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IMDbPro

Le monstre magnétique

Original title: The Magnetic Monster
  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Jean Byron, Richard Carlson, and King Donovan in Le monstre magnétique (1953)
The Office of Scientific Investigation sends A-Men agents to investigate reports of unusual magnetic activity in various communities.
Play trailer2:20
1 Video
7 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

The Office of Scientific Investigation sends A-Men agents to investigate reports of unusual magnetic activity in various communities.The Office of Scientific Investigation sends A-Men agents to investigate reports of unusual magnetic activity in various communities.The Office of Scientific Investigation sends A-Men agents to investigate reports of unusual magnetic activity in various communities.

  • Directors
    • Curt Siodmak
    • Herbert L. Strock
  • Writers
    • Curt Siodmak
    • Ivan Tors
  • Stars
    • Richard Carlson
    • King Donovan
    • Jean Byron
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Herbert L. Strock
    • Writers
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Ivan Tors
    • Stars
      • Richard Carlson
      • King Donovan
      • Jean Byron
    • 62User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:20
    Official Trailer

    Photos6

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Richard Carlson
    Richard Carlson
    • Dr. Jeffrey Stewart
    King Donovan
    King Donovan
    • Dr. Dan Forbes
    Jean Byron
    Jean Byron
    • Connie Stewart
    Harry Ellerbe
    Harry Ellerbe
    • Dr. Allard
    Leo Britt
    • Dr. Benton
    Leonard Mudie
    Leonard Mudie
    • Howard Denker
    Byron Foulger
    Byron Foulger
    • Mr. Simon
    Michael Fox
    Michael Fox
    • Dr. Serny
    John Zaremba
    John Zaremba
    • Chief Watson
    • (as John Zarimba)
    Lee Phelps
    • City Engineer
    Watson Downs
    • Mayor
    Roy Engel
    Roy Engel
    • Gen. Behan
    • (as Roy Engle)
    Frank Gerstle
    Frank Gerstle
    • Col. Willis
    John Vosper
    John Vosper
    • Capt. Dyer
    John Dodsworth
    • Dr. Carthwright
    Charles Williams
    • Cabbie
    • (as Charlie Williams)
    Michael Granger
    Michael Granger
    • Kenneth Smith
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    • Albert
    • (as Bill Benedict)
    • Directors
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Herbert L. Strock
    • Writers
      • Curt Siodmak
      • Ivan Tors
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    5.82.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7Hitchcoc

    Quite an Attraction

    This is very good 1950's science fiction. At the center is Curt Siodmak, a pretty good writer who involves us in a tale where the use of a particle accelerator causes magnetism to go crazy. It results in implosions that could eventually end all life on earth. It's up to Richard Carlson and King Donovan, staples in the movie genre of the time, to come up with a solution. This is post atom bomb time and we are treated to a lot of moralizing about life and its preciousness. This could have gotten out of hand but is reined in pretty well. I thought the science was reasonable and the acting quite good. Stereotyping was kept to a minimum and allowed the principles to do their thing. Very good scene in an appliance store at the beginning.
    8Dejael

    One of the best sci-fi B-movies of the Fifties!

    One of the best sci-fi B-movies of the Fifties! Stalwart hero-scientist Carlson is really terrific and convincing too; stock footage of dynamo is realistically intercut with new footage of a movie set built to look exactly like the one in the German film GOLD (1934), in which stock footage from the 1934 film is intercut with new footage. The film succeeds on all levels, made for an adult audience, and although a 'modern' American film, it had a film crew with a heritage in German impressionist cinema of the 1930s. Highly recommended! Great Science Fiction! Probably the only Fifties SF film besides ON THE BEACH (1959) to show the nuclear radiation problem realistically; especially chilling is the scene on board an airliner where the nuclear scientist who had a hand in creating the monster (Leonard Mudie) is dying of nuclear radiation and his gums are bleeding while he holds onto a briefcase in his lap containing the radioactive isotope. Rushed to a hospital after the plane lands, he dies in isolation. And a formidable, unknown, unseen monster! Badly dated now, but an effective, well-written thriller featuring the TV star of I LED THREE LIVES and the movie star of IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE and CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON, Richard Carlson gives another fine performance.
    5ma-cortes

    So-so Sci-Fi about O.S.I., the Office of Scientific Investigation to find out weird magnetism and strange atomic forces

