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Persée l'invincible

Original title: Perseo l'invincibile
  • 1963
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
454
YOUR RATING
Persée l'invincible (1963)
AdventureFantasy

A warrior does battle against the evil Medusa, her army of stone warriors and a monstrous dragon.A warrior does battle against the evil Medusa, her army of stone warriors and a monstrous dragon.A warrior does battle against the evil Medusa, her army of stone warriors and a monstrous dragon.

  • Director
    • Alberto De Martino
  • Writers
    • Mario Guerra
    • Luciano Martino
    • José Mallorquí
  • Stars
    • Richard Harrison
    • Anna Ranalli
    • Arturo Dominici
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    454
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alberto De Martino
    • Writers
      • Mario Guerra
      • Luciano Martino
      • José Mallorquí
    • Stars
      • Richard Harrison
      • Anna Ranalli
      • Arturo Dominici
    • 16User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos10

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    Top cast22

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    Richard Harrison
    Richard Harrison
    • Perseo
    Anna Ranalli
    • Andromeda
    Arturo Dominici
    Arturo Dominici
    • Acrisio
    Leo Anchóriz
    Leo Anchóriz
    • Galenore
    Antonio Molino Rojo
    Antonio Molino Rojo
    • Tarpete
    • (as Molino Rojo)
    Roberto Camardiel
    Roberto Camardiel
    • Cefeo
    Ángel Jordán
    • Alceo
    • (as Armand Jordan)
    Fernando Liger
      Bruno Scipioni
      Elisa Cegani
      Elisa Cegani
      • Danae
      Osiride Pevarello
      • Ambush soldier
      Frank Braña
      Frank Braña
      • Prince
      • (uncredited)
      Rafael Cortés
      • Serifo Nobleman
      • (uncredited)
      Miguel de la Riva
      • Prince
      • (uncredited)
      José L. Ferreiro
      • Principe
      • (uncredited)
      Miguel González
        Rufino Inglés
        Rufino Inglés
          Enrique Navarro
          • Stheno
          • (uncredited)
          • Director
            • Alberto De Martino
          • Writers
            • Mario Guerra
            • Luciano Martino
            • José Mallorquí
          • All cast & crew
          • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

          User reviews16

          4.8454
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          Featured reviews

          4Bunuel1976

          THE MEDUSA AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES (Alberto De Martino, 1963) **

          Passable low-brow mythological hokum: Richard Harrison is Perseus – who, rather than the offspring of Zeus, here is the adopted son of Hercules (and an unwitting deposed monarch to boot!). The film provides two villains in Arturo Dominici, an ambitious man who usurps the throne by killing the current ruler and marrying his wife (the scriptwriters must have read "Hamlet"), and Leo Anchoriz as his equally despicable son – who also acts as a rival to Harrison for the heroine's hand; the latter, then, is the usual lovely sovereign of a rival harassed empire (but who, at least, demonstrates a prowess with bow and arrow).

          In this outing, Perseus fights a couple of monsters: a man-eating dragon residing in a lake(!) and the titular paralyzing creature (which, instead of sporting writhing snakes in its hair-do, is a vine-like Cyclops that would better fit the atmosphere of a science-fiction movie, in the vein of the shapeless one-eyed alien seen in IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE [1953], than a sword-and-sandal flick); nevertheless, the latter confrontation anticipates the Ray Harryhausen opus CLASH OF THE TITANS (1981). With respect to the human end of the scale, the ongoing dispute is resolved over a long-running duel between Harrison and Anchoriz taking place at the heart of a tournament organized by Dominici.

          Director De Martino made a few peplums before going on to other "Euro-Cult" genres (Spaghetti Western, war, horror, giallo, etc). Eugenio Bava – father of cult film-maker Mario – served as technical adviser here, presumably contributing the matte work involved in the creation of the special effects. The film's score is highlighted by a catchy but corny title tune heard over the opening and closing credits.
          8Maciste_Brother

          Watch this for Richard Harrison and the Medusa created by Carlo Rambaldi

          MEDUSA AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES is a pretty standard Sword & Sandal: though the story is simple enough, the direction (or lack thereof) makes the story look more convoluted than need be and it probably didn't make much sense to kids who saw this in theaters back in 1963. There are good guys and bad guys who fight for power. You know, the usual stuff. But there are some really good things in this meandering mini-epic: this first good thing is Richard Harrison. Harrison is one of the best actor to appear in S&S films. He's handsome, in good shape (but he's no Steve Reeves) and he can actually act. Every Peplum I've seen with Richard Harrison, he always stood out and gave believable performances even if the material was anything close to being believable.

