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Les Musaraignes tueuses

Original title: The Killer Shrews
  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 9m
IMDb RATING
4.2/10
6K
YOUR RATING
Les Musaraignes tueuses (1959)
Home Video Trailer from Good Times Ent
Play trailer1:22
1 Video
73 Photos
B-HorrorHorrorSci-Fi

On an isolated island, a small group of people is terrorized by giant voracious shrews during a hurricane.On an isolated island, a small group of people is terrorized by giant voracious shrews during a hurricane.On an isolated island, a small group of people is terrorized by giant voracious shrews during a hurricane.

  • Director
    • Ray Kellogg
  • Writer
    • Jay Simms
  • Stars
    • James Best
    • Ingrid Goude
    • Ken Curtis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.2/10
    6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ray Kellogg
    • Writer
      • Jay Simms
    • Stars
      • James Best
      • Ingrid Goude
      • Ken Curtis
    • 145User reviews
    • 75Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Killer Shrews
    Trailer 1:22
    The Killer Shrews

    Photos73

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    Top cast7

    Edit
    James Best
    James Best
    • Thorne Sherman
    Ingrid Goude
    Ingrid Goude
    • Ann Craigis
    Ken Curtis
    Ken Curtis
    • Jerry Farrell
    Gordon McLendon
    • Dr. Radford Baines
    Baruch Lumet
    Baruch Lumet
    • Dr. Marlowe Craigis
    Judge Henry Dupree
    • 'Rook' Griswold
    Alfredo de Soto
    • Mario
    • (as Alfredo deSoto)
    • Director
      • Ray Kellogg
    • Writer
      • Jay Simms
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews145

    4.25.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5rsartisttouch-1

    The First Campy Scary Movie I Ever Saw.

    I saw THE KILLER SHREWS the first time on TV. Late every Saturday night, the local TV station played a horror film. We were alerted by a fellow junior-high student who saw the film in another city and his "word of mouth" was to run around the hallways at school pretending he was a shrew; so when it was on TV we all stayed home to watch and see what made our friend so crazily enthusiastic.

    For the time it was original in concept as no one had seen "monster shrews" before. The shrews, looking like a bunch of German Shepards dressed up for a Halloween party, have large, saber tooth tiger-like teeth ... they're coming to get ya and eat you alive! Also, one of the main characters is played by Ken Curtis a.k.a. "Festus" from the TV Series "Gunsmoke". We found this a novelty after we read THE KILLER SHREWS was filmed entirely on location in Texas!

    I have to make it a point to add THE KILLER SHREWS to my film library as a campy, low-budget, 50's monster movie!
    5kairingler

    James Best and the Killer Shrews

    I got this movie from the 100 pack at Wal Mart. once I found out who was in it I just had to jump right in,, James Best.. Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrain. apparently on an island somewhere, overpopulation has become a real problem, and these Giant Killer Shrews are taking over the population and the island. just imagine yourself on an island like that where you are being over run by these huge gigantic shrews, I thought James Best did a wonderful job in this.. he was very funny, and his acting was also pretty good,, I guess back in the late 50's you could say that the undertone to this movie was a warning about overpopulation and what it will mean in the future if we as humans try to take over a certain land mass or area... very decent film from the 50's that isn't Oscar material, but not bad either,, I would recommend it even if I never heard of James Best.
    youroldpaljim

    A bad movie but the basic idea is not as silly as it sounds.

    This is one of my favorite all time schlocky movies from the fifties. The shrews themselves look like...well what they are, collies (or is it greyhounds?) in fur coats. The acting ranges from good (James Best, Ken Curtis) to non-existent (Ingrid Goude, Gorden McLendon.) The dialogue is lame. The editing bad and music poorly inserted; ominous music plays when James Best goes to wash his hands! That being said, I have to take exception with those that say giant shrews are a silly idea. Shrews are primitive mammals with high metabolism rates. They consume their own weight in food every couple of hours. They are known to attack animals larger than themselves. At least one species is mildly poisonous. The great naturalist Roger Carras, in his book, DANGEROUS TO MAN, in the chapter on poisonous mammals and montremes, states that shrews the size of collies would wreck unthinkable ecological havoc. Now you just learned something new.
    Michael_Elliott

    I Can't Help It, I Love These Shrews

    The Killer Shrews (1959)

    *** (out of 4)

    You'd think a hurricane coming through would be the most dangerous thing for a small group of people on an island but it isn't. No, it's the giant killer shrews that are going to be the most dangerous for the people who soon find themselves trapped inside a house with the creatures trying to get it.

