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Le Peuple des abîmes

Titre original : The Lost Continent
  • 1968
  • 13
  • 1h 29min
NOTE IMDb
5,5/10
2,4 k
MA NOTE
Le Peuple des abîmes (1968)
Trailer for this adventurous tale
Lire trailer2:46
1 Video
50 photos
Aventure avec des dinosauresAventure maritimeAventure

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe captain, crew, and passengers of an old freighter-all of them with dark secrets to keep-find themselves adrift in a mysterious land full of monsters, conquistadors, and killer seaweed.The captain, crew, and passengers of an old freighter-all of them with dark secrets to keep-find themselves adrift in a mysterious land full of monsters, conquistadors, and killer seaweed.The captain, crew, and passengers of an old freighter-all of them with dark secrets to keep-find themselves adrift in a mysterious land full of monsters, conquistadors, and killer seaweed.

  • Réalisation
    • Michael Carreras
    • Leslie Norman
  • Scénario
    • Michael Carreras
    • Dennis Wheatley
  • Casting principal
    • Eric Porter
    • Hildegard Knef
    • Suzanna Leigh
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,5/10
    2,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Carreras
      • Leslie Norman
    • Scénario
      • Michael Carreras
      • Dennis Wheatley
    • Casting principal
      • Eric Porter
      • Hildegard Knef
      • Suzanna Leigh
    • 77avis d'utilisateurs
    • 49avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Lost Continent
    Trailer 2:46
    The Lost Continent

    Photos50

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 44
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    Rôles principaux26

    Modifier
    Eric Porter
    Eric Porter
    • Capt. Lansen
    Hildegard Knef
    Hildegard Knef
    • Eva Peters
    Suzanna Leigh
    Suzanna Leigh
    • Unity Webster
    Tony Beckley
    Tony Beckley
    • Harry Tyler
    Nigel Stock
    Nigel Stock
    • Dr. Webster
    Neil McCallum
    Neil McCallum
    • First Officer Hemmings
    Ben Carruthers
    Ben Carruthers
    • Ricaldi
    • (as Benito Carruthers)
    Jimmy Hanley
    Jimmy Hanley
    • Patrick, the Bartender
    James Cossins
    James Cossins
    • Nick, Chief Engineer
    Dana Gillespie
    Dana Gillespie
    • Sarah
    Victor Maddern
    Victor Maddern
    • Mate
    Reg Lye
    Reg Lye
    • Helmsman
    Norman Eshley
    Norman Eshley
    • Jonathan, the Prisoner
    Michael Ripper
    • Sea Lawyer
    Donald Sumpter
    Donald Sumpter
    • Sparks, the Radioman
    Alf Joint
    Alf Joint
    • Jason, a Crewman
    Charles Houston
    Charles Houston
    • Braemer, a Crewman
    Shivendra Sinha
    • Hurri Curri
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Carreras
      • Leslie Norman
    • Scénario
      • Michael Carreras
      • Dennis Wheatley
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs77

    5,52.4K
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    Avis à la une

    7nelsmonsterx

    Two movies in one!

    Perhaps the strangest film to come out of Hammer Studios, The Lost Continent is literally like watching two movies in one. Similar in format to Tarantino's From Dusk 'til Dawn, the film shifts from a taut "mutiny on the bounty" type nautical drama play (with a little funky late sixties weirdness thrown in) to a whacked out sci-fi freak show complete with corny monsters, strange & hostile plants, an unnaturally large breasted woman, a child King, an oddball religious cult, and balloon-type thingies to keep the characters afloat on the marshy alien wetlands! Whew! Talk about your shift in gears! A must see for fans of oddball cinema. And to think it came out of Great Britain . . .
    Cajun-4

    Oddly endearing cinematic mess.

    THE LOST CONTINENT is from a novel by Dennis Wheatley, a prolific writer whose books were a compilation of badly written prose, cardboard characters and often inaccurate details. They also happened to be enormous best sellers.

    The movie captures his style. We are introduced to characters whose personalities change during the movie for apparent reason and plot threads that start promisingly then go nowhere.

