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IMDbPro

The Ape

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 2m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Boris Karloff, Ray Corrigan, Gene O'Donnell, and Maris Wrixon in The Ape (1940)
The Ape: Life In That Tiny Bottle
Play clip2:43
Watch The Ape: Life In That Tiny Bottle
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7 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

Dr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.Dr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.Dr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.

  • Director
    • William Nigh
  • Writers
    • Adam Shirk
    • Curt Siodmak
    • Richard Carroll
  • Stars
    • Boris Karloff
    • Maris Wrixon
    • Gene O'Donnell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Nigh
    • Writers
      • Adam Shirk
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Richard Carroll
    • Stars
      • Boris Karloff
      • Maris Wrixon
      • Gene O'Donnell
    • 69User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Ape: Life In That Tiny Bottle
    Clip 2:43
    The Ape: Life In That Tiny Bottle

    Photos6

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    Top cast23

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    Boris Karloff
    Boris Karloff
    • Dr. Bernard Adrian
    Maris Wrixon
    Maris Wrixon
    • Miss Frances Clifford
    Gene O'Donnell
    • Danny Foster
    Dorothy Vaughan
    Dorothy Vaughan
    • Mother Clifford
    Gertrude Hoffman
    Gertrude Hoffman
    • Jane - Adrian's Housekeeper
    • (as Gertrude W. Hoffman)
    Henry Hall
    Henry Hall
    • Sheriff Jeff Halliday
    Selmer Jackson
    Selmer Jackson
    • Dr. McNulty
    Jessie Arnold
    Jessie Arnold
    • Mrs. Brill
    • (uncredited)
    Billy Bletcher
    Billy Bletcher
    • Short Mustached Posse Man
    • (uncredited)
    Harry C. Bradley
    Harry C. Bradley
    • Quinn
    • (uncredited)
    George Cleveland
    George Cleveland
    • Mr. Howley
    • (uncredited)
    Ray Corrigan
    Ray Corrigan
    • Nabu the Gorilla
    • (uncredited)
    Pauline Drake
    • Young Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Field
    Mary Field
    • Mrs. Mason
    • (uncredited)
    Gibson Gowland
    Gibson Gowland
    • Posse Member
    • (uncredited)
    Julia Griffith
    • Townswoman
    • (uncredited)
    I. Stanford Jolley
    I. Stanford Jolley
    • Ape Trainer
    • (uncredited)
    Stan Jolley
    Stan Jolley
    • Boy in Soda Shop
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Nigh
    • Writers
      • Adam Shirk
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Richard Carroll
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews69

    4.72.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8Tera-Jones

    An Underrated Karloff Horror Classic

    This is one of those lesser known Boris Karloff films that is an underrated horror classic! Worth watching if you enjoy the films concerning "a mad scientist", older horror classics and/or Boris Karloff.

    Yes Karloff is finding a cure for polio in this underrated classic - but is he really a "mad scientist" or a man desperate to help humanity?

    What does a circus, an ape, a mad scientist, a woman with polio and murder have to do with each other? If you are curious then I would recommend you watching the Karloff film "The Ape".

    The copy of this film I have is clear and I can hear the movie quite well but it does jump around a little bit. I would guess the film was not preserved all that well but that has NOTHING to do with the original film before the wear and tear of time.

    If you want a fairly decent copy of this film like I have then I would recommend getting the horror film pack called "Horror Classics 50 Movie Pack Collection" (with Phantom of the Opera on the cover). It's a fairly clean/decent copy although their might be a better copy of this film floating around out there that I am unaware of.

    "The Ape" is a good old fashioned horror film that I do recommend to others.

    8.5/10
    5AlsExGal

    A ponderous plot and a misnamed film

    I'm not sure what I'd name this film. It was probably named "The Ape" to bring in crowds - thoughts of an ape gone rogue and Boris Karloff creeping about would do so in 1940. Dr. Bernard Adrian (Karoloff) is introduced immediately. He is visiting a girl, Frances, who is paralyzed on what would have been Adrian's daughter's 18th birthday. Both his daughter and wife were lost in an epidemic of what is called "paralysis". It is probably polio, but the disease is never named. The girl is like a second daughter to Adrian, and she has a beau, the rather simple but kindly Danny.

    A local circus goes up in flames and an ape belonging to the circus is on the loose. The ape badly injures his cruel trainer/keeper in the process of escaping and the trainer is brought to Dr. Adrian. Adrian figures the man is going to die anyways, and uses his spinal fluid in a serum he is concocting to help Frances and other paralytics walk again.

    There are several mysteries going on here. The ape only seems to kill people who are evil - you are given a scene in which each of his victims does something awful. How does the ape know? Plus the ape is hanging around the doctor's house. Why?? Also, in one scene the ape is said to be killed but is shown walking about later, still on a mad spree. How?

    Is this all just bad editing? Why are chronically ill young people always shown as so patient and kind in these B films? Will the doctor push the boundaries of medicine too far and have Frances remove the blanket on her legs to reveal hairy ape legs? If so will Danny make a run for it? Watch and find out the ridiculous ending.

