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Bride of the Monster (1955)

Bride of the Monster (1955)
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To most outside observers, Bride of the Monster probably seems like a ridiculously inept horror film, and in many ways it is just that. To connoisseurs of the work of director Edward D. Wood Jr., however, it is the biggest budgeted film in his entire output, made with the resources of a normal B-movie (as opposed to his usual totally emaciated finances) and the most easily accessible of his three horror films. Bela Lugosi, in his final complete performance, portrays Dr. Eric Vornoff, a renegade Eastern European scientist with a plan to create a race of atomic supermen, giants charged with radioactivity. The problem is that the hapless hunters and other passersby at Lake Marsh, where he has set up shop with his hulking, mute assistant Lobo (Tor Johnson), whom the pair waylay, keep dying when he straps them in and switches on his atomic ray machine (which is a not-at-all disguised photographic enlarger). A dozen victims later, reporter Janet Lawson (Loretta King) goes out to investigate the disappearances -- attributed to a monster -- and falls into Vornoff's hands, with her police detective fiance Dick Craig (Tony McCoy) hot on her trail, and a devious spy (George Becwar) from Vornoff's former nation also nosing his way around the swamp and the old house. Vornoff dresses Lawson in a wedding gown and plans to irradiate her but Lobo refuses to allow it, straps Vornoff into the machine, and turns him into a radioactive giant (and into stuntman Eddie Parker, totally unconvincing in his doubling for Lugosi). ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
Bela LugosiTor Johnson, (more)
Director(s):
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Bride of the Monster

To most outside observers, Bride of the Monster probably seems like a ridiculously inept horror film, and in many ways it is just that. To connoisseurs of the work of director Edward D. Wood Jr., however, it is the biggest budgeted film in his entire output, made with the resources of a normal B-movie (as opposed to his usual totally emaciated finances) and the most easily accessible of his three horror films. Bela Lugosi, in his final complete performance, portrays Dr. Eric Vornoff, a renegade Eastern European scientist with a plan to create a race of atomic supermen, giants charged with radioactivity. The problem is that the hapless hunters and other passersby at Lake Marsh, where he has set up shop with his hulking, mute assistant Lobo (Tor Johnson), whom the pair waylay, keep dying when he straps them in and switches on his atomic ray machine (which is a not-at-all disguised photographic enlarger). A dozen victims later, reporter Janet Lawson (Loretta King) goes out to investigate the disappearances -- attributed to a monster -- and falls into Vornoff's hands, with her police detective fiance Dick Craig (Tony McCoy) hot on her trail, and a devious spy (George Becwar) from Vornoff's former nation also nosing his way around the swamp and the old house. Vornoff dresses Lawson in a wedding gown and plans to irradiate her but Lobo refuses to allow it, straps Vornoff into the machine, and turns him into a radioactive giant (and into stuntman Eddie Parker, totally unconvincing in his doubling for Lugosi). ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
69 mins

Complete Cast of Bride of the Monster


Director(s):
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Writer(s):
Alex GordonEdward D. Wood, Jr.
Producer(s):
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Categories:
Sci-Fi & FantasyHorror
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    Rich H.

    The octopus alone almost makes this as good as Plan 9. The use of stock-footage is also extremely entertaining, as is Bela's inept acting. One of the funniest parts of this movie for me was showing the detective D. Craig with his shirt torn off and suspenders still on. It's so meaningless and awkward, almost like the Twilight movies in its banal attempts to woo the females in the audience. Definitely an Ed Wood classic and must-see!

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    Geoffrey G.

    An excellent Ed Wood opus, almost as fine as "Plan 9"! Bela's last real role is a hambone home run, and it has all the special Wood(en) touches like awesomely awful dialog, laugh-til-ya-drop FX (dig the octopus!) and of course Tor Johnson, a special effect in his own right! If yer lookin for a good movie, fergit it - but if you love "so bad it's good" then by all means don't miss this!

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    John H.

    This is one of Ed Wood's "classics"; it is one of those films(?) that is so bad that it is actually good in a comical sense. This is something to watch every once in a while so that one can appreciate the modern CGI.

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