    Ben Carruthers is an almost cartoon-like sleazeball and good actors like Eric Porter, Jimmy Hanley and Hildegarde Kneff somehow manage to keep straight faces throughout.

    The music is weird; from the opening crooning of a completely inappropriate title song it seems throughout to have been written for a different movie, having no connection with the mood of the scenes.

    With it's painted sets and general air of cheapness it should have been a complete disaster but somehow in the end it all becomes strangely likeable.

    One for those yahoo evenings with beer and popcorn.
    chris_gaskin123

    Enjoyable Hammer lost world adventure

    I have sometimes confused The Lost Continent to the 1951 dinosaur movie of the same name. It is rather enjoyable though.

    A tramp steamer with a motley collection of passengers and plenty of barrels of a dangerous explosive goes on an expedition and ends on an uncharted island in the Sargasso Sea which seems to be a graveyard for ships. When there, they discover the land populated by giant crabs, a giant scorpion, man-eating seaweed and survivors of the Spanish Inquisition! After several of the party and Inquisition are killed by the monsters and the explosive chemical, they set off and head back to civilization, along with some of the Inquisition.

    Hammer made this movie in 1968 and I taped it when it came on Channel 4 some years ago. Some of the monsters look rather cheap and the movie has a good theme song.

    The cast includes Eric Porter, Suzanna Leigh, Nigel Stock and Dana Gillespie.

    This movie is worth a look at. Enjoyable.

    Rating: 3 and a half stars out of 5.
    6chrismartonuk-1

    The Guiltiest of Pleasures.

    Michael Carreras often attempted to broaden Hammer's repertoire during his terms there and most of the company's artistic triumphs, and interesting misfires, can be laid at his feet. THE TWO FACES OF DR JEKYLL was a serious attempt to move the Gothics beyond the traditional limits expected of Hammer that failed due to the gap between intention and execution. Having pioneered SHE and ONE MILLIONS YEARS BC and put Hammer into the Summer family crowd pleaser market - and anticipating the modern Hollywood blockbuster - Carreras took advantage of hammer's relationship with Dennis Wheatley not to churn out another Black magic Chiller but a curious mish-mash of soap-opera, disaster movie, nautical adventure and sci-fantasy.

    Eric Porter was hotter than a murder weapon at the time with his portrayal of the tormented, cuckolded Soames Forsyth on the BBC (and had become something of a sex symbol in the process - despite, or because of, his rough treatment of his capricious wife, Irene) so Hammer thought it worth taking a chance on him as leading man material - as they had Peter Cushing - instead of Christopher Lee or a fading American star. Porter was a top drawer classical actor - I had the good fortune to see his Malvolio in TWELFTH NIGHT at Stratford - and he has a convincingly craggy sea-faring face and a natural authority, and ain't half-bad as a man of action at the climax. His captain could give Cushing's Baron Frankenstein a few lessons in monomania - he fails to tell his crew (including, inevitably, Michael Ripper) about the dangerous cargo of Phophor B they carry. Having been beaten to the punch by Benito Carruther's sleazy character to sleep with Hildegard Knef, he cares very little when the man is carried off by an octopus. I doubt whether Porter lingered too long over the film on his CV but he's a first-rate lead and although he made an excellent Moriarity in the Granada series, might have been an intriguing Holmes. The women characters are unusually complex for Hammer. Hildegard Knef looked every inch a MILF and conveys the weary melancholy of a beaten-down woman who's had to compromise herself in the name of survival. Suzanne Leigh is one of Hammer's finest and most underrated bitches - look at the smirk she gives her hated father Nigel Stock when Porter berates him - and opens her thighs for anything with a pulse including the Sparks, Benito, and on-the-wagon Harry. Sadly, both fade from centre-stage at the climax - but there is compensation in the form of Dana Gillespie. We've suffered enough childish double-entendres with those gas balloons she wears for now, but she is a striking beauty and, as Hammer weren't overly concerned with the thespian ability of their ladies, it seems strange she never made another one for them - Christopher Lee could have sunk his fangs into her certainly. I suspect she's dubbed, but she certainly takes Harry's mind off the booze.

