AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,6/10
3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA military officer survives a nuclear blast, only to begin to uncontrollably grow into an increasingly unstable giant.A military officer survives a nuclear blast, only to begin to uncontrollably grow into an increasingly unstable giant.A military officer survives a nuclear blast, only to begin to uncontrollably grow into an increasingly unstable giant.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Glenn Langan
- Lt. Col. Glenn Manning
- (as Glen Langan)
Russ Bender
- Richard Kingman
- (as Russell Bender)
Dick Nelson
- Sgt. Hansen
- (as Richard Nelson)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Burt I. Gordon's "The Amazing Colossal Man" was the first sci-fi film I saw as a kid that actually scared me. But it wasn't the effect of a bald Col. Glenn Manning running around Las Vegas that I found frightening; it was the actual atomic bomb test-blast footage I found so horrific. At the age of six, seeing houses blown like matchsticks into blazing debris was enough to cause nightmares. The same footage (recently restored by Peter Kuran for the "explosive" documentary "Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie") can still sends shivers down the spine of any self-respecting anti-nuker.
"The Amazing Colossal Man" still ranks as one of the better b-grade drive-in movies. It is unintentionally funny, full of impossible science and very entertaining. The cast does their best with the material (from a script by George Worthing Yates) but I suspect no one took the project very seriously, least of all Mr. Gordon. It is also highlighted by another thunderous Albert Glasser score.
"The Amazing Colossal Man" still ranks as one of the better b-grade drive-in movies. It is unintentionally funny, full of impossible science and very entertaining. The cast does their best with the material (from a script by George Worthing Yates) but I suspect no one took the project very seriously, least of all Mr. Gordon. It is also highlighted by another thunderous Albert Glasser score.
Actually, I have seen this on and off, but watching it again in its entirety actually was a good thing. This is rare when describing Gordon's works.
Glenn Manning is the unfortunate guy who gets the full blast of a plutonium bomb. Poor guy is real mad about growing every day and being treated like a freak (hey, who doesn't). Although the effects are pure de Monsieur Gordon, it does work well with the film (I was cracking up with the big syringe). Glenn's rants and angina attacks do create some sympathy, but man, his girl sure stood by his side!! Some parts do tend to drag, there are lots of dimly lit hallways perfect for subterfuge and the miniature knick knacks were classic!
Um, there's a sequel?? Can I change my vote?
Glenn Manning is the unfortunate guy who gets the full blast of a plutonium bomb. Poor guy is real mad about growing every day and being treated like a freak (hey, who doesn't). Although the effects are pure de Monsieur Gordon, it does work well with the film (I was cracking up with the big syringe). Glenn's rants and angina attacks do create some sympathy, but man, his girl sure stood by his side!! Some parts do tend to drag, there are lots of dimly lit hallways perfect for subterfuge and the miniature knick knacks were classic!
Um, there's a sequel?? Can I change my vote?
An Army colonel gets too close to an exploding plutonium bomb and like all creatures in the 1950s movies he begins to grow at an amazing rate to colossal proportions. This is much to the dismay of his girlfriend because, well, size does matter. But when your man is 50 feet tall it's ridiculous. But she still loves him even though he's way up there and she's way down here. He goes a little funny in the head and roams the countryside wearing a giant diaper because even the tall men's section has nothing in his size.
Amazing Colossal Man is ridiculous Bert I. Gordon nonsense with cheesy special effects concocted in a garage. Followed by War of the Colossal Beast which is equally stupid. The only way to have fun watching this is with the help of an illegal substance.
Amazing Colossal Man is ridiculous Bert I. Gordon nonsense with cheesy special effects concocted in a garage. Followed by War of the Colossal Beast which is equally stupid. The only way to have fun watching this is with the help of an illegal substance.
