A scientist experimenting with suspended animation decides to use himself as a test subject. Before he is frozen, his wife is killed, and he is suspected of her murder.A scientist experimenting with suspended animation decides to use himself as a test subject. Before he is frozen, his wife is killed, and he is suspected of her murder.A scientist experimenting with suspended animation decides to use himself as a test subject. Before he is frozen, his wife is killed, and he is suspected of her murder.
Walter Rilla
- Sir Keith
- (as Walter Rilia)
Albert Bessler
- Martin - Lab Tech
- (as Albert Ressler)
Wolfgang Günther
- Sgt. Grun
- (as Woflgang Gunther)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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As someone already said, this is a silly melodrama. It's more about a triangle with two scientists and the drunken wife of one of them. The fact that they are performing experiments in suspended animation using low temperatures is really not an issue. It is secondary to the efforts of the man to continue to live with this unstable women. At least her character is pretty believable. She is pathetic and unpredictable. The man is more than patient. The subplot has to do with the determination to perform these experiments on human subjects, which is met with resistance by the head of the lab. Even that is poorly portrayed and uninteresting.
American star Mark Stevens ("The Dark Corner") stars in this German sci-fi flick as an American scientist, Frank Overton, working for the World Health Organization. He and his associate Helen Wieland (Marianne Koch) are performing experiments on chimps, putting them in deep freeze for a while and then resuscitating them. At roughly the time that Frank gets the bright idea to become a human guinea pig, something unexpected happens that lands him in trouble.
Screenwriter Evelyn Frazer and director Bernard Knowles don't have as much fun with this premise as one might hope they would. "Frozen Alive" is a classic case of "more talk than action", focusing on the personal problems of the characters (Overtons' wife Joan (Delphi Lawrence, "The Man Who Could Cheat Death") is resentful and an alcoholic) and not spinning a particularly interesting yarn. It's fairly static, and lacking in style, and one can see that this was done on a low budget. It starts to get better in its last half hour with its amusing twists of fate. Its opening credits are a gas, as the music segues from traditional ooga-booga sci-fi music to much more jazzy stuff.
The characters are reasonably engaging; nobody here is particularly dislikable. Stevens may be slumming, but he gives the material a straight faced go. Buffs will automatically realize that Koch and co-star Wolfgang Lukschy were also utilized in the legendary Spaghetti Western "A Fistful of Dollars" around this time. Joachim Hansen ("The Boys from Brazil"), Walter Rilla ("Day of Anger"), and John Longden ("Quatermass II") are among the solid supporting cast.
"Frozen Alive" is nothing special, but does offer a mild amount of fun.
Five out of 10.
Screenwriter Evelyn Frazer and director Bernard Knowles don't have as much fun with this premise as one might hope they would. "Frozen Alive" is a classic case of "more talk than action", focusing on the personal problems of the characters (Overtons' wife Joan (Delphi Lawrence, "The Man Who Could Cheat Death") is resentful and an alcoholic) and not spinning a particularly interesting yarn. It's fairly static, and lacking in style, and one can see that this was done on a low budget. It starts to get better in its last half hour with its amusing twists of fate. Its opening credits are a gas, as the music segues from traditional ooga-booga sci-fi music to much more jazzy stuff.
The characters are reasonably engaging; nobody here is particularly dislikable. Stevens may be slumming, but he gives the material a straight faced go. Buffs will automatically realize that Koch and co-star Wolfgang Lukschy were also utilized in the legendary Spaghetti Western "A Fistful of Dollars" around this time. Joachim Hansen ("The Boys from Brazil"), Walter Rilla ("Day of Anger"), and John Longden ("Quatermass II") are among the solid supporting cast.
"Frozen Alive" is nothing special, but does offer a mild amount of fun.
Five out of 10.
Yes, I'm probably giving it way too many stars, but I really have a proclivity both for British films of the 60's and sci-fi thrillers about cryogenics and suspended animation. I didn't pay too much for this (it was part of my now-infamous Mill Creek 50-pack called 'Nightmare Worlds'), it wasn't very long (around 70 minutes in my cut), had jazzy, African and crooning music that I found highly enjoyable, had two gorgeous actresses at its core and a bizarre plot (which intercut plot lines of becoming the first to safely freeze and re-animate a human being, with an accidental shooting death that the scientist/first human subject is the main suspect of), and though it was rather predictable, I have to admit I thoroughly enjoyed it, and would easily recommend it to anyone that likes B-movies from the 60's. You could do a heck of a lot worse.
Somewhat relatedly, I would to see any other films that either Marianne Koch or Delphi Lawrence were in. I loved both of them dearly in this film.
Somewhat relatedly, I would to see any other films that either Marianne Koch or Delphi Lawrence were in. I loved both of them dearly in this film.
One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Bernard Knowles; Produced by Ronald Rietti and Artur Bruaner, Presented by Harold Goldman, released as "Frozen Alive" by Feature Film Corp. Of America. Screenplay by Evelyn Fraser; Photography by Robert Ziller; Edited by Steve Collins; Music by Eric Spear. Starring Mark Stevens, Marianne Koch, Delphi Lawrence, Wolfgang Lukschy, Joachim Hanson, Albert Kessler and Walter Rilla.
Anglo-German straight sci-fi film made in the English language, notable for the fine acting and attractive presence of Marianne Koch, who co-starred in "A Fistful of Dollars" around this time. The plot of a scientist freezing apes and humans experimentally is too often sideswiped by romantic subplots.
Anglo-German straight sci-fi film made in the English language, notable for the fine acting and attractive presence of Marianne Koch, who co-starred in "A Fistful of Dollars" around this time. The plot of a scientist freezing apes and humans experimentally is too often sideswiped by romantic subplots.
This one is a little misleading, as the sci-fi is really no more than a Maguffin which complicates an accidental killing. Really, they should have ramped up the sci-fi angle and done something a lot more interesting with it. The acting and the characters aren't too bad but this one fell short on account of it just not adding up to much by the ending. Watchable but underwhelming.
Did you know
- TriviaMarianne Koch and Mark Stevens will work together again in 1965 ('Tierra de fuego') and 1968 ('Espana otra vez').
- GoofsDuring the nightclub scene you clearly hear a clarinet being played.
- Quotes
Dr. Karl Merkheimer: I would like to thank all of our contributors for this very interesting symposium on hypothermia.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Shiver & Shudder Show (2002)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Frozen Alive
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 21m(81 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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