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Embryo

  • 1976
  • PG
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Embryo (1976)
A scientist doing experiments on a human fetus discovers a method to accelerate the fetus into a mature adult in just a few days. All is not well though as the child begins to exhibit some horrific tendencies.
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
27 Photos
Body HorrorHorrorSci-Fi

A scientist (Rock Hudson) doing experiments on a human fetus discovers a method to accelerate the fetus into a mature adult in just a few days. All is not well though as the child begins to ... Read allA scientist (Rock Hudson) doing experiments on a human fetus discovers a method to accelerate the fetus into a mature adult in just a few days. All is not well though as the child begins to exhibit some horrific tendencies.A scientist (Rock Hudson) doing experiments on a human fetus discovers a method to accelerate the fetus into a mature adult in just a few days. All is not well though as the child begins to exhibit some horrific tendencies.

  • Director
    • Ralph Nelson
  • Writers
    • Anita Doohan
    • Jack W. Thomas
  • Stars
    • Rock Hudson
    • Barbara Carrera
    • Diane Ladd
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ralph Nelson
    • Writers
      • Anita Doohan
      • Jack W. Thomas
    • Stars
      • Rock Hudson
      • Barbara Carrera
      • Diane Ladd
    • 44User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Trailer

    Photos27

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    Top cast18

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    Rock Hudson
    Rock Hudson
    • Dr. Paul Holliston
    Barbara Carrera
    Barbara Carrera
    • Victoria Spencer
    Diane Ladd
    Diane Ladd
    • Martha Douglas
    Roddy McDowall
    Roddy McDowall
    • Frank Riley
    Anne Schedeen
    Anne Schedeen
    • Helen Holliston
    John Elerick
    • Gordon Holliston
    Vincent Baggetta
    Vincent Baggetta
    • Collier
    Jack Colvin
    Jack Colvin
    • Dr. Jim Winston
    Joyce Brothers
    Joyce Brothers
    • Dr. Joyce Brothers
    • (as Dr. Joyce Brothers)
    Dick Winslow
    Dick Winslow
    • John Forbes
    Ken Washington
    • Dr. Brink
    Lina Raymond
    • Janet Novak
    Sharri Zak
    • Nurse
    • (as Sherri Zak)
    Joyce Spitz
    Joyce Spitz
    • Trainer
    George Sawaya
    • Policeman
    Hank Robinson
    Hank Robinson
    • Ambulance Attendant
    Chuck Comisky
    • Fireman
    Bob Reynolds
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ralph Nelson
    • Writers
      • Anita Doohan
      • Jack W. Thomas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    5.11.8K
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    Featured reviews

    Poseidon-3

    Sort of a cinematic abortion.....