I liked this film. I liked it a lot. Sure it is by no means anything other than a poorly-crafted, deficient special effects laden film about a man that survives a plutonium blast that starts to grow almost 8 inches a day. Soon Colonel Glenn Manning becomes fifty feet high and starts to lose his mind. Bert I. Gordon is able to do something he rarely ever does, and that is make you care a bit for the characters. Glen Manning is punished for a good deed and his heroic personality, and the irony of his situation is never lost on him or the audience. Glenn Langlan does a pretty good job as the giant man despite the acting experience it was trying to seem gigantic. The rest of the cast is not quite at his mediocre level. Cathy Downs does a credible job as his love interest, but the two fellas playing the doctors had all the bedside charm of a brick wall. How bout that scene with the camel and the elephant? What a hoot! The special effects are some of the cheapest to come out of the fifties. Giant Glenn Manning is just projected onto other film. Nothing too special about that. Except in the close-ups, the giant always looks transparent(a symptom of the projection process...watch Attack of the 50 Foot Woman and you will see the same effect). The scene with the giant hypodermic needle is easily the best. Glenn finally gets his point across to an army scientist. The biggest low of the film for me was the ending. It seems very abrupt, almost like, "Hey, we ran out of money....let's end it like this....real fast!" Shortcomings notwithstanding...give The Amazing Colossal Man a try if you like good/bad science fiction films from the fifties. If your ideas of horror classics are Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street...stay away...nothing in this film will entertain you.
1957's "The Amazing Colossal Man" was director's Bert I. Gordon's debut and most financially successful release for American International Pictures, while also his most acclaimed, not too surprising once you realize that virtually none of his other giant size creatures had any personality, neither "The Cyclops" nor the sequel "War of the Colossal Beast" giving their menace any dialogue. The simple inversion of Universal's massive hit "The Incredible Shrinking Man" was actually an uncredited adaptation of Homer Eon Flint's brief 1928 novel "The Nth Man," the rights to which just happened to belong to James H. Nicholson, and may have also inspired Stan Lee's origin story for The Incredible Hulk! In the lead was Glenn Langan, an actor who made a name for himself the previous decade in films like "Hangover Square" and "Dragonwyck" (facing off against Vincent Price), but had fallen on hard times here but a performance that engenders sympathy for his plight despite an excess of self pity and the typically overdone excuse of radiation poisoning. Colonel Glenn Manning (Langan) readies himself for the nation's first plutonium bomb test but leaves his position of safety to try to rescue the pilot of a downed civilian plane, the flesh seared from his body by the force of the blast (a startling visage so well done it is repeated at least twice more). As 95% of his body suffered third degree burns doctors give his fiancée Carol (Cathy Downs, "The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues," "The She-Creature," "Missile to the Moon") little hope that he'll survive, yet just hours after treatment his skin has completely regenerated itself, beginning a process of growth where Dr. Paul Linstrom (William Hudson, "Attack of the 50 Foot Woman") estimates the rate to be 10 feet per day. Manning emerges from his coma in a state of shock, despair and amusement in equal measure before we learn that his heart is not growing at the same pace as the rest of his body, essentially doomed to die in a few days unless something can be done to halt the progression. There's entirely too much talk until the final reel, when the Colossal Man finally goes on the rampage through Las Vegas, while one patrolman haplessly observes: "are you gonna stand by and let him destroy property?" A giant needle makes a painful looking injection that hopefully should stunt his growth, but in his fury he impales one unfortunate medico with a devastating strike and purloins his tiny fiancée for a final date with destiny at Boulder Dam. Gordon continued making giant size creature features for another 20 years, but never again reached the heights that this picture did. There's a lot of fun to be had if one can stay patient through the slow spots, which sadly isn't the case with its perfunctory sequel.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAmerican International Pictures released this in a double feature with Cat Girl (1957).
- Erros de gravaçãoThe heart has more than one cell.
- ConexõesEdited into A Mulher de 15 Metros (1958)
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- How long is The Amazing Colossal Man?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 20 min(80 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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