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Monolith Monsters by John Sherwood (II)
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Product detailsActor: Grant Williams, Les Tremayne, Lola Albright, Phil Harvey, Trevor Bardette Director: John Sherwood (II) Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Original Language), Analog Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, HiFi Sound, NTSC Running Time: 78 minutes Release Date: 1996-10-01 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Publisher: Universal Studios Studio: Universal Studios
VHS Movie Reviews of Monolith MonstersMovie Review: Big Rocks Smash Town -- (or, "It's SALT WATER, Dummy!") Summary: 4 StarsDirector Jack Arnold Creature From the Black Lagoon again joins forces with Grant Williams The Incredible Shrinking Man in an above-average sci-fi story about a meteor that not only grows at incredible rates when splashed with water, but also sucks the silicate out of a human body, causing people to turn to stone. Holy Medusa!
Lots of supporting actors you may spot. Lola Albright, the smiling yet scared co-star, is known for her appearances in Peter Gunn TV series Peter Gunn, Set 1 and another appearance by weatherman William Schallert (also in another Arnold flick, Incredible Shrinking Man, Gidget). (By the way, Lola is still alive and at 83.)
The "monsters" are really big rocks that grow to the size and shape of the Chrysler Building and come crashing down under their own weight. It's not clear how they suck the silicate (favorite phrase, sorry) out of people -- a little girl gets the black disease, her parents are killed; can we save her in time (violins)??
Damn bursts, growing rocks and the incredibly shrinking probabilities of science mark this above average scifi flick, not as good as Incredible Shrinking Man, but a fun rental on a Saturday afternoon.
By the way, there are many compilations of Monolith with other fun fifties sci-fi films, so don't worry if you don't have a VHS player. I watched this film in the DVD The Classic Sci Fi Ultimate Collection; click on this link to get better quality:
Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection 1 & 2 (Tarantula/Mole People/Incredible Shrinking Man/Monolith Monsters/Monster on the Campus/Dr. Cyclops/Cult of the Cobra/Land Unknown/Deadly Mantis/Leech Woman). The set has no features except a trailer, however it is in glorious black & white!
Other Arnold flicks for your library include:
This Island Earth (he co-directed): This Island Earth (Forrest J Ackerman Presents)
Incredible Shrinking Man: The Incredible Shrinking Man
Creature from the Black Lagoon: Creature from the Black Lagoon - The Legacy Collection (Creature from the Black Lagoon / Revenge of the Creature / The Creature Walks Among Us)
Movie Review: WHAT'S THIS??? ANOTHER INTELLIGENT SCI-FI FILM FROM THE 50'S! Summary: 5 StarsMost people who like old Sci-Fi and Horror films have seen 'The Incredible Shrinking Man', but not as many know about another really smart and interesting film called 'The Monolith Monsters'. I do not like giving plot details in my reviews but, this one does have an intriguing premise that is well executed. Good special effect and I'm sure that is an unbilled Paul Peterson from 'The Donna Reed Show' as the boy with the bike. The transfer is excellent on the ultimate sci-fi classic collection volume one. This is another top notch film from a time when most of these flicks were for making out at the Drive- in.
Movie Review: Finally available on dvd!! Summary: 5 Stars[...]
Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection: There's nowhere to run and nowhere to hide as five incredible science fiction films crash down on DVD for the first time ever in The Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection! This fascinating, collectible set will shock, terrify, and captivate you with film favorites from the golden age of Hollywood including Tarantula, The Mole People, The Incredible Shrinking Man, The Monolith Monsters, and Monster on Campus. Featuring amazing, ground-breaking special effects, these classics set the standard for all sci-fi terror to come! Tarantula An experiment to create a growth formula that could end starvation evolves into a nightmare when a contaminated spider grows gargantuan - with an appetite to match! The Mole People Deep below the surface of the earth, three scientists stumble upon a tyrannical tribe of albinos who have enslaved a mutant- and dangerous- race of mole people. The Incredible Shrinking Man After encountering a mysterious radioactive mist, an ordinary businessman finds his physical size diminishing as his ordinary household becomes a terrifying trap of doom. The Monolith Monsters In a desperate race against time and nature, a geologist and a scientist must find a way to stop the effects of killer outer-space rocks that are literally petrifying people with fear! Monster on the Campus Terror sweeps a college campus when the discovery of a prehistoric fish turns animals and humans that come into contact with it into bloodthirsty monsters.
Movie Review: These movies scream for a dvd release! Summary: 5 Stars The film The Monolith Monsters, is one of the more thoughtful
of the fifties sci-fi movies.
This film along with The Day the Earth Stood Still. and When
Worlds Collide. Take a philosophical approch to great question "What if?".
These are great science fiction movies should have been released on to dvd long ago! (or at least re-released on vhs)
Movie Review: Vote here if you want the dvd released... Summary: 5 StarsPlease vote that this review was helpful to encourage the distributors to release this fantastic movie on DVD. Thanks.
Summary of Monolith MonstersFirst off, be advised that the Monolith Monsters are not really monsters in the conventional sense (meaning a guy in a hideous rubber suit wreaking havoc). That having been said, this is still a very effective, standout Fifties sci-fi film. A meteor crashes near a desert town, and the fragments of the meteor crystallize very quickly when exposed to water. They also suck the moisture from humans, turning them stiff as boards. The rocks (black and shiny, like obsidian) grow to great heights and fall over from their own weight, with each shard of the rock starting the process over again. Of course, a thunderstorm accelerates everything. It's up to the townspeople to stop the advance of the menace before it overruns everything. Based on a story by Jack Arnold (director of Creature from the Black Lagoon), Monolith's production values are very good for the time, with the huge, menacing black rocks sometimes resembling the Chrysler Building. There are plenty of recognizable character actors to be seen, and a sense of pacing and tension that's above average for the genre. With its inventive premise, The Monolith Monsters is quite a bit better than the usual cheapo drive-in sci-fi from the mid-Fifties. --Jerry Renshaw
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