X: The Man with X-Ray Eyes (1963) Reviews

X: The Man with X-Ray Eyes (1963)
Member Rating:  
Dr. James Xavier (Ray Milland) is a brilliant but unorthodox researcher whose work with human sight has yielded an experimental chemical that may vastly increase the range of what we can see. Despite the misgivings and warnings of the two people closest to him, Dr. Diane Fairfax (Diana Van Der Vlis) and Dr. Sam Brant (Harold J. Stone), he uses it on himself and finds that he is able to look inside the human body in real-time. This gives him the ability to save the life of a patient in surgery, but in the process, he offends a top physician and calls his own judgement into question. He won't stop or even slow his experiments, however, and when Sam is accidentally killed trying to stop him, he is forced to flee. Soon he is living the life of a hunted man, and is protected and exploited by Crane (Don Rickles), a larcenous carny-man who sets him up as a "healer" on skid row, taking peoples' pennies while Xavier makes his diagnoses. After getting away from Crane, Xavier is found by Diane, who joins him on the run, and by now his own worst nature is coming to the surface. They head to Las Vegas, where his ability to see through objects allows him to win at most of the games in front of him, but he is discovered because of the attention that his "streak" draws to him. Pursued out of town, he heads out to the desert, and by now his ability to see transcends the boundaries of earthly space, leading him to a terrible quandry and a hideous solution to his plight, inspired by an encounter with a preacher. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
Ray MillandDiana Van Der Vlis, (more)
Director(s):
Roger Corman
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(5 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


Jerel C.

I saw this when I was a kid of 8 or 9, and the image of a staring, wild-eyed Ray Milland as he tries to drive with eyes that can see what nobody should see... seeing through things that you need to see the outside of.... it was frightening!! I loved it!! I'm almost 50 now, and I still remember the impact it had on me. Sure it's old and dated, (nobody under the age of 40 will even know who Ray Milland is!!) but the thing which makes it watchable today is that the "sci" part of sci-fi was not the star. Special effects were not the important thing. What was important in this movie was the effect on the scientist of his experiments, and how he slowly went mad as his experiments continued. Pretend you are a kid in the 1950-60's when you watch this and I think you'll enjoy it.

Yes   |   No


James L.

I loved Ray Millan in Lost Weekend which I think was his prime time. This movie is a typical B-horror film. The special effects are campy but at the time of its showing it was high tech. Plus a lot of folks forget this type of movie was either shown in the movie theatre or the drive-ins not on DVDs or even VCRs. The big screen really enforced the special effects. Anyway, a great movie to watch on a rainy afternoon. Long live the B-movies!!!! Susan L.

Yes   |   No


Jeremy S.

Great movie. This is about the best 1960's era film of this sort I've ever seen. The acting and script are good and it does not come off corny or trite. This is a movie I could watch multiple times.

Yes   |   No


Erica T.

I enjoyed this movie greatly. I am a fan of Ray Milland; he reminds me of my Grandfather.

Yes   |   No


Rich B.

...to be enjoyed. This was probably a good "b" movie in its day, but all these years later it just doesn't play as anything but very hokey.

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    Jerel C.

    I saw this when I was a kid of 8 or 9, and the image of a staring, wild-eyed Ray Milland as he tries to drive with eyes that can see what nobody should see... seeing through things that you need to see the outside of.... it was frightening!! I loved it!! I'm almost 50 now, and I still remember the impact it had on me. Sure it's old and dated, (nobody under the age of 40 will even know who Ray Milland is!!) but the thing which makes it watchable today is that the "sci" part of sci-fi was not the star. Special effects were not the important thing. What was important in this movie was the effect on the scientist of his experiments, and how he slowly went mad as his experiments continued. Pretend you are a kid in the 1950-60's when you watch this and I think you'll enjoy it.

    Yes   |   No

     
    James L.

    I loved Ray Millan in Lost Weekend which I think was his prime time. This movie is a typical B-horror film. The special effects are campy but at the time of its showing it was high tech. Plus a lot of folks forget this type of movie was either shown in the movie theatre or the drive-ins not on DVDs or even VCRs. The big screen really enforced the special effects. Anyway, a great movie to watch on a rainy afternoon. Long live the B-movies!!!! Susan L.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Jeremy S.

    Great movie. This is about the best 1960's era film of this sort I've ever seen. The acting and script are good and it does not come off corny or trite. This is a movie I could watch multiple times.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 5 Reviews