    The plot structure is oddly similar to FROM DUSK TIL DAWN with the plot starting off as one genre and taking an unexpected detour in fantasy-land. Nonetheless, it remains a curio in Hammer's output (and an indication of what ZEPPELINS VS PTEROCATYLS might have looked like had it been made) and remains the guiltiest of pleasures.
    7Terrell-4

    An Excellent Rainy Day Movie

    One of my favorite rainy weekend movies, The Lost Continent also is one of the best ripe Hammer films of the Sixties.

    A freighter is blown off course and finds itself in a fog-shrouded part of the ocean where the seaweed enjoys flesh and mutated creatures with claws scamper about. It's a mild horror version of the Sargasso Sea and Bermuda Triangle. Eventually the surviving crew and passengers encounter humans who scitter around the seaweed with paddle-like shoes and balloons. The ship these people are from is a Spanish galleon several hundred years old, the crew of which survived and bred into the generations, evolving an Inquisition-like culture on board.

    It's really pretty good, thanks to the interesting ideas of seaweed that bites back and the evolved life on the Spanish ship, plus the skill of the two lead actors. And it has a great look. Eric Porter and Hildegard Knef were both heavyweights in the acting department. I'm not sure why they agreed to this film, but I assume the money was good. Porter is one of my favorite actors. He wasn't handsome enough to make a career as a movie leading man, but if anyone doubts his abilities to command watch him as Soames in the original BBC Forsyte Saga. Knef had a so-so career as a lead actress in a handful of American and British films, but returned to Germany for better stuff. She was sexy and self-confident.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Aventure avec des dinosaures
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    Still frame
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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Dana Gillespie talked about seeing this film in a theater and why she prefers music to acting. "I do remember when THE LOST CONTINENT (1968) first came out, I went to the premiere. But I thought I'd go and see the film again sort of anonymously in the local ABC in the Fulharn Road. And I went in and sat up the back to watch it and, the moment when I come on with these balloons on my shoulders, the whole audience fell about with laughter. Then I realized there's no point ever being taken seriously in the film world. But you know, if you're born with a particular shape, you're judged on how you look. It's a nuisance, and that's why I've always preferred music for my profession- because it really doesn't matter what color or shape or size you are."
    • Gaffes
      Much is made of the importance of the buoyancy balloons when crossing the seaweed. Yet they are not large enough to do much good, they don't float upwards, or need to be tied down when not in use, and near the end of the film they are not needed anyway.
    • Citations

      [facing down the Grand Inquisitor]

      Capt. Lansen: We're getting out. Now we can noisily, or we can go quietly. The choice is up to you.

      The Grand Inquistor: Where are you going? You're trapped here like the rest of us. There's no escape.

      Capt. Lansen: How do you know? Have you ever tried?

      The Grand Inquistor: Our ancestors tried.

      Capt. Lansen: I'm not talking about them, I'm talking about you.

      The Grand Inquistor: It's God's will!

      Capt. Lansen: It's your will, because you want it this way! You do it in the name of God through this child here because you haven't got the guts to do your own dirty work!

      The Grand Inquistor: You speak bravely of escaping. How are you going to do it?

      Capt. Lansen: I don't know, but we'll try.

      The Grand Inquistor: You will fail!

      Capt. Lansen: Then we'll go on trying, and the day we stop trying we stop living!

    • Versions alternatives
      The Warner / Seven Arts US release was pared down by 8 minutes or so, of slightly more adult material and released with a G rating. It would have otherwise gotten the M rating, which later morphed into GP and then PG. When Anchor Bay released the VHS and DVD editions, they found an uncut print and cut the material back into the film. You can notice these scenes as they are of slightly poorer quality than the bulk of the film.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Les Archives de la Hammer: Lands Before Time (1994)
    • Bandes originales
      Lost Continent
      (over the credit titles)

      Song by Roy Phillips

      Sung by The Peddlers

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Lost Continent?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is this The Lost Continent featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 juillet 1969 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Lost Continent
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Elstree Studios, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Studio)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Seven Arts Productions
      • Hammer Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 29min(89 min)
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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