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4,6/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.Dr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.Dr. Bernard Adrian is a kindly mad scientist who seeks to cure a young woman's polio. He needs spinal fluid from a human to complete the formula for his experimental serum.
Gertrude Hoffman
- Jane - Adrian's Housekeeper
- (as Gertrude W. Hoffman)
Jessie Arnold
- Mrs. Brill
- (non crédité)
Billy Bletcher
- Short Mustached Posse Man
- (non crédité)
Harry C. Bradley
- Quinn
- (non crédité)
George Cleveland
- Mr. Howley
- (non crédité)
Ray Corrigan
- Nabu the Gorilla
- (non crédité)
Pauline Drake
- Young Girl
- (non crédité)
Mary Field
- Mrs. Mason
- (non crédité)
Gibson Gowland
- Posse Member
- (non crédité)
Julia Griffith
- Townswoman
- (non crédité)
I. Stanford Jolley
- Ape Trainer
- (non crédité)
Stan Jolley
- Boy in Soda Shop
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe final film in Boris Karloff's six-picture contract with Monogram. Filming began 7/29/40.
- GaffesWhen the doctor is showing off his 'cured' guinea pigs, one of the poor critters falls off the table, at the end of the shot.
- Citations
Danny Foster: I don't like things I can't understand.
- ConnexionsEdited from Under the Big Top (1938)
- Bandes originalesSobre las Olas (Over the Waves)
(1887) (uncredited)
Written by Juventino Rosas
Played at the circus for the trapeze act
Reprised as background music on the circus grounds
Commentaire à la une
It doesn't sound like much of a compliment, but this cheapie was better than I expected, thanks not only to Karloff's sympathetic performance but to a script by Curt Siodmak, who did much better things. Once you accept that the main idea is stupid, you can appreciate that each individual scene is well-written in terms of character development. Everyone is slightly more ambiguous than their stock character usually would be. The "mad" doctor is sincerely concerned with the insipid heroine who reminds him of his daughter, and his madness is a kind of beautiful tragedy. The "good" boyfriend says he doesn't want her hurt, but he also seems jealous of the doctor and resentful that the heroine won't be so dependent on him. There's real tension in their triangle. The hick sheriff is almost sharp enough to figure things out. The town blowhard gets several scenes showing what a well-chiseled wretch he is, especially the scene with his pathetic wife. The small-towners are all various little unflattering types--lazy, suspicious, gossipy, narrow-minded--not exactly an ad for rural life. Karloff's maid seems mute except when she suddenly whispers one word. There's a city doctor who comes on as an antagonist, then gets converted into an ally by Karloff's evidence, and disappears from the movie! There's the wise caretaker, introduced in a surprising pan shot that begins with a black circus worker playing a trumpet for a dancing elephant and ending with the ape being provoked by the rotten trainer. The very ending, too, has a certain power if you meet the movie halfway. The trouble is, just as you're pulled into the simplicity and effectiveness of all these human scenes, along comes another scene with that apesuit to pull the rug out from under the movie's credibility. The ape is the worst thing about THE APE!
- michael.e.barrett
- 16 juil. 2004
- Permalien
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- How long is The Ape?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 2 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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