    The astounding story of the "thing" that came alive deals with the discovery of an atomic power , then the government has set up a special group, the Office of Scientific Investigation or OSI , to look into rare phenomenon . Those who work there are known as A-Men (similarly to G-Men) , they are detectives for science and they are called in perilous missions as A-Man (A as in Atom) led by the brave agent Jeffrey Stewart (Richard Carlson) and his partner Dan Forbes (King Donovan) are sent to a local hardware store where they find a strong magnetic field has magnetized every metal item in the store and other bizarre phenomena .There they find the local appliance store owner that explain them all of their products have become highly magnetized and the things came alive . As they start a number of tests to establish what the source of the magnetism . The scientists are puzzled but their investigation leads them to a scientist who has invented a new element of extraordinary power. Unless they can find a way to stop its growth, it will destroy the Earth. As terror sweep through the heart of a city in the dead of night and this one man , the brave scientific , stands between the earth and doom! , battling a monstrous being that terrorizes Earth! A Cosmic Frankenstein monstrosity terrorizes earth and there is an only Man That Dared To Track The Monster To Its Lair!

    A main candidate for the strangest and nuttiest Science Fiction of all time along with ¨Red planet Mars¨ by Harry Horner , including a surprising premise and plenty of twists and turns . This in an incoherent movie overburned with various messages about atomic danger and risks on the sub-atomic particles . As the picture narrates how a new danger faces man, sound waves that kill, atomic isotopes searing flesh, even pilotless planes that break the sound barrier , and to combat these threats a new agency has been created, The Office of Scientific Investigation (OSI) the men who work for this agency are known as ¨A men¨ similar to the classic ¨G-Men¨. The script involves a valiant scientist , his helper , his pregnant wife and their fight against a giant magneto-dynamo with tremendous power .The best parts of the movie are the thrilling final scenes ; however , using stock footage of the underground magneto-dynamo from the German science fiction thriller Gold (1934).It stars the always agreeable Richard Carlson . His film debut was The Young in Heart (1938). At the beginning he played forgettable second features, such as the supernaturally-themed Beyond tomorrow (1940), or commercial failures, like the nostalgic Anna Neagle musical No, No, Nanette (1940). There was, however, one stellar performance: his newspaperman David Hewitt in William Wyler's brilliant adaptation of Lillian Hellman's southern melodrama The Fox (1941). This was followed by another decent role in the fruity -but highly enjoyable- melodrama White Cargo (1942), and the lead in a cliched, run-of-the-mill crime picture, Highways by Night (1942). Then , Richard found renewed energy for his third-billed appearance in MGM's lavish Technicolor remake of King Salomon's mines (1950). Perhaps surprisingly, this did not lead to further roles in A-grade features. Instead, Richard Carlson found himself the unlikely star of several sci-fi features, which have attained cult status over the passing years. Pick of the bunch was Jack Arnold's seminal It came from outer space (1953) , based on a story by Ray Bradbury , with Richard in the role of a well-meaning, rather arcane astronomer, witness to an alien presence which turns out to be benign. The sincerity of his performance led to similar parts in The magnetic monster (1953) with similar moralistic undertones and the atmospheric Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954). He is accompanied by an unknown support cast such as : King Donovan , Michael Fox , Byron Foulger , Jean Byron who plays his wife , she was billed the third , but the filming was so tight that she shot her scenes in one day . Look for two notorious secondaries giving brief interpretations : Kathleen Freeman and Strother Martin .

    It packs an atmospheric musical score by Sanford and Paul Beaver . As well as an evocative cinematography in black and white by Charles Enger .This Sci-Fi film from another age that was ahead of its time was written and produced by Ivan Tors , being regularly directed by Curt Siodmak and Herbert L. Strock . Although credited to Curt Siodmak, most of the film was actually directed by Herbert L. Strock, who was hired by Ivan Tors for his skills as an editor, which were viewed as essential for a film that relied so much on stock footage. Curt Siodmak was a good writer and filmmaker who had a long career . One of Siodmak's first film-writing assignments was the screenplay for the German sci-fi picture F.P.1 antwortet nicht (1932) (US title: "Floating Platform 1 Does Not Answer"), based on his own novel. Compelled to leave Germany after Adolf Hitler and the Nazis took power, Siodmak went to work as a screenwriter in England and then moved to Hollywood in 1937. He got a job at Universal through his director-friend Joe May, helping write the script for May's The Invisible man returns (1940). Because the film went over well, Siodmak says, he fell into the horror/science-fiction "groove" . As he directed : Bride of the Gorilla , Slaves of the Amazons ,The Devil's Messenger , Curucu, Beast of the Amazon and 13 Demon Street . While director Herbert L-Strock made a lot of terror and Sci-Fi movies such as : Witches's brew , Monster , Men on the run , The crawling hand , How to make a monster , Flood of Drácula , Rider on a Dead Horse and I was a teenager monster . Rating : 5.5/10. Acceptable and passable .
    sdlitvin

    Unique monster, unknown classic

    "The Magnetic Monster" was a superior sci-fi B movie of the 1950's. Rarely seen these days, it hasn't gotten the appreciation it deserves as an unusual sci-fi classic.

