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Lost Continent

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
3.4/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Lost Continent (1951)
Major Joe Nolan heads a rescue mission in the South Pacific to recover a downed atomic rocket. The crew crash lands on a mysterious island, and spends much time rock-climbing.
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
50 Photos
Dinosaur AdventureAdventureFantasySci-Fi

Major Joe Nolan heads a rescue mission in the South Pacific to recover a downed atomic rocket. The crew crash lands on a mysterious island, and spends much time rock-climbing.Major Joe Nolan heads a rescue mission in the South Pacific to recover a downed atomic rocket. The crew crash lands on a mysterious island, and spends much time rock-climbing.Major Joe Nolan heads a rescue mission in the South Pacific to recover a downed atomic rocket. The crew crash lands on a mysterious island, and spends much time rock-climbing.

  • Director
    • Sam Newfield
  • Writers
    • Richard H. Landau
    • Carroll Young
    • Orville H. Hampton
  • Stars
    • Cesar Romero
    • Hillary Brooke
    • Chick Chandler
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.4/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sam Newfield
    • Writers
      • Richard H. Landau
      • Carroll Young
      • Orville H. Hampton
    • Stars
      • Cesar Romero
      • Hillary Brooke
      • Chick Chandler
    • 57User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:25
    Trailer

    Photos50

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    Top cast15

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    Cesar Romero
    Cesar Romero
    • Maj. Joe Nolan
    Hillary Brooke
    Hillary Brooke
    • Marla Stevens
    Chick Chandler
    Chick Chandler
    • Lt. Danny Wilson
    John Hoyt
    John Hoyt
    • Michael Rostov
    Acquanetta
    Acquanetta
    • Native Girl
    Sid Melton
    Sid Melton
    • Sgt. Willie Tatlow
    Whit Bissell
    Whit Bissell
    • Stanley Briggs
    Hugh Beaumont
    Hugh Beaumont
    • Robert Phillips
    Murray Alper
    Murray Alper
    • Air Police Sergeant
    William E. Green
    • Simmons
    • (as William Gren)
    Paul Bradley
    Paul Bradley
    • Officer at Proving Grounds
    • (uncredited)
    Ed Hinton
    • Officer at Proving Grounds
    • (uncredited)
    Clark Howat
    Clark Howat
    • Naval Captain
    • (uncredited)
    Chubby Johnson
    Chubby Johnson
    • Bunker 'Suit'
    • (unconfirmed)
    • (uncredited)
    Bert Stevens
    Bert Stevens
    • Officer at Proving Grounds
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Sam Newfield
    • Writers
      • Richard H. Landau
      • Carroll Young
      • Orville H. Hampton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews57

    3.41.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6ferbs54

    Pulpy Appeal, Although I Could've Used More Hillary Brooke

    "Lost Continent" (1951) is a film that I used to love as a kid, but hadn't seen in over 40 years. I still remembered parts of it vividly, however, especially the gripping image of a man falling to his doom through a covering of cloud, and wondered if it would hold up all these years later. The answer: well, partly. In this one, the prototype of an atomic rocket crashlands on a mountain plateau in the South Pacific, and Air Force pilot Cesar Romero is called on to ferry scientists Whit Bissell, John Hoyt and Hugh Beaumont (six years pre-"Beaver") to the site, along with a few others. After a protracted but nonetheless suspenseful climb up the steep mountainside, which the band accomplishes with only ropes (and no pitons or carabiners!)--a climb that takes up more than 1/3 of the picture--our heroes make it to the top and discover a suddenly green-tinted world, populated with prehistoric critters. Although the switch from B&W to that greenish hue IS pretty nifty, it must be said that these dinosaurs are brought to life by the filmmakers using what might be the lamest stop-motion photography ever committed to film; 1925's "The Lost World" did a better job at this! Still, cheaply put together as it is, "Lost Continent" is mighty fun to watch, mainly because the leads are so appealing and convincing. The presences of yummy '50s gals Hillary Brooke and Acquanetta in bit roles doesn't hurt, either. Although the dinosaurs-on-an-island bit had been better handled three years earlier in "Unknown Island," and the notion of going after a crashlanded rocket over dangerous terrain would be dealt with infinitely better in 1968's "Ice Station Zebra" (and even in the 1963 Bob Hope comedy "Call Me Bwana"), this film still has a pulpy appeal that manages to strike a chord in me 40 years later. Watch it with the kiddies one night. Oh...nice-looking print on the DVD that I just watched, too!
    3Jared G.

    Rock Climbing

    A decent cast is wasted in this low-budget film, hastily put together to compete with "Rocketship X-M", which wasn't all that good of a movie either. However, that movie at least attempts to convey some profound message, this film is satisfied with just being a typical "action" film. Unfortunately, very little action actually occurs as approximately two-thirds of the film is devoted to a search party making slow progress up a mountain.

    Although, it should be noted that the film actually tries to avoid stereotypes with the German/Russian guy. For that, I think, the film deserves a little praise.
    5youroldpaljim

    Dinosaurs, rockets and radiation.

    This film features three elements commonly found in science fiction movies; rockets, dinosaurs and radiation, although the latter plays only a minor part in the proceedings. It is interesting that this Lippert production features both rockets and dinosaurs since the original treatment for Lipperts ROCKET SHIP XM, made the previous year, the Martian explorers were originally supposed to find a dinosaur inhabited Mars, not the nuclear bomb destroyed Mars found in the finished film.

