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Thursday, November 16, 2023

MONSTER FROM GREEN HELL

monster threatens Jim Davis and Barbara Turner
MONSTER FROM GREEN HELL (1957). Director: Kenneth G. Crane. Colorized

When several rockets are sent into space by scientists Quent Brady (Jim Davis of Satan's Triangle) and Dan Morgan (Robert Griffin), one of them crashes on earth in equatorial Africa. This is followed by reports of monstrous creatures in the area. Quent theorizes that a wasp in one of the space capsules was battered with cosmic radiation for forty hours instead of forty seconds, and may have given birth to gargantuan mutations. After a long journey across the Dark Continent (courtesy of stock footage from Stanley and Livingstone) the two men come to an outpost run by Dr. Lorenz (Vladmir Sokoloff) and his daughter Lorna (Barbara Turner). When the former is found dead by his associate Arobi (Joel Fluellen), a group -- consisting of Quent, Dan, Lorna, Arobi and guide Mahri (Eduardo Ciannelli) -- set out to find the creatures and destroy them, which won't be an easy task.  

Big wasp on the rampage!
Monster from Green Hell
 is actually a fun and entertaining giant monster flick. The acting is perfectly swell, although I confess I've never been able to get a handle on the odd Barbara Turner. The monsters themselves are either full-scale props with dangerous stingers or are brought to life with credible stop-motion. A decided plus is the score by Albert Glasser, whose music always brings out excitement and suspense in the weird situations. The climax contains a cave-in after a scary run-in with a humongous wasp that temporarily traps the team in darkness. This is a well-done colorized version of the movie, which definitely adds a lot to the picture -- for one thing, the "Green Hell" region in the movie where the monsters dwell is actually green. A creepy scene has the wasps surrounding the gang's camp at night.

Verdict: You can't go wrong with big bugs -- in color!

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