          The second and the most remarkable thing about MEDUSA AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES is the Medusa itself. The Medusa in this film is a tentacled monster instead of a woman with vipers for hair. When I saw it for the first time my jaw was on the floor. It's by far the coolest thing I've ever seen in a movie. A truly one of a kind creation. The Medusa, totally in black, looks like an evil tree and moves around with spidery roots and has a uber thick nest of tentacles for hair, and it freezes men into statues of stone with its single huge glowing white eye. We see it walk around in a misty landscape which is strewn with marbled soldiers. Some might find it cheesy but I thought the effect was amazing. The Medusa appears from head to toe, for several seconds, in full frame. No CGI here. Very evocative. Like a 1960s pulpy science fiction cover come to life. Carlo Rambaldi is a genius. I wish the (uninspired) direction was at the level of Rambaldi's imagination and it knew how to utilize the remarkable creation to the max.

          There's also a full-sized dragon designed by Rambaldi which is also cool but it's pretty obvious it's mechanical after being on screen for a few minutes. It never leaves the beach and only the head moves. It doesn't compare to the Medusa though, which is, along with Richard Harrison, the main reason(s) to watch this film. Even with all its weaknesses, certainly with the weak script and workman-like direction, MEDUSA VS TE SON OF HERCULES is an overlooked fantasy film. It preceded almost every fantasy film of its type, including JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS. I give 5 stars for the film but a full 10 stars for the Medusa, so an average of 7 stars.
          5steve.schonberger

          cheesy but entertaining action

          This movie is not a literary dramatization of classical mythology. Instead it's a melodramatic action movie. The plot takes some long divergences away from the mythological sources, and has a few bits that don't quite make sense, but it does the job of carrying the characters from one action scene to another. The introduction tells us that Perseus is an honorary Son of Hercules, for no apparent reason except maybe to link it with the many Italian Hercules movies.

          The acting is only occasionally good, but it's never terrible either. The costumes are pretty basic, but set the mood well. The sets are mostly simple too, but also get the idea across. There are plenty of extras in scenes that need them. The fights are sometimes well-choreographed and performed, but sometimes look dumb.

          The lighting is almost always bright sunshine; even night scenes look sunlit, just slightly underexposed. The pan-and-scan was sloppy, and sometimes shows obvious losses, like people split vertically while they're talking. The cinematography probably looks better in widescreen versions.

          The worst part was the monsters. The dragon looks decent, if low-budget, but doesn't move well in scenes it shares with actors. It's also a bit on the small side, but it's big enough to threaten a warrior in leather and bronze armor. It looked like a model of some sort, rather than a person in a dragon suit. In contrast to the dragon, Medusa is terrible, even though she's the title character in some of this movie's many titles. She looks like a leafless tree walking around on exposed roots, with a single glowing eye. Myths described her as a woman with snakes for hair, and looks so hideous her gaze turned people to stone.

          The music sometimes took itself too seriously, but it kept the mood going pretty well. During the Medusa scenes, the score turned squeaky, as if the musicians were laughing at what they could see were dumbest scenes in the movie. Often it sounded better-suited to a Western than an ancient myth setting.

          In parts where the movie is good, it's quite entertaining. When it's bad, it's still entertaining in a "so bad it's good" sense. As long as you don't set your expectations too high, you should be satisfactorily entertained.
          5BA_Harrison

          Swords and sandals and silly monsters.