    This film is five out of ten just because of Karloff. He creeps up the atmosphere and adds depth to just about any character he plays. Everybody else in the cast is just a cardboard cutout next to him. It makes me wonder why he even did this film. Probably for Karloff completists only.
    6lorenellroy

    Workmanlike B movie

    It could be argued that the 1940's were something of a golden age for the B movie in America -at least in quantity terms - and several studios arose to make a great many cheap pictures for double bills and the sleazier end of the market . Monogram pictures were one such company and they strove with Universal for the horror end of the spectrum although with fewer resources . Like other such pictures The Ape gives a leading role to a horror icon , Boris Karloff ,while featuring unknowns, and untalented ones into the bargain, for the supporting parts . He plays Doctor Adrian who is regarded with suspicion by the small town locals but is revered by a young woman ,the wheelchair bound Frances Clifford whose paralysis he is striving to cure .His favoured method is by injection of spinal fluid but he is running out of the stuff till fate takes a hand .A giant ape escapes from the visiting circus ;unknown to the townsfolk he is shot .Adrian skins the dead beast and goes out at night dressed in the skin ,killing to obtain victims so he can continue the treatment . Karloff is his usual excellent self ,this time playing the scientist rather than a creation of a scientist ,and the script is quite sharp in its depiction of small town narrow mindedness .The ape suit is better than usual in this type of picture with this type of budget and this is a decent little horror number
    michael.e.barrett

    Karloff and Siodmak add class to ridiculous tale

    It doesn't sound like much of a compliment, but this cheapie was better than I expected, thanks not only to Karloff's sympathetic performance but to a script by Curt Siodmak, who did much better things. Once you accept that the main idea is stupid, you can appreciate that each individual scene is well-written in terms of character development. Everyone is slightly more ambiguous than their stock character usually would be. The "mad" doctor is sincerely concerned with the insipid heroine who reminds him of his daughter, and his madness is a kind of beautiful tragedy. The "good" boyfriend says he doesn't want her hurt, but he also seems jealous of the doctor and resentful that the heroine won't be so dependent on him. There's real tension in their triangle. The hick sheriff is almost sharp enough to figure things out. The town blowhard gets several scenes showing what a well-chiseled wretch he is, especially the scene with his pathetic wife. The small-towners are all various little unflattering types--lazy, suspicious, gossipy, narrow-minded--not exactly an ad for rural life. Karloff's maid seems mute except when she suddenly whispers one word. There's a city doctor who comes on as an antagonist, then gets converted into an ally by Karloff's evidence, and disappears from the movie! There's the wise caretaker, introduced in a surprising pan shot that begins with a black circus worker playing a trumpet for a dancing elephant and ending with the ape being provoked by the rotten trainer. The very ending, too, has a certain power if you meet the movie halfway. The trouble is, just as you're pulled into the simplicity and effectiveness of all these human scenes, along comes another scene with that apesuit to pull the rug out from under the movie's credibility. The ape is the worst thing about THE APE!
    4BaronBl00d

    Karloff Slumming

    William Nigh directs this low-budget Monogram picture about a circus ape escaping simultaneously with an eccentric doctor trying to cure a young girl's paralysis. Somehow the two plot strands meet and end in a very far-fetched denouement. Fantastical plot notwithstanding, The Ape is a quality picture at least as far as Monogram pictures go. Sure it has some real cheap sets and a threadbare, ridiculous story. The direction is adequate but nothing more. But what it does have is a fine performance from Boris Karloff as the doctor working endlessly to free a girl from the confines of her wheelchair all the while blurring the line of good and bad. For me there are three types of mad doctors. The first and probably most familiar is the crazed, maniacal, egocentric mad doctor looking for revenge or glory or the affections of a girl. These guys are the ones full of themselves and usually are dedicated in some form or fashion to evil. Bela Lugosi excelled at these. The second type is the same maniacal, crazed doctor but one that is more worldly. He wants money or power and position. He knows oftentimes that what he is doing is wrong(differentiates him from first type). I think Lionel Atwill played this type very well. The third type - and a very broad one - is the mad doctor who crosses the line of acceptable behaviour but his action are all done with good at the core. Karloff really perfected this type. The Ape has just such a "mad doctor" in it. Karloff gives such a good performance despite everything working against him. He creates genuine pathos in his role. The rest of the cast in this film is nothing too special. I enjoyed Henry Hall as the lawman, and Gertrude Hoffman as Karloff's quiet maid was chilling in her demeanor and silence. The Ape should not be overlooked simply because of its less than stellar roots with Monogram. Karloff rises above the material and this film rises above the standard fare usually created. The ape itself, well, quite ridiculous. In this one George Barrows gets a break and Ray "Crash" Corrigan(the alien in It! The Terror from Beyond Space)dons the unrealistic simian outfit.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The final film in Boris Karloff's six-picture contract with Monogram. Filming began 7/29/40.
    • Goofs
      When the doctor is showing off his 'cured' guinea pigs, one of the poor critters falls off the table, at the end of the shot.
    • Quotes

      Danny Foster: I don't like things I can't understand.

    • Connections
      Edited from Under the Big Top (1938)
    • Soundtracks
      Sobre las Olas (Over the Waves)
      (1887) (uncredited)

      Written by Juventino Rosas

      Played at the circus for the trapeze act

      Reprised as background music on the circus grounds

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 30, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le singe tueur
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Monogram Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 2m(62 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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