    The whole question of man tampering with genetics and life support gets a superficial and at times idiotic treatment in this sci-fi yarn. Hudson plays a research scientist who's mourning the loss of his partner and wife who died in an accident years before. One rainy night, while tipsy and distraught, he runs down a pregnant Doberman. He brings it to his mansion/laboratory and tries to revive it, while also trying to save the lives of it's three unborn pups. He decides to utilize theories he and his wife had been working on (but were shelved after her death.) When this approach is partially successful, he tries it out on a human fetus, but the results go haywire. He winds up (within days) with the fetus transformed into long-haired Carrera! He then attempts to acclimate this ready-made person into society, but it isn't as easy as he had hoped it would be. He is soon in over his head and pays dearly for his tampering. The entire first section of the movie has a sort of detached, clinical viewpoint with a rather monotone Hudson dictating endless data into a recorder so that the audience can figure out (if it wants to!) what all he's doing to the dog and then to the fetus. This gets tiresome to say the least and it isn't helped by the dull surroundings of his lab. It all seems like a forced, pay-your-dues prelude to justify having the luscious, naked Carrera pop out later and seduce Hudson. (And wouldn't Hudson be more likely to have Jack Scalia slide out of the incubator?) For some inexplicable reason, Hudson's deceased wife's sister (Ladd) lives in the house as well. Their relationship is very fuzzily detailed and her character rarely makes sense. Fortunately, despite the lame scripting, Ladd brings enough presence and authority to the role that she manages to get a few good lines and icy stares out of her thankless part. (She has one ludicrous extended scene involving the search for the planet's ugliest lamp in the attic while a fierce, threatening dog growls at her.) Hudson actually looks pretty good in many of the scenes, especially the outdoor ones where the lighting is more flattering. He does an admirable enough job with his role in spite of the complete lunacy of the subject matter and the nonsensical actions of his character. (WHY is it necessary for the unborn fetus to know how to multiply a couple of numbers before it can even talk?!) Carrera has been given an impossible role to play. Nothing about her character makes any sense at all, yet she somehow brings conviction, believability and sympathy to the role. (It is never explained, however, why she has a heavy Nicaraguan accent. The poor lady was always playing oddities at this stage of her career. See "The Island of Dr. Moreau" as well...) She has one great sequence opposite McDowall at a party. (This hilarious party full of doctors and scientists even includes Dr. Joyce Brothers as herself!!!!!) Other roles go to Elerick as Hudson's son, Baggetta as a sly wolf with designs on Carrera and Schedeen as Hudson's pregnant daughter-in-law. Schedeen capped her place in sci-fi cultdom when she went on to play the surrogate mom of "ALF". The film is moderately entertaining if one doesn't think about any of the science involved. Even so, it could have been a lot better with a higher budget, stronger script and better direction. One potentially disturbing moment involving a dogfight is rendered fall-down hilarious due to the usage of a preposterous stuffed terrier as a stunt double.
    7tomsview

    Bringing up baby

    "Embryo" has a touch of "Bride of Frankenstein" plus a pinch of "Lost Horizon", but all in all, I still find it a guilty pleasure.

    Dr Paul Hollistan (Rock Hudson) is a genetic scientist who uses experimental growth hormones to speed up the growth of embryos. He has success with a dog, which becomes fully grown in no time at all. He then tries his luck on a human embryo and within a few days has produced a stunning Barbara Carrera. Not bad for his first human. He names her Victoria and sets out to educate her, finding that she absorbs information at a furious pace.

    Of course, as devotees of horror/sci-fi well know, these kinds of experiments always have a catch and the growth hormone continues to accelerate Victoria's growth well past the hottie stage into old age; there are tears and screams before the final fade out.

    The film has suspense: we wait to see people's reactions when Victoria explores her world and surprises them with her superior intelligence. The film starts stronger than it finishes, it has some interesting bits of pseudo science at the beginning with even a reference to DNA long before the acronym tended to pop up in every second sentence.

    The presence of Rock Hudson gave the film a lift. The director, Ralph Nelson, had some big ones under his belt by this stage, and the film is many notches above the standard of many of the science fiction/horror movies that were around at the time.

    I think Rock gave it some of the same juice he gave "Seconds" 10 years before; he ends up railing against fate at the end of both. "Embryo" was in that period between his big hits of the 50's and 60's, and before his career had a revival of sorts on television. However he was always watchable and had charisma to spare.

    Barbara Carrera is captivating. She played a lot of femme fatales in her time, but that's fair enough; along with a sexy accent, she had a sensuous look that could easily cause turbulence amongst the male population. She works well with Rock, although she looks tiny alongside him despite the fact she was 5'8" (according to IMDb); he sure was a big dude.

    "Embryo" is still worth a look even though there have been many variations on the theme over the decades, it doesn't outstay its welcome and the stars make it worth the effort.
    barnabyrudge

    Exploitation sci-fi with Frankenstein asides

    Rock Hudson plays a widowed scientist who runs down a pregnant dog whilst driving in a storm. He manages to save the unborn dog by messing with its genes, and decides that if he can do it with dogs, he can do it with humans. He steals a foetus from the local hospital, and uses it to create a female child. Amazingly, the child grows an incredible rate, and is a near-genius, very beautiful woman within a couple of months. Then, Franken-daddy makes his big mistake... he falls in love with his own creation, and gets her pregnant!