    I first saw this film when I was a pre-schooler in the early sixties on a weekly saturday morning show called "Super Adventure Theater". Because I saw this film at a very young age, it's probably the only reason why I recall this film with fondness. Viewed as an adult, THE LOST CONTINENT is a fairly standard science fiction movie. The film moves along a good pace, except for the overly long rock climbing sequence mentioned several times in this forum by the films detractors. The stop motion dinosaurs are only moderately interesting. The effects seem to have been done by effects men who lacked experience in employing this technique. Note how the dinosaurs in most scenes only move one limb at a time and appear not to have been anchored down tight enough. However, despite the faults in the stop motion animation in this film, I will give the films producers credit for at least employing this technique instead giving us tired looking, put upon photographically enlarged lizards.

    The films cast is acceptable, but no one gives a performance that would win any major awards either. Hillary Brooke was given top billing in the films ads, but her role here is minor, so minor that her scenes are often cut from many of the TV prints I have seen. Whit Bissel, who soon become a stalwart in fifties science fiction movies, is cast in a superfluous role as a scientist who falls off the mountain (in a surprisingly effective scene where he falls into a mist) before our band of merry mountain climbers encounter the dinosaurs. John Hoyt has the best part a the Russian exile scientist who becomes the films hero, in that it is rather unusual for a fifties film to have a Russian as a hero. However, all the characters except for Hoyt's, are stereotypes, but the not kind that was typically found in fifties science fiction movies. Thats because the typical fifties science fiction movie characters had not yet been invented. Instead, THE LOST CONTINENT features the kind of stereotype characters found in war movies.

    The best part of THE LOST CONTINENT is use of green tinting in the scenes when the explorers are on the dinosaur inhabited mountain top. I had to chance to see the tinted version and thought it to give the film an interesting look. Its a shame so many black and white films that included tinting or colour sequences are shown only in black and white today.

    THE LOST CONTINENT isn't a bad film really, I can't really sight anything, except for the overly long rock climbing sequence, thats done all that bad that would make someone dislike it, nor does anything stand out as exceptionally well done to make this film anyones favorite either. Its simply undistinguished. It is just another film, I don't think anyone back in 1951 saw this film and raved about it to their friends, but I don't think anyone walked out on this film demanding their money back either. THE LOST CONTINENT is like a great number of movies, the kind one sits through with only mild interest and enthusiasm.
    3"Manos!"

    Rock Climbing, Joel, Rock Climbing...

    I saw this flick first on MST3k, but I have since seen it in its original splendor. Lemme tell ya, it really didn't change all that much. I mean, *sure*, it wasn't as funny without the shadows at the bottom of the screen, but the film really does make fun of itself.

    Honestly, if I'd wanted to see a documentary about rock climbing (especially the climbing of the same styrofoam rock set shot from different angles) I'd turn on the discovery channel. This film is obviously one of those intended for the 50's drive-in couples that weren't there to watch the movie anyway.
    5BrianV

    Amazing! A GOOD Sam Newfield movie...

    Sam Newfield was one of the, if not THE, most prolific directors in American film history. Counting features and two-reelers, Newfield racked up close to 300 films in a career that started shortly after the turn of the century and ended in 1958. Newfield churned out movies so quickly and on such a regular basis that one studio he worked for, PRC (owned by his brother, Sigmund), tacked the names "Sherman Scott" and "Peter Stewart" on much of Newfield's output so it wouldn't look like one man was making almost all of PRC's product. As can be expected, much of Newfield's work is of little or no importance (his Buster Crabbe westerns for PRC in the '40s are especially worthless), but every so often something would happen and Newfield would turn out a film that was coherent, professional-looking and even (gasp!) entertaining. He was assigned by producer Sam Katzman to the Tim McCoy series of westerns for Puritan in the mid-1930s, and some of them are actually tidy little gems--tight, humorous, well-staged little examples of the best of the B-western. "The Lost Continent" is among Newfield's best work--in fact, it probably IS Newfield's best work. Working with a larger budget than he was usually accustomed to (even given the fact that it was a cheapo Lippert production), and given a stronger cast than he got in many of his films, Newfield manages to do quite a good job with what he is given. The story (an Air Force plane trying to recover a lost missile that has landed in what turns out to be a prehistoric jungle, complete with dinosaurs) is nothing much, but Newfield's pacing is quite steady, the dialogue isn't as mind-numbing as the usual Newfield extravaganza, and he actually manages to generate some suspense (a first for him) with the Russian character played by John Hoyt (is he or isn't he a Commie spy?). The crude stop-motion dinosaurs are cheesy and badly done, but since they seem to have been thrown in at the last minute, they don't really detract from the film all that much. If you're familiar with Sam Newfield's work, this will be a revelation to you. If you're not, check it out to see what is the best film in an otherwise almost completely undistinguished career.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The 20-minute rock climbing sequence was mercilessly skewered on Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1988).
    • Goofs
      At approximately 32 minutes into the film, Hugh Beaumont can be seen and heard laughing in the background as one of the men is pulled up onto a ledge on the mountainside. For a moment, the actor being pulled is upside down in a humorously compromising position, which is apparently what caused Beaumont to 'lose it'.
    • Quotes

      Nolan: Look at the size of that footprint! I've never seen anything like it before!

      Phillips: I have. Once... in a museum.

    • Connections
      Edited from 24h chez les Martiens (1950)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 17, 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Затерянный континент
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden - 301 N. Baldwin Avenue, Arcadia, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Sigmund Neufeld Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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