4.6
An astronaut exposed to cosmic rays outside of Saturn's rings returns to Earth and begins to melt away. Escaping from the hospital, he wanders around the backwoods looking for human flesh to eat.
Alex Rebar
Steve West
Burr DeBenning
Dr. Ted Nelson
Myron Healey
General Michael Perry
Michael Alldredge
Sheriff Neil Blake
Ann Sweeny
Judy Nelson
Lisle Wilson
Dr. Loring
Cheryl Smith
The Model
Julie Drazen
Carol
Stuart Edmond Rodgers
Little Boy
Chris Witney
Little Boy
Edwin Max
Harold
Dorothy Love
Helen
Janus Blythe
Nell Winters
Jonathan Demme
Matt Winters
Westbrook Claridge
Second Security Guard
DeForest Covan
Janitor
Samuel W. Gelfman
Fisherman
Bonnie Inch
Nurse
Mickey Lolich
First Security Guard
Keith Michl
Maintenance Man
Leigh Mitchell
Carol's Mother
Don Walters
Photographer
Newell Alexander
Steve West (voice)
Rosemary Alexander
Nora (voice)
Dave Hull
Houston Control (voice)
Jennifer Mulaire
Newscaster (voice)
Director, Writer
William Sachs
November 4, 2013
4
Smelting!
The Incredible Melting Man is written and directed by William Sachs. It stars Alex Rebar, Burr DeBenning and Myron Healey. Music is by Arlon Ober and cinematography by Willy Curtis.
Astronaut Steve West’s body begins to melt after he was exposed to radiation during a space flight to Saturn.
Escaping from the hospital, West trawls the land in search of human victims to eat in the desperate hope of staving off the melting of his body.
It’s as bad as you most likely have heard it is, and Rick Baker’s makeup work is as good as you have heard it is! Intended as a horror parody but switched to being a “supposed” horror with some cuts and swipes requested by the studio, it’s pretty evident upon viewing the film that was clearly the case. Tale doesn’t add up to much more than the melting man of the title walking from one scene to another dripping in goo whilst meeting up with a host of bad actors. He’s pursued by a pal who wants to help him, while it all builds to some fireworks at a power plant where the “big” battle unfolds.
You can’t really do much with the story, after just 8 minutes of film he starts melting and once his bodily parts start falling off you just know he is beyond help. The tragic creature vibe is strong enough to hold interest, if you can stop yourself from laughing at everything else that surrounds him (it) during its Quatermass Experiment journey. The power plant scenes are nicely photographed, the final demise of the creature is bleakly sad and Baker really comes through with the only bit of quality in the piece. It’s messy in more ways than one! But fun to be had if in a very forgiving mood. 4/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$250,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00