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The Brute Man

  • 1946
  • Approved
  • 58m
IMDb RATING
4.4/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Jane Adams, Rondo Hatton, Donald MacBride, and Tom Neal in The Brute Man (1946)
Clip: Stay away from me!
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A facially-deformed and mentally-unhinged man wreaks his revenge, with a series of brutal murders, on those who deformed him.A facially-deformed and mentally-unhinged man wreaks his revenge, with a series of brutal murders, on those who deformed him.A facially-deformed and mentally-unhinged man wreaks his revenge, with a series of brutal murders, on those who deformed him.

  • Director
    • Jean Yarbrough
  • Writers
    • George Bricker
    • M. Coates Webster
    • Dwight V. Babcock
  • Stars
    • Rondo Hatton
    • Tom Neal
    • Jan Wiley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.4/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean Yarbrough
    • Writers
      • George Bricker
      • M. Coates Webster
      • Dwight V. Babcock
    • Stars
      • Rondo Hatton
      • Tom Neal
      • Jan Wiley
    • 46User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Brute Man
    Clip 4:06
    The Brute Man

    Photos23

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    Top Cast42

    Edit
    Rondo Hatton
    Rondo Hatton
    • Hal Moffat AKA 'The Creeper'
    Tom Neal
    Tom Neal
    • Clifford Scott
    Jan Wiley
    Jan Wiley
    • Virginia Rogers Scott
    Jane Adams
    Jane Adams
    • Helen Paige
    Donald MacBride
    Donald MacBride
    • Police Captain M. J. Donelly
    Peter Whitney
    Peter Whitney
    • Police Lieutenant Gates
    Fred Coby
    Fred Coby
    • Young Hal Moffat
    Janelle Johnson Dolenz
    • Joan Bemis
    • (as Ja Nelle Johnson)
    Carl Anders
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Rodney Bell
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Ann Bricker
    • Dorothy Obringer
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Clark
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Tristram Coffin
    Tristram Coffin
    • Police Lieutenant
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Peggy Converse
    • Mrs. Obringer
    • (uncredited)
    Pat Costello
    • Car 22 Patrolman
    • (uncredited)
    Joseph Crehan
    Joseph Crehan
    • Police Commissioner Salisbury
    • (uncredited)
    Alan Foster
    • Jeweler
    • (uncredited)
    John Gallaudet
    John Gallaudet
    • Police Guard
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jean Yarbrough
    • Writers
      • George Bricker
      • M. Coates Webster
      • Dwight V. Babcock
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    4.41.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Somewhat Sad

    The Brute Man (1946)

    ** (out of 4)

    Hal Moffat (Rondo Hatton) was once an up and coming doctor but he was brutally attacked and left as a deformed monster. Now with vengeance in his heart he sets out as The Creeper to seek revenge on those who left him in his condition.

    Poor Rondo Hatton. You can read up on his medical condition, which led him to look the way he did but basically Universal exploited his looks and threw him into a number of their horror films over the last two years of Hatton's life. Hatton would end up dying before this film would be released and this would stand as his final picture.

    I must admit that I have a hard time watching his films simply because of knowing his true story and it's pretty sad seeing him exploited. With that said, there's no question that he was an amazing presence on the screen and it's easy to see why the studio would want him in the movies. He certainly does a fine job here playing the victim as the studio obviously went for sympathy towards his character and threw in a subplot dealing with a blind woman, which seemed to be a wink back to the BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN.

    As far as the film goes, it's pretty much a routine horror film but at just under a hour it's certainly entertaining enough for what it is.
    4kevinolzak

    Ja Nelle Johnson was the mother of Micky Dolenz

    1946's "The Brute Man" was a follow up to "House of Horrors," from the same producer (Ben Pivar) and director (Jean Yarbrough), plus the same star, Rondo Hatton, who filmed "The Spider Woman Strikes Back" in between (none were released until after his death in February 1946). Hatton's own back story inspired much of the plot of this low grade thriller (his last film), actually a prequel to the far superior "House of Horrors," taking place before the events of the earlier film. The Creeper stalks his victims slowly, snapping their spines in two, before befriending a blind girl (Jane Adams), who naively finds sympathetic qualities in the fiendish killer. Hatton's performance consists of wandering the dark streets from one incident to the next, while the police investigation adds up to a game of 'pass the buck.' Jane Adams had just finished playing the hunchbacked nurse in "House of Dracula," and would end her brief career with 1949's Bowery Boys horror-comedy, "Master Minds." Jan Wiley, from "The Strange Case of Doctor Rx" and "She-Wolf of London," was about to end her own brief career. Another actress of note, billed last in the credits, is Ja Nelle Johnson, a radio performer who apparently made just one other screen appearance, wife of actor George Dolenz (television's COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO), mother of singer-actor Micky Dolenz (THE MONKEES), and grandmother of actress Ami Dolenz. She gets one opening scene, and another in a later flashback, filmed when Micky was about 8 months old (November 1945). In the ultimate tribute to his mother, who kept the family stable through George's untimely death in 1963, Micky ended up recording a bedtime lullaby she used to sing, titled "Pillow Time," from the October 1969 Monkees lp, THE MONKEES PRESENT. Her credited co-author was fellow actor Matt Willis, best remembered as Bela Lugosi's werewolf servant in Columbia's "The Return of the Vampire" in 1943 (both had definitely worked at Universal).
    8chris_gaskin123

    Beware of the Creeper

    For such a low budget movie and from PRC as well, The Brute Man is quite good.