          The peaceful people of Serifo are unable to use their trade route due to attacks by the soldiers of Argos, led by the king's wicked son Galenore (Leo Anchóriz), and the existence of both a dragon and the hideous Medusa along the way. Help comes in the form of Perseus, the rightful heir to the throne of Argos, who defeats the dragon and the gorgon, and commands an army to defend Serifo from an attack by the Argos army.

          As much as I admire the work of stop-motion genius Ray Harryhausen, I was never that impressed with his final film, Clash of the Titans, which saw Greek hero Perseus defeat the gorgon Medusa and rescue the beautiful Andromeda from the Kraken. In some ways, this cheapo '60s Italian fantasy peplum adventure, in which Perseus (played by Richard Harrison) also battles Medusa, is marginally more enjoyable than the star-studded Clash.

          While Perseus Against the Monsters' special effects are undeniably far cruder than those in Clash of the Titans, they are arguably more memorable, the dragon an impressive life-size mechanical model that is wheeled out (literally) whenever someone gets too close to the edge of its lake, and Medusa a tree-like cyclops with snake branches who moves along on writhing tentacles. Both are clumsy looking creatures, cobbled together out of odds and ends by effects man Carlo Rambaldi (of E.T. fame), but they're imaginative and surprisingly effective, Medusa in particular managing to be be quite unsettling despite the fact that 'she' looks like she might topple over at any moment.

          Director Alberto De Martino also packs in more action than Clash, with none of that boring nonsense on Mount Olympus that really dragged the Harryhausen film down. There's a fun tournament that involves jousting and a duel on a wooden bridge, plenty of battles with clashing swords and deadly arrows, and a castle siege. There's even a jolly theme song over the opening and closing credits. It all adds up to a passable piece of peplum bolstered by some family friendly fantasy.
          3bkoganbing

          Perseus saves the day

          American actor/bodybuilder Richard Harrison stars in this peplum epic about the legend of Perseus who wins princess Andromeda and her kingdom by slaying all kinds of foes, human and monster. Since he's the illegitimate son of Zeus it's only fitting as he has the heroic lineage.

          This story was remade much better with a name cast and special effects by master Ray Harryhausen in 1981 as Clash Of The Titans. Perseus is also the son of a queen who married and a real son who grew up to be as nasty a piece of work as his old man. Andromeda is princess in the next kingdom over and her bit of real estate is in the grip of the bad king and his Snidely Whiplash like son. And we always know what Snidely Whiplash villains have uppermost in their minds.

          Anyway the bad guys have both the Medusa and a lake dragon, cousin of the Loch Ness monster working for them. I wonder how the dragon knows only to eat the enemies of the bad king?

          It's his mission to get the bad monsters and as for Medusa there's a bit of license taken from Greek mythology.

          Harrison is a bit of a sculpted Greek God himself. But the acting and the dubbing is real bad in this Italian peplum epic.

          I'd see Clash Of The Titans first.

          Related interests

          Still frame
          Adventure
          Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
          Fantasy

          Storyline

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          Did you know

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          • Trivia
            This movie is better known as Medusa Against The Son of Hercules.
          • Goofs
            Serifos, Andromeda's hometown in the movie, is said to be the capital city of a landlocked state in the vicinity of Argos. Actually, it is a town and an island in the Aegean Sea.
          • Alternate versions
            In the United States, Embassy Pictures released this as "The Medusa Against the Son of Hercules" as part the "Sons of Hercules" television package. The film was pan-and-scanned and the opening score was replaced with "The Sons of Hercules" theme used at the beginning of all the features in this package. Broadcasters had the choice playing this as a feature or edited into two one-hour "episodes."
          • Connections
            Featured in Svengoolie: The Medusa Against the Son of Hercules (2017)

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          Details

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          • Release date
            • September 18, 1963 (France)
          • Countries of origin
            • Italy
            • Spain
          • Language
            • Italian
          • Also known as
            • Medusa vs. the Son of Hercules
          • Filming locations
            • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italy
          • Production companies
            • Cineproduzione Emo Bistolfi
            • Copercines, Cooperativa Cinematográfica
          • See more company credits at IMDbPro

          Tech specs

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          • Runtime
            • 1h 24m(84 min)
          • Aspect ratio
            • 2.35 : 1

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