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The Crawling Eye

Original title: The Trollenberg Terror
  • 1958
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Jennifer Jayne, Janet Munro, Laurence Payne, and Forrest Tucker in The Crawling Eye (1958)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:28
1 Video
44 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

A series of decapitations on a Swiss mountainside appear to be connected to a mysterious radioactive cloud.A series of decapitations on a Swiss mountainside appear to be connected to a mysterious radioactive cloud.A series of decapitations on a Swiss mountainside appear to be connected to a mysterious radioactive cloud.

  • Director
    • Quentin Lawrence
  • