The Unearthly

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The Unearthly
File:Unearthly.jpg
Directed by Boris Petroff
Produced by Robert A. Terry
Written by Screenplay
Jane Mann
John D.F. Black
Characters
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Starring John Carradine
Allison Hayes
Myron Healey
Sally Todd
Marilyn Buferd
Tor Johnson
Music by Henry Vars
Cinematography W. Merie Connell
Production
company
AB-PT Pictures
Distributed by Republic Pictures
Release dates
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  • June 28, 1957 (1957-06-28) (United States)
Running time
73 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Unearthly is a 1957 science fiction/horror film written by Jane Mann and John D.F. Black, with characters originally created by Edward D. Wood, Jr.. The film was produced and directed by Boris Petroff for AB-PT Pictures, and starring John Carradine, Allison Hayes, Myron Healey, Sally Todd, Marilyn Buferd, and Tor Johnson.

Buferd was Miss America 1946.

The film was mocked on the television show Mystery Science Theater 3000.[1]

Summary

At his psychiatric institute, Dr. Charles Conway (John Carradine) is surreptitiously experimenting with artificial glands to try to create longevity; he works with his minion Lobo (Tor Johnson) and his assistant Dr. Sharon Gilchrist (Marilyn Buferd). Conway receives his test subjects through an associate, Dr. Loren Wright (Roy Gordon), who delivers patients seeking treatment for lesser conditions. After this, they are then taken into the operating room for Conway's illicit surgery.

Wright delivers his newest find, Grace Thomas (Allison Hayes), who is seeking treatment for depression. Wright confides in Conway that he threw Grace's purse into the bay, to fool family and the authorities into believing she had committed suicide. He then asks Conway for a demonstration of his experimental progress; Conway takes him down into the basement, where he introduces him to Harry Jedrow (Harry Fleer), his latest victim. Jedrow is clearly alive, but severely disfigured and in a vegetative state; this concerns Wright, who reveals that Jedrow's sister is currently seeking him out. Conway is furious, since none of his patients were supposed to have ties of any kind.

That night, Lobo discovers Frank Scott (Myron Healey) roaming around the grounds. Scott attempts to conceal his identity, but Conway quickly deduces that he is an escaped convict from his description in the newspapers, as well as a telltale tattoo on his wrist. Rather than turn Scott into the police, he offers him the chance to take part in his experiments. Knowing the odds are stacked against him, Scott accepts his offer.

Scott is introduced to Grace the following morning, along with the two other patients: Danny Green (Arthur Batanides), who is being treated for anger issues, and pretty young Natalie Andries (Sally Todd), whose treatment schedule for a nervous breakdown is nearing completion. After demanding Wright to make out a certificate of death for Harry Jedrow, Conway happily informs Natalie that one last treatment for her is all that's necessary. While the other patients sleep, Natalie is sedated, taken to the operating room, and given an artificial gland along with a high dosage of electricity. The procedure backfires, and she ends up a senile old woman. They hide her in a back room.

Lobo is ordered to bury Jedrow alive, but Frank Scott sneaks out to the burial site and opens the coffin. Jedrow rises out of it and escapes, and Lobo - not having been alerted - buries the casket. Sharon confronts Conway about his apparent affinity for Grace, and requests that she be made the next patient to be experimented upon. Meanwhile, Scott begins attempting to reveal to the other patients that Dr. Conway is carrying out horrific deeds to their friends. After a failed attempt to reveal Natalie's fate, he manages to show Grace and Danny what had happened to her, only to get caught by Dr. Conway and Sharon. They detain Scott and Danny and prepare Grace for surgery.

Danny helps Scott escape by distracting Lobo, who fatally shoots him before being knocked unconscious. Scott confronts Dr. Conway with Lobo's gun and reveals that he is not a convicted murderer; he is actually Lt. Mark Houston, an undercover police officer sent to the psychiatrist's business to investigate it. Dr. Conway evades arrest, but is murdered by Jedrow. Lobo comes in and kills Jedrow, but Chambers' police backup arrive soon afterward and arrest Lobo and Sharon, barely saving Grace from the procedure. The police go downstairs and find Danny's body, and then discover a menagerie of beastly men, all failed experiments of Dr. Conway.

Production and release

The film was completed in 6 days by at least May 1957. Despite the title "The Unearthly" the film contains no extraterrestrial elements.[2]

In the United-States, it was distributed as a double-feature with The Beginning of the End (1957).[3]

DVD releases

  • The Unearthly was originally released on DVD by Image Entertainment.
  • The MST3K version of the film was released by Rhino Home Video in April 2003. The DVD was later recalled in March 2007, but then later put back in print in June 2007.

See also

References

  • The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood, Jr. (1996), documentary film directed by Brett Thompson
  • Rudolph Grey, Nightmare of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of Edward D. Wood, Jr. (1992) ISBN 978-0-922915-24-8
  1. Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Unearthly at IMDb Retrieved on July 24, 2007
  2. Internet Movie Database Trivia
  3. Internet Movie Database Trivia

External links