    Two scientist-detectives from the Government "Office of Scientific Investigation (O.S.I.)" are sent to investigate some bizarre events, like some guy found dead of radiation poisoning in an apartment building where metal objects have become magnetized. They eventually discover the cause: somewhere there's a new, accidentally created radioactive isotope with the unique property to "grow" by assimilating surrounding energy into itself. As it grows geometrically, its magnetic field and radioactivity increase too, potentially threatening the very existence of Earth itself. Our heroes race to find and destroy the thing somehow.

    For its time, the plot tried hard to be realistic, with realistic-sounding science and a semi-documentary style reminiscent of detective movies. Even a deliberate bit of comic relief as the detectives are initially stymied by false leads. ("Some guy phoned to complain that the battery in his hearing aid burned out and he wants us to look into the matter." "Oh, fine!")

    With the new crimes of computer hacker attacks and bioterrorist attacks, the notion of detectives with scientific training is no longer science fiction. When the Government started investigating the deaths of people from anthrax in October 2001, I thought O.S.I. had finally come to pass.
    youroldpaljim

    One of my favorite minor Science Fiction films from the fifties!

    Two agents from the Office of Scientific Investigation are sent to investigate high levels of radiation and magnetism centered above a hardware store. They discover that a scientist, who has since fled with the element, has invented a new highly dangerous radioactive element that is able to "grow". If the element is not found and destroyed or contained, it could continue to grow until it sends the Earth off its orbit. The OSI men must locate the element and then find a way to destroy before its to late.

    THE MAGNETIC MONSTER is one of the best low budget films from the 1950's. The story is intelligent and the science at least seems authentic. Ivan Tors deserves praise for trying to make a serious, realistic science fiction film. This is probably his best. His other science fiction films and T.V. series "Science Fiction Theater" also aimed for this kind of realism, but they were often to talky and slow moving. This film moves at the right pace and builds up to an excellent climax.

    A few stray facts: Most of the special effects at the end were taken from the 1935 German science fiction film GOLD. This explains the outdated overcoat and fedora that Carlson wears at the the climax, to match the one worn by the German actor in the older film. Also Ivan Tors is said to have aped this films structure from the "Dragnet" TV series. The fictitious government agency The Office of Scientific Investigation turned up in Tors GOG (1954) and some episodes of "Science Fiction Theater."

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Uses stock footage of the underground magneto-dynamo from the German science fiction thriller Gold (1934).
    • Goofs
      In the early scene in the hardware store, when the scientists toss washers up to the ceiling to determine a magnetic source, the the washers roll and spin before settling on the ceiling, just as some coins would do so if dropped on the floor. A magnetic force strong enough to magnetize much heavier objects in the store would have pulled the washers directly to the ceiling without the extraneous movement.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      [Jeffrey and Connie Stewart arrive at their new house and are walking toward the front door]

      Dr. Jeffrey Stewart: Hey, you're not so skinny.

      Connie Stewart: I'm working on it. I'm getting bigger and better.

      Dr. Jeffrey Stewart: Secret of multiplication.

      Connie Stewart: What are you talking about?

      Dr. Jeffrey Stewart: I'm not sure. Excepting they both seem to have something to do with multiplication. Done through love, the result is a baby, a... a lovely thing. But without love, done through hate or... or fear, the result is a monster, an element that grows.

      Connie Stewart: Jeff...

      [Connie removes a set of keys from her handbag, and they enter the house]

    • Crazy credits
      All credits except the main title -- stars, supporting cast, director, producer, screenplay, etc. -- are at the end of the film, not the beginning.
    • Connections
      Edited from Gold (1934)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 31, 1954 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Magnetic Monster
    • Filming locations
      • McCulloch Plant, Los Angeles International Airport - 1 World Way, Los Angeles, California, USA(OSI Office)
    • Production company
      • Ivan Tors Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $105,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 16 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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