    As a result of an experiment going wrong at university, Hal Moffat becomes disfigured and some years later, starts killing people. His victims include a grocer's delivery boy and a jeweller. He makes friends with a blind woman but nearly kills her after shopping him to the police and is arrested in her home after she set him up.

    The Brute Man is shot well in black and white and is certainly one of the better efforts from PRC.

    I've never heard of any of the cast in this, with Rondo Hatton in the title role.

    This is worth checking out. A good way to spend an hour one afternoon or evening.

    Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
    8scott-palmer2

    Rondo Hatton's Finest Hour

    Rondo Hatton was a former reporter who began acting in films in 1930 when he was covering a film being made in Florida. During the 30s and 40s he was mainly seen in small roles, often as hulks, due to his large body size and the fact the he had contracted acromegaly after being gassed during the first world war. In 1944 he was cast as The Hoxton Creeper in a Sherlock Holmes film, The Pearl of Death, and achieved brief stardom-or at least cult stardom-until his early death from a heart attack at age 52 in 1946 (he had suffered a milder heart attack the previous year as a direct result of his condition).

    In this, one of his last films, not only does Hatton get the starring role, he has a great deal of dialogue and proves that he could be a good actor when given the chance. It is unusual for audiences to feel as much sympathy for a killer-especially one who has killed several times-but we do for Hatton. His scenes with Jane Adams, playing Helen, the blind piano teacher, are especially moving. Helen sees the inner man without being able to see the physical one, and although as I said he's a killer he gives the impression of a very human, tragic figure. Helen wants to touch his face, but he won't let her; this gives one a strong impression of a mirroring of the life of the actor himself. Just like the character he plays, Rondo Hatton was an athlete when younger, and excelled at football.

    All of the cast play their parts well. Donald MacBride, frequently cast as the dumb cop, plays a very canny and intelligent one here, and he's ably supported by Peter Whitney-looking handsome and slim!-as Police Lieutenant Gates. The photography is well-done-especially considering the budget (or lack thereof) and there are some nice angles and lighting, especially when Hatton is prowling around the city.

    Note: This film was actually made at Universal, who sold the rights to it to PRC shortly after it was completed (and Rondo Hatton died).
    7ferbs54

    An Extremely Well-Made Little B Picture

    Guys, the next time you look in the mirror and don't like what you see, try telling yourself that at least you're not Rondo Hatton. Hatton suffered with the congenital disease acromegaly, which, as Webster's puts it, is "chronic hyperpituitarism marked by progressive enlargement of hands, feet and face." He lived to the age of 52, being felled by a heart attack shortly after making his last film, "The Brute Man," in 1946. This is an extremely well-made little B picture, featuring fine acting by all, a compact story and some real suspense. In it, Hatton plays a former college BMOC who became disfigured after a lab accident and who, years later, begins a murder spree against all his former pals and teachers that he blames for his current condition. He also befriends a pretty, blind piano teacher, who naturally doesn't recoil automatically from the big lug's unique physiognomy. These scenes, with big Rondo and the blind woman, will likely cause most viewers to recall Frankenstein and the blind hermit in "Bride of Frankenstein" (1935), just as his later sacrifices on her behalf are reminiscent of Chaplin's for his blind flower girl in "City Lights" (1931). No, "The Brute Man" is not nearly in the same league as those two immortal classics, but still remains a fine entertainment nevertheless. "Frankenstein" makeup man Jack Pierce contributed his great talents to this film, too, making Hatton (I would imagine) even more of a sight than he was ordinarily. It's hard to feel much sympathy for Rondo's "Creeper" character, cold-blooded psycho that he has become, but somehow, we DO still feel some, to the actor's great credit. Oh, by the way, this DVD looks just terrific; an absolutely first-rate transfer from the fine folks at Image Entertainment.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Rondo Hatton passed away before the film was released. Universal was so embarrassed by its shameless exploitation of Hatton's disfiguring illness (which led to his death) that it sold all rights to the finished film to "B" studio Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC). It's unlikely Universal would've cared about hurting anyone's feelings, they were about to merge with International Pictures, and were ceasing production of B horror movies, so they sold the picture to PRC.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Haskins: [holding a grocery list] Where'd this come from?

      Jimmy: Somebody stuck it under the door.

      Mr. Haskins: [annoyed] Uhh...

      Jimmy: Don't you think it's kinda funny? Sticking a note under the door?

      Mr. Haskins: No! And don't go trying to make a mystery out of it! Somebody probably to busy to pick up the stuff.

      Jimmy: Could be the Creeper.

      Mr. Haskins: [very annoyed] Creeper, Creeper, Creeper! YOU GIVE ME THE CREEPS!

      Jimmy: Well he could be. That'd be a swell reason why he wouldn't wanna see anyone, or come out, 'cept at night.

      Mr. Haskins: Well you've just gotta deliver these groceries. And don't forget the money! A dollar and a quarter.

      Jimmy: OK... but I still think it could be...

      Mr. Haskins: I know! So he's The Creeper. Well you just creep along with that - I mean, hurry up with that stuff! And then get back and do the rest of your work!

    • Connections
      Featured in Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Brute Man (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Liebestraum No 2 A Sharp Minor
      (uncredited)

      Music by Franz Liszt

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 1, 1946 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Грубый человек
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 58m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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