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Le monstre qui vient de l'espace

Original title: The Incredible Melting Man
  • 1977
  • 16
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
4.3/10
5.6K
YOUR RATING
Le monstre qui vient de l'espace (1977)
An astronaut is transformed into a murderous gelatinous mass after returning from an ill-fated space voyage.
Play trailer1:06
1 Video
99+ Photos
Body HorrorSpace Sci-FiHorrorSci-Fi

An astronaut is transformed into a murderous gelatinous mass after returning from an ill-fated space voyage.An astronaut is transformed into a murderous gelatinous mass after returning from an ill-fated space voyage.An astronaut is transformed into a murderous gelatinous mass after returning from an ill-fated space voyage.

  • Director
    • William Sachs
  • Writer
    • William Sachs
  • Stars
    • Alex Rebar
    • Burr DeBenning
    • Myron Healey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.3/10
    5.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Sachs
    • Writer
      • William Sachs
    • Stars
      • Alex Rebar
      • Burr DeBenning
      • Myron Healey
    • 122User reviews
    • 99Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:06
    Trailer

    Photos166

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Alex Rebar
    Alex Rebar
    • Steve West - The Incredible Melting Man
    Burr DeBenning
    Burr DeBenning
    • Dr. Ted Nelson
    Myron Healey
    Myron Healey
    • Gen. Michael Perry
    Michael Alldredge
    Michael Alldredge
    • Sheriff Neil Blake
    Ann Sweeny
    Ann Sweeny
    • Judy Nelson
    Lisle Wilson
    Lisle Wilson
    • Dr. Loring
    Cheryl Smith
    Cheryl Smith
    • The Model
    • (as Rainbeaux Smith)
    Julie Drazen
    Julie Drazen
    • Carol
    Stuart Edmond Rodgers
    • Little Boy
    Chris Witney
    Chris Witney
    • Little Boy
    Edwin Max
    Edwin Max
    • Harold
    Dorothy Love
    • Helen
    Janus Blythe
    Janus Blythe
    • Nell Winters
    Jonathan Demme
    Jonathan Demme
    • Matt Winters
    Westbrook Claridge
    • Second Security Guard
    DeForest Covan
    DeForest Covan
    • Janitor
    Samuel W. Gelfman
    Samuel W. Gelfman
    • Fisherman
    • (as Sam Gelfman)
    Bonnie Inch
    Bonnie Inch
    • Nurse
    • Director
      • William Sachs
    • Writer
      • William Sachs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews122

    4.35.5K
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    Featured reviews

    5Chase_Witherspoon

    Melting Moments

    Irresistible, guilty pleasures like "Incredible Melting Man" don't appear often, so when they do, you watch them closely. Space shuttle pilot survives a near-fatal dose of radiation, but finds that his flesh is melting, and this inversely increases his hostility. After catching a glimpse of his disfigurement in the mirror, he becomes enraged. You'd become unhinged too. Despatching the nurse (who does the longest slow-motion panicked run in film history) he escapes, then awkwardly stumbles across the landscape, disintegrating and dismembering until his inevitable conclusion.

    While star-billed, Rebar has little to do, and is unrecognisable beneath Rick Baker's repulsive make-up, leaving acting duties to the capable DeBenning whose ability to deliver his puerile dialogue without flinching is a testament to his dedication and professionalism. He has some crackers - my personal favourite being when he spies a piece of rotting flesh attached to a tree and on closer inspection announces despondently "Oh god.. it's his ear". A quality supporting cast includes Myron Healey and Michael Alldredge as the reinforcements, while Janus Blythe and Jonathan Demme appear in cameos. Exploitation aficionados might also recognise tragic Rainbeaux Smith as the model, nearing the end of her mainstream film career.

    Baker's make-up effects are spectacularly camp; the guy's decapitated head tumbling down the waterfall is pure gold. Only the terrified expression bares any resemblance to the person off whom it was ripped, but that's trivial. The radioactive goo that trickles off Rebar is like pizza topping; sometimes cheesy with occasional ham. What enthralls some, will appear tasteless to others, but credit where it's due, Baker has done an outstanding job.

    Like its title character, William Sachs' film ambles along, bereft of any real plot or direction, just a succession of gory, head-ripping melting moments, punctuated by incessant flashbacks and stock footage of solar flames. Often pilloried as a stinker, there's more than meets the eye here, and though not a serious contender with "The Quartermass Experiment" or others of its ilk, it's still entertaining late night fare, well worth the admission.
    drjest

    Waited a long time to see this

    When I was a kid way back in 1977 there was an article about this movie in a kids magazine called Dynamite. It looked so incredibly gross that it just had to be fantastic, right? Well, go forward to the present year, 2003. I'm channel surfing and lo and behold, I find that The Incredible Melting Man is coming on Flix!! Sure it's goofy, but I got kinda excited about it since I STILL remembered seeing pictures of this hideous guy with his face melting off in that magazine. OK. I really wasn't expecting much, but I must say, despite the terrible plot, acting, etc., the special effects weren't half bad. Definitely not a movie you could enjoy while eating a plate of lasagna or something like that. But, even the gross factor is overshadowed by the dumbness of it all. To quote a character in the movie, "The more he melts, the stronger he gets!" WHAT?? No explanation is EVER given as to why this guy has ended up this way or how it is making him stronger. And it has to have one of the most depressing endings I've ever seen in a Z-grade movie!! I'll almost bet I would have loved this movie had I seen it as a kid in the late 70's though. I guess that whole idea of what I thought it would be as a kid was ruined by actually seeing it. Oh well...
    5PCC0921

    You can clearly see two different movies unfolding here.

    The Incredible Melting Man (1977), looks, every bit, like a polished, seasoned, TV production company, produced a science fiction film, about a lost astronaut, inflicted with a terrible condition, wandering around the hills of southern California, terrorizing the public, while his friends at the space agency, try to save him. Then, Moe, Larry, Curly and Freddy Krueger come into the production and make, another movie. Then, they merge the two movies together into this mess. I decided to look into this situation, with the obvious differences and from what I have read, that is exactly what happened to this doomed production.

    Director, William Sachs, who has plenty of good credits in his resume, along with a fine group of seasoned actors and legendary, make-up genius, Rick Baker, started shooting this movie and those parts of the film, are the good ones in this movie. Studio producers then came in, did reshoots on all those scenes, which are truly embarrassing and re-edited the film, in a completely different way. The only thing, that the producers decided to do, that I feel worked in the film, was making the Incredible Melting Man (1977), into a full horror movie and not a parody of itself, which Sachs had originally intended to do. Sachs uses, in his filmmaking process, interesting styles of camera-work, lighting and editing, as well as, strategically-placed, audio edits and voice-over techniques. The film looks really good in some parts. The melting-man is what kills the film.

    Rick Baker's creature effects are ok, but they too, suffer from the re-editing and change of direction, that the film took. At one point in the film, we get to witness the melting man's right eye-ball fall out of his head. Unfortunately, later in the film, we can see actor, Alex Rebar's, real eye, poking out behind all of the creature make-up effects. The melting effects worked much better in long shots, back shots and low-lighted scenes. The dripping effect of his skin falling off his body looks cool in some shots. There are plenty of miscues in the film and terribly embarrassing moments, which means, maybe Sachs was right. Make the film a parody of itself, because the melting skin and bones, are a metaphor, for a mess of a film, on the way.

    4.6 (E MyGrade) = 5 IMDB.
    bop_girl

    Incredible is one word to describe it...

    The acting in this film is rotten, the music similarly crass, and the plot so full of holes it's surprising they were able to string a movie together from it. But...

    It's very funny.

    Watch this with some mates and you can all have a laugh as the sheer stupidity of it all unfolds in front of you. Why does that nurse run through a glass door? Why does Steve lurk around his friends house, fertilising the garden? Pre-pubescent kids taking a puff? And what's with the head in the waterfall?

    I'm sure the intention was to make a genuinely scary film, but it's more like an Ed Wood effort. The only thing they managed to do well was the effects.
    7Coventry

    In space nobody can hear you...melt!

    "The Incredible Melting Man" is a fantastically gross, trashy and energetic Z-grade production that every self-respecting camp-horror freak simply has to see for him/herself! The ideal way to describe this low-budget 70's gem is like a shameless copy of Hammer's "The Quatermass Xperiment" ...only a thousand times filthier! Astronaust Steve West is the only survivor of a disastrous space-mission, but turns out the carrier of a horrible disease that makes him radioactive and ... causes him to melt! In shock after seeing his face in the mirror (can you blame him?), Steve busts out of the hospital, leaving a trail of sticky pus and fallen off body parts behind. Doctor Ted Nelson has to find him urgently, as the disease also set Steve up with an insatiable appetite for human flesh. The premise may sound utterly stupid but this flick is enormously entertaining and contains great make-up effects from the hand of Rick Baker. The melting dude's face looks like a rotting pizza and his heavy breathing makes him sound like Darth Vader! Another big advantage is that William Sachs' screenplay doesn't waste any time on tedious scientific explanations or emotional speeches. The repulsiveness starts right away and lasts until the very last moment of the film. Just enjoy this silly horror gem and try to switch off your brain activity as much as you can because, if you start contemplating about the many stupidities in the script, you'll miss out on all the campy fun!

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    Related interests

    Jeff Goldblum in La Mouche (1986)
    Body Horror
    Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner in Star Trek (1966)
    Space Sci-Fi
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To achieve the gruesome Melting Man monster, makeup effects artist Rick Baker fashioned a slightly over sized skull-shaped helmet for actor Alex Rebar to wear. The piece was painted flesh tone and then was cover by a gooey concoction of syrup and paint. The drippy substance would have to be re-applied for every take of the Melting Man. At the end of each shoot Rebar would have so much of the sticky stuff on him that he would literally have to peel his costume off.
    • Goofs
      When the nurse enters the room of the melting man, she drops the blood containers and it splatters her shoes; then, as she runs away down the hallway, her shoes are completely clean.
    • Quotes

      [it's lunch time at the Nelson home]

      Dr. Ted Nelson: Steve escaped.

      Judy Nelson: Oh God. What're you gonna do?

      Dr. Ted Nelson: Uh... did you get some crackers? I told you yesterday that we needed some crackers.

      Judy Nelson: Oh, I forgot. I knew there was something... Y'know there's uh, there's a pad right by the phone y'know, you could write it down too.

      [she brings over his soup]

      Judy Nelson: So what about Steve?

      Dr. Ted Nelson: So, we don't have any crackers?

      Judy Nelson: Ted. Steve?

      Dr. Ted Nelson: Steve? I've got to go out and find Steve.

    • Connections
      Featured in Movie Macabre: The Incredible Melting Man (1982)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 18, 1981 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Incredible Melting Man
    • Filming locations
      • San Fernando Valley Generating Station, San Fernando, California, USA(final scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Quartet Productions
      • Rosenberg-Gelfman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $250,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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