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Man Beast

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 7m
IMDb RATING
4.2/10
752
YOUR RATING
Asa Maynor in Man Beast (1956)
Connie Hayward mounts an expedition into the Himalayan Mountains looking for her brother, who has not returned from a previous trek trying to locate the Yeti, or "Abominable Snowman". Arriving at her brother's last-known camp Connie and her companions find only a strange old guide, Varga. They are soon attacked by gigantic Snowmen but are not half as surprised as when Vargas reveals his secret origin and the plans he has for Connie.
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
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HorrorSci-Fi

Connie Hayward mounts an expedition into the Himalayan Mountains looking for her brother, who has not returned from a previous trek trying to locate the Yeti, or "Abominable Snowman". Arrivi... Read allConnie Hayward mounts an expedition into the Himalayan Mountains looking for her brother, who has not returned from a previous trek trying to locate the Yeti, or "Abominable Snowman". Arriving at her brother's last-known camp Connie and her companions find only a strange old guid... Read allConnie Hayward mounts an expedition into the Himalayan Mountains looking for her brother, who has not returned from a previous trek trying to locate the Yeti, or "Abominable Snowman". Arriving at her brother's last-known camp Connie and her companions find only a strange old guide, Varga. They are soon attacked by gigantic Snowmen but are not half as surprised as when... Read all

  • Director
    • Jerry Warren
  • Writer
    • B. Arthur Cassidy
  • Stars
    • Rock Madison
    • Asa Maynor
    • George Skaff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.2/10
    752
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jerry Warren
    • Writer
      • B. Arthur Cassidy
    • Stars
      • Rock Madison
      • Asa Maynor
      • George Skaff
    • 28User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:25
    Trailer

    Photos

    Top cast9

    Edit
    Rock Madison
      Asa Maynor
      Asa Maynor
      • Connie Hayward
      • (as Virginia Maynor)
      George Skaff
      • Varga
      Tom Maruzzi
      • Steve Cameron
      Lloyd Nelson
      Lloyd Nelson
      • Trevor Hudson
      • (as Lloyd Cameron)
      George Wells Lewis
      • Dr. Eric Erickson
      Jack Haffner
      • Kheon
      Wong Sing
      • Trader
      Brianne Murphy
      • The Yeti
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Jerry Warren
      • Writer
        • B. Arthur Cassidy
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews28

      4.2752
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      Featured reviews

      3BaronBl00d

      A Good BAD Film!

      No illusions from me here. This movie is bad. Real bad. In fact, it's a stinker. A woman and a guy named "Hud"(wants to be her boyfriend I think) hire he-man/guide into the Himalayas Steve Cameron to find her brother. Turns out her brother is part of an expedition to find the famed yeti creatures. Well, along the journey we meet up with the lead professor of the mission and his native guide named Varga. Are there yeti creatures? Big surprise. Are they made up fairly interestingly? Not real bad. What is real bad is the acting. It is bad and everyone in the movie is bad. The woman playing Connie looks off to the side trying to feign interest while wearing enough make-up in the Himalayas to be mistaken for a hooker! The guy playing Steve is even worse. Catch the scene where he and Connie are talking at the fire near the beginning. He actually looks like he is looking directly into the camera lens with virtually no shame. The gentleman playing the rounded, bald professor fairs just a tinge better, and the best performance of all these bad ones goes to the guy playing Varga. He at least can ham it up a bit. The story makes no sense when you hear the resolution. It is in its favor a very short film and is mildly entertaining for all of its faults and flaws.
      3kevinolzak

      A slight edge over "The Snow Creature" from first time director Jerry Warren

      1956's "Man Beast" marked the debut of hustler director Jerry Warren, a former bit player like Ed Wood itching for a shot behind the camera. Hype from W. Lee Wilder's "The Snow Creature" first created interest in the Himalayas, but as a single feature this opus only earned a flat rate that brought on his decision to combine double bills for 100% of the profits. Sources vary as to exactly what type of footage was used for long shots of frigid mountain climbing, either an unfinished Mexican title or something closer to home, but he did use the cast for scenes in Griffith Park's Bronson Canyon, easily identifiable for its lack of snow. Despite the deadly pace it might be said that as a first feature Warren probably never surpassed it as a coherent story from start to finish, the mysterious screenwriter B. Arthur Cassidy likely a pseudonym for the director himself, everything composed around the stock footage at hand, some provided by Poverty Row's Monogram/Allied Artists catalog. It remains a long slog as Asa Maynor's intrepid heroine goes in search of her missing brother, accompanied by two assistants to reach a scientist and his native guide Varga (George Skaff), all the while failing to notice a yeti observing from a discreet distance (a costume previously used for PRC's "White Pongo," certainly an improvement on the shag carpet from Wilder's minor epic, not seen until the 25 minute mark). The final reel makes up for all the climbing tedium, as Varga reveals himself as half human and half yeti, intending to take the woman for himself after dispatching all the men first, the last survivor escaping an avalanche to do victorious battle for the fair maiden, leaving their pursuer to try climbing down a steep mountain side with a rope that yields to the law of gravity. At least Warren has more to offer than "The Snow Creature," but Hammer's upcoming Peter Cushing vehicle "The Abominable Snowman" put the exclamation point on such cheap productions with a touch of class. Next up for the filmmaker would be his first double bill, "The Incredible Petrified World" (first collaboration with John Carradine), then a script conceived on his honeymoon, "Teenage Zombies." If George Skaff looks familiar, his screen comeback essentially began with Ray Milland's 1972 "Frogs," a film in which he demonstrated the wrong method of alligator wrestling!
      7chris_gaskin123

      Danger in the Himalayas

      Man Beast is one of several Yeti movies made in the 1950's. Though not brilliant, I quite enjoyed this one.

