little over the top but can still give you chills.
If you've never seen it & you're a movie buff, sure...watch it. Otherwise, it's not really one for the young crowd.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFirst of two back-to-back sci-fi/horror films for Barbara Carrera, who appeared in the following year's La isla infernal del Dr. Moreau (1977). Both films were produced by Sandy Howard and included three of the same make-up department personnel.
- ErroresMethotrexate, although definitely a powerful drug, is not addictive at all, and an MD would know that.
- Citas
Frank Riley: [Stunned during the chess match] Hold on! You've played this game before!
- Créditos curiososA caption is shown stating that the science of the movie is within our grasp.
- ConexionesEdited into Pale Moonlight Theater: Embryo (2014)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
- How long is Embryo?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Embryo
- Locaciones de filmación
- La Cañada-Flintridge, California, Estados Unidos(Mansion scenes.)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 1,400,000 (estimado)
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was El embrión mortífero (1976) officially released in India in English?
Responda