    This film was shot around the same time as THE GIANT GILA MONSTER from the same production company who planned on using them as a double feature. I will gladly hold my head up high and admit that I really love both of these pictures. Yes, both are extremely low- budget pictures that has countless flaws but at the same time both of them are so darn entertaining that I can't help but have a good time with both of them.

    THE KILLER SHREWS is notorious for the fact that the giant shrews are actually played by dogs with costumes. These costumes look incredibly fake and more times than not they're crooked on the dogs or falling off all together. I'm sure you could cry foul at this but if you do so then you'd be taking the film way too serious. These types of movies were meant to fill up drive-in screens so they weren't meant to be Oscar-winning movies.

    One thing I really like about this film are some of the performances. While there are many issues with some of them, the cast is still quite likable and that includes James Best as the leader, Ingrid Goude as the semi love interest and Gordon McLendon and Baruch Lumet as the doctors. At just 68 minutes the film moves at a very good pace and even the dialogue is slightly entertaining in its own way. Still, the main reason to watch THE KILLER SHREWS is for its "dogs/shrews" and they are worth the price of admission alone.
    4Wilber A Neil

    Not As Bad As All That

    Having seen any number of bad movies, I can state that this is significantly better than most of them, and even better in part than movies not considered bad at all. However, in those aspects in which this movie is bad it is not merely bad, it is awful.

    We have the usual formula of two-fisted hero (James Best), damsel in distress (Swedish Ingrid Goude), the damsel's mad-scientist father (non-Swedish Baruch Lumet), and the villain (Ken Curtis). The formula in this case is less clichéd than usual. The hero is fairly articulate and the mad scientist is actually quite urbane, tossing off his creation of hundreds of giant, poisonous, man-eating shrews with the line "unusual experiments lead to unusual results". The dialog is competently written and the acting is above par (with the exception of the Swedish eye-candy, who is at least good eye candy).

    The general concept is compact and dramatically efficient: a group of people are trapped first by a hurricane and then by an outside menace in a stronghold which gets less and less strong as time, ammunition and group cohesion all grow short.

    However the execution is at times illogical. One problem is that the stronghold is made out of...adobe. On a rainswept island crawling with usable timber? The thrilling conclusion is also somewhat implausible.

    The main reason for the film's abysmal reputation is the legendary and quite obvious use of ordinary dogs in bathmats to play the part of giant shrews. I suppose this just has to be overlooked.

    As a sidelight, it is interesting to see Dukes of Hazard sheriff James Best tall and handsome as the hero, and it is apparent that producer/villain Ken Curtis labored long and hard in the trenches before gaining fame as Festus.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Close-ups of the giant shrews were filmed using hand puppets. The wider shots used dogs made up as the shrews.
    • Goofs
      At one point Thorne and Jerry walk past an apparently undamaged rowboat, which would get everyone off the island. When they return to the house they never mention it. This is most likely the same boat they tied to the dock, since it is not there when they are looking for Rook.
    • Quotes

      [while hiding under oil drums, the refugees are attacked by gigantic shrews]

      Thorne Sherman: Don't let their head get under! They'll flip us over!

    • Alternate versions
      A colorized version was released in 2007 as part of a double feature with The Giant Gila Monster (1959).
    • Connections
      Edited into Pale Moonlight Theater: The Killer Shrews (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Finger of Suspicion 1
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Bluestone and Emil Cadkin

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    FAQ25

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1959 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Killer Shrews
    • Filming locations
      • Lake Dallas, Texas, USA(Exterior)
    • Production company
      • Hollywood Pictures Corporation (II)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $123,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 9m(69 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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