Rating:
****/*****, or 8/10
First
dinosaur-on-a-rampage movie (beating the much more famous Japanese
Gojira by one year) is still one of the best of its kind,
mostly thanks to Ray Harryhausen's sublime stop motion animation.
After an H-bomb test in the frozen Arctic wastelands, a scientist
(Paul Hubschmid) spots a giant reptillian creature before being
wounded in an avalanche. At first his wild stories are met with
disbelief by his colleagues except for an old paleontologist (Cecil
Kellaway) and his attractive female assistant (Paula Raymond).
However, as soon as the monster, a fictional species of dinosaur
dubbed Rhedosaurus, attacks Manhattan, doubt turns into terror and
the scientists, in cooperation with the armed forces, race against
time to find a way to stop the beast. This was Harryhausen's first
solo project after having done most of the animation for Mighty
Joe Young (1949) together with his mentor Willis O 'Brien.
Apparently, Harryhausen was a good student, since the result of his
skill in animation proved at least as great as the master's own work
on King Kong (1933). Many creature-destroys-city films would
follow in its wake, but very few would come even close to this level
of realism. And fun. For a casestudy regarding the role of science in
this film, check this link.
Starring:
Paul Hubschmid, Cecil Kellaway, Paula Raymond
Directed
by Eugène Lourié
USA: Jack
Dietz Productions, 1953
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