    The modern elements of The Bride of Frankenstein sit nicely in this disturbing update. Hudson is OK as the scientist, and Carrera as the female he builds is pretty believable. Roddy McDowall has a funny guest appearance as a chess whiz who gets thrashed at his favourite game by the super-intelligent Carrera.

    What I dislike about this movie is that as it goes on, it starts to go for cheap shocks and unpersuasive horror touches, rather than maintaining the accent on the science fiction side of the story. It veers off track and ends up like any old exploitation horror flick of the 60s and 70s. If they could have just stuck by the science fiction, then this would have been a top class film. As it is, it's no better than average. Pity, really!
    7weasl-729-310682

    Better Than The IMDb Rating

    I think this movie was WAY ahead of it's time. Very few people were aware of the scientific manipulations that could be done for development of new life.

    Also it doesn't hurt that the leading actors are absolutely gorgeous. Barbara Carrera has nude scenes that even a woman can appreciate. What a goddess!

    If you like sci-fi from olden times that mimics the life we are living now, you'll love this one.

    That said, I agree with the other reviewer who noted that it was absolutely ridiculous to put in the scene about the natural language query to a computer that came back with a good answer. I worked with mainframes in 1976, and we were still feeding trays of punch cards into readers to run programs. CRT's were still command line interfaces.

    There are a bunch of hater's for this movie for resistance to scientists assuming the role of gods.

    I happen to be a Monsanto HATER, ABHORER, LOATHER, DESPISER!

    Did ya'll know they "own," legally, but NOT morally IMO, a terminator gene, that renders their seeds unable to reproduce? Imagine if that gene got loose and started mutating flora and fauna. That could be the absolute end of life on our planet. Fortunately, our government, stupid and clueless as it is, has so far denied Monsanto the ability to deploy such a dangerous assault against us.

    Watch "Bitter Harvest" with Ron Howard to see some of the corporate antics this toxic multinational corporation gets up to: contaminating (getting loose on) neighboring farms with their genetically modified seeds and pollen, then suing them for stealing their patented stuff. They get away with it, and have put many hard-working people out of business and off their land.
    6Rrrobert

    Nonsense but not too boring

    Entertaining nonsense where Rock Hudson learns the secret of growing fetuses to adulthood with the offspring super-fast learners, highly skilled and super intelligent.

    The Doberman which is the first successful offspring is a fabulous character (like the diabolical dog in The Omen.) She is beautifully trained and does some great stunts, and is chilling in other scenes. The second success is Victoria (Barbara Carrera) who - surprise - is a stunning beauty. Carrera is good in the role and creates a believable character.

    Diane Ladd provides great support as Rock's cynical sister-in-law/live-in assistant who is suspicious of Victoria, and hates the dog. The most chilling (and high camp) scene has Ladd's character, who has been away, return to Rock's estate to rummage through the attic and retrieve a hideous frog-shaped lamp, only to be followed by the snarling dog the entire time. The dog carefully escorts Ladd from the premises, clearly glad to be rid of the ugly light fitting.

    The opening scenes are rather dull, padded out with Rock endlessly recounting plot exposition into his refrigerator sized reel to reel tape recorder. The film really begins to feel like a TV movie with its tiny cast and few locations. But once Victoria's up and talking (and disrobing) the pace and interest picks up.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      First of two back-to-back sci-fi/horror films for Barbara Carrera, who appeared in the following year's L'île du docteur Moreau (1977). Both films were produced by Sandy Howard and included three of the same make-up department personnel.
    • Goofs
      Methotrexate, although definitely a powerful drug, is not addictive at all, and an MD would know that.
    • Quotes

      Frank Riley: [Stunned during the chess match] Hold on! You've played this game before!

    • Crazy credits
      A caption is shown stating that the science of the movie is within our grasp.
    • Connections
      Edited into Pale Moonlight Theater: Embryo (2014)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Embryo?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 21, 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El embrión mortífero
    • Filming locations
      • La Cañada-Flintridge, California, USA(Mansion scenes.)
    • Production companies
      • Sandy Howard Productions
      • Plura Service Company
      • Turp Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,400,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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