      An expedition heads for the Himalayas to search for one of the party's brother, who has gone missing while on another trek. When they reach the higher regions, they encounter Yeti's and are put in more danger when it is revealed that one of the party is a mad scientist who has been cross breeding Yeti's with humans and is half Yeti himself. At the end, just two pf the party survive while the others are killed off in various ways. There is also an avalanche.

      Man Beast contains some good scenery, even though it wasn't filmed on location in the Himalayas.

      I've heard of nobody in the cast and their acting isn't brilliant either. You can clearly tell this movie was made on a low budget. Despite this, certainly worth a look.

      Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
      5ferbs54

      Inferior To The Brit Yeti

      It is almost impossible to discuss the 1956 yeti movie "Man Beast" without making comparisons to the British film "The Abominable Snowman," which came out the following year. While the latter film features the stars Peter Cushing and Forrest Tucker, "Man Beast" boasts the "talents" of Virginia Maynor (who acts atrociously and doesn't even provide the requisite eye candy) and action lead Tom Maruzzi. And while the Brit film boasts a literate script and interesting characters...well, let's just say that the American film again comes off second best. But perhaps the most telling difference of all is that whereas "Snowman" only teases us with occasional glimpses of the yetis, seemingly adhering to Val Lewton's unspoken credo that the viewer's imagination can supply far more terror than anything shown on a screen, "Man Beast" shoves the yetis in our faces again and again. Fortunately, for red-blooded monster fans, this is not altogether a bad thing. The snowmen do look pretty scary here, especially in the film's finest scene, in which the yetis attack our heroes for the first time, in a dark cave. This scene is filmed largely in silence, and in somewhat slow motion, and is pretty darn nightmarish. As reported in the fine book "Sleaze Creatures," stock footage and filming in the hills of Bishop, CA do a decent job of simulating the Himalayan locale. Still, at least half of the film's compact 63-minute running time consists of scenic shots of our band plodding through the snow. Bottom line: This is a fun hour at the movies, inferior to the Brit version as it may be. Oh--the DVD here is nice and clean looking, but scratchy in spots, and with no extras to speak of.
      7Hey_Sweden

      Not really all that terrible.

      Which is surprising, given the nature of schlock purveyor Jerry Warrens' subsequent output. This entry in the yeti genre of the 1950s may be silly at times and not 100% convincing, but it's also pretty atmospheric, even spooky. Granted, the appearances of the monster were laugh inducing for this viewer, but the effects certainly could have been worse. The acting isn't as abominable as one might expect, and the protagonists aren't unlikable people. In addition, there's a delicious revelation from our primary antagonist.

      Working from a screenplay by B. Arthur Cassidy, Warren tells the tale of young and headstrong Connie Hayward (Asa Maynor), who launches an expedition into the Himalayas in search of her missing brother Jim, in the company of worrywart friend Trevor Hudson (Lloyd Nelson). They meet up with others in the area including Steve Cameron (Tom Maruzzi) and Dr. Erickson (George Wells Lewis), and come to learn that local stories about beast-men aren't as crazy as they might think. What's more, their guide, Varga (George Skaff), seems to have a hidden agenda.

      This viewer admits that he had a pretty good time with this one, although it helps if one is partial to monster movies and horror features set in mountainous or snowy environments. Another good thing is that Warren ensured that the running time remained very brief; there are versions running both 63 minutes and 67 minutes. Only the resolution really fell short of being satisfying.

      Incidentally, Maruzzi is actually billed twice, once under his own name and once under the phony matinée idol pseudonym Rock Madison given to him by Warren. The pretty Maynor can also be seen in "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes", and co-stars Skaff and Nelson had pretty extensive careers afterwards; Skaff did other genre films such as "Frogs", "Exorcist II: The Heretic", and John Carpenters' 'Someone's Watching Me!', and Nelson became a frequent script supervisor and bit player in Clint Eastwood vehicles.

      A decent watch overall.

      Seven out of 10.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The monster suit was originally used in the movies The White Gorilla and White Pongo, both made in 1945. Both monsters were played by actor Ray Corrigan.
      • Goofs
        Five expedition members (Connie, Varga, Steve, Hud and Dr. Erickson) set out at night with flares to search for the Yeti, but a couple of shots of the members out on the mountain show six persons in the group, not five. Also, in those shots, the members are tied to one another with rope, but in close-ups immediately following, none of them has any rope tied to them.
      • Quotes

        Trevor Hudson: No... it's not the climbing it's... the Yeti! I have a feeling!

      • Connections
        Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Man Beast (1974)

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      FAQ12

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • December 5, 1956 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • El hombre bestia
      • Filming locations
        • Bronson Caves, Bronson Canyon, Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA
      • Production company
        • Jerry Warren Productions Inc.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 7m(67 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono

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