The Crawling Eye Streaming
Vendredi, septembre 3rd, 2010![]() |
The Crawling Eye Streaming.
Movie Title: The Crawling Eye The Crawling Eye is available for streaming or downloading. |
The Crawling Peer (1958) had numerous monikers like The Creeping Search For, The Flying Peek, and even Creature from Another World, but started out as a British television serial titled The Trollenberg Scare (this is the title that appears in the beginning of this version of the film) . Apparently the series was accepted enough to warrant the making of film versions for European and American distribution. The film stars Forrest Tucker, who, while not an modern member of the series, was brought in by the British studios in order to better promote the film in America. Unusual series actors that transferred from the television version to the film version were Janet Munro and Laurence Payne.
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The film starts off with three climbers on the side of a mountain, and one of the climbers suffers a serious case of death from the loss of his head (off-screen) . The other two freak out and then we cleave to three characters on a utter, two being the Pilgrim sisters Sarah (Jennifer Jayne) and Anne (Janet Munro) while the third being Alan Brooks (Forrest Tucker) . All three bag off at the same finish, and manufacture for a hotel advance the disagreeable of the Swiss Alps. Brooks arrived at the inquire of of a friend, Professor Crevett (Warren Mitchell), who works in a nearby observatory and has disturbing news. The two sisters, one with telepathic abilities (Munro’s character), are inexplicably drawn to the mountain. We soon learn that something is stealing mountain climber’s heads, leading some villagers to fill an terrible snowman with a guillotine is on the loose, aptly called `The De-Nogginizer’ (okay, no one said it, but I opinion it) . Brooks makes his device to the observatory and meets with his friend Professor Crevett. Crevett gives Brooks the ten cent tour, bragging on and on about his wonderfully fabulous, technologically advanced and highly fortified observatory to which Brooks cuts it shorts and asks why he was dragged out here. Dr. Crevett shows Brooks a cloud on the mountain, and makes a reference to a shared past experience and believes there is a link to the cloud and the fresh spate of deaths on the mountain. Turns out there is…
Not distinguished point in going into the account too mighty more, spoiling the fun for everyone, but I will articulate you this, there are more deaths by beheading, giant eyeball creatures, zombies, mysterious ice clouds, and some other wintry surprises. As funny as all this sounds, the overall sense of the film is serious…even though the viewer will rupture out into laughter, especially at the special effects. The tentacled eyeball creatures various appearances impartial do not allow for the keeping of a straight face. I couldn’t benefit wonder if they had kept the mystique of the fog, revealing less about what was inside, if that would have made the film powerful more scary than it was…the tension was certainly there up until the point when the creatures were revealed, as the cloud hid its’ secrets well, prowling the mountain, signaling death was coming. Well, being the 50’s, you needed some astounding creature, be it giant eyeballs, flying brains, or disembodied hands. If you didn’t, you were splendid powerful cheating the audience. I really enjoyed the number of elements eager in the anecdote, and how nicely these things were tied together. That’s not to say everything works and there are no set holes, but the film is tight, and any missing station points are minor and not very detectable. This film is objective all out 50′ sci-fi fun, great in the vein of another movie that came out in the same year, Fiend Without a Face. Cornball? Maybe, but certainly worth watching. Forrest Tucker is sizable taking time off from his usual westerner/action films to star here. He certainly doesn’t seem to fit the fragment in the beginning; at least to me, but as the film progresses, he makes it work, like pounding a square peg into a round hole. Janet Munro is pretty, and I had fair recently saw her in The day the Earth Caught Fire (1961), but the dependable view catcher was the actress who played the character of her sister, Sarah Pilgrim, Jennifer Jayne. Yowsa! Along with being an actress, I found out she is also a writer, and is responsible for (as Jay Fairbanks) the comedy/horror/musical Son of Dracula (1974) starring Harry Nilsson, Ringo Starr, and a slew of other musical talents.
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Image and Wade Williams prove a really nice looking wide conceal print here. The characterize is crisp and sure, and suffers shrimp deterioration. Also, this is the European edition; hence the beginning credits stating The Trollenberg Dismay as the title. A trailer is available on the disc, but it certainly suffered the ravages of time, looking very outmoded and damaged. There is also liner notes written by journalist, columnist, film historian, radio and television commentator David Del Valle, who is considered to be one of the leading authorities on the horror/science-fiction/cult and fantasy film genres. If you can fetch a better giant, killer eyeballs from region movie I’d like to explore it.
Cookieman108
I saw this film as a child and it really tremulous me. It doesn’t fright me any more, but I unexcited appreciate it. It has a huge script, good directing, and really cold monsters. The scare begins gradually with mountain climbers disappearing and later being found with their heads ripped off. Enter Forrest Tucker (star of many fims and the TV series F troop) as a U.N official dragged into the investigation of the “accidents.” Also starring in the film is the fine Janet Munro as a psychic who can communicate with the aliens. The tension builds up as the cloud, where the monsters camouflage, gradually moves towards the local village. The first appearance of the giant, crawling monsters with one glimpse is helpful. Although the itsy-bitsy special effects present in the climactic scene as the besieged humans fight succor with Molotov cocktails, it is aloof first rate. Trivia note: following this film Janet Munro would do a series of Walt Disney flicks including Darbey O’Gill and the Itsy-bitsy People (where she sings a duet with Sean Connery!), and Swiss Family Robinson. She would also star in the sci-fi classic The Day the Earth Caught Fire.
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