4.7
A United Nations investigator crosses paths with a pair of psychic sisters on his way to Trollenberg observatory in the Swiss Alps, which has been plagued by a series of mountaineer disappearances that may be related to a radioactive cloud at the mountain's south face.
Forrest Tucker
Alan Brooks
Jennifer Jayne
Sarah Pilgrim
Janet Munro
Anne Pilgrim
Laurence Payne
Philip Truscott
Warren Mitchell
Prof. Crevett
Frederick Schiller
Mayor Klein
Colin Douglas
Hans
Andrew Faulds
Brett
Stuart Saunders
Dewhurst
Derek Sydney
Wilde
Richard Golding
First Villager
George Herbert
Second Villager
Jeremy Longhurst
First Student Climber
Anthony Parker
Second Student Climber
Leslie Heritage
Carl
Theodore Wilhelm
Fritz
Anne Sharp
The Mother
Caroline Glazer
The Child
Garard Green
The Spotter Pilot
Jack Taylor
Voice of Beheaded Climber Jim
Anna Cameron
Evacuated Villager (uncredited)
Thomas Foulkes
Evacuating Villager (uncredited)
Otto Friese
Evacuated Villager (uncredited)
Jack Hetherington
Stationmaster (uncredited)
Philip Johns
Evacuated Villager (uncredited)
Reg Thomason
Mountain Rescue Stretcher Bearer (uncredited)
Director
Quentin Lawrence
Screenplay
Jimmy Sangster
Story
Giles Cooper
Story
George F. Kerr
Story
Jack Cross
November 21, 2014
7
The Crawling Eye.
The filmic adaptation of a 1956 UK TV serial of the same name, The Trollenberg Terror is a whole bunch of fun and not deserving of the stinker reputation it has in some sci-fi loving circles.
Action is set in Trollenberg, Switzerland and concerns a creature from outer space that has taken residence in a radioactive cloud atop of the Trollenberg mountain. As the bodies start to pile up and various climbers go missing on the mountain, the United Nations send a boffin to help the local scientists to hopefully solve the mystery.
The effects work has been the source of some disdain, and in truth it’s poor but not the worst from the 1950s pantheon of “B” schlockers. The back projection scenes are crude, but again in keeping with the fun aspects of the genre and era. However, Jimmy Sangster’s screenplay is tight and produces brainy conversations and strong sequences.
Horror comes by way of headless bodies turning up and that once sane people turn into maniacs as “the terror” weaves its magic. On the normal human side the narrative is given a boost by Janet Munro’s (excellent) telepathic darling, something which troubles the visitors greatly and puts her in grave danger. The psychological aspects of the story mark this out as a genre piece of worth.
Elsewhere director Quentin Lawrence does a study job with what is available to him, Forest Tucker is the hero in waiting, playing it reserved like, and Warren Mitchell proves good foil for Tucker and the Terror! It’s not a great film, but it is a good one, let down in some tech departments for sure, but strengths elsewhere make up for its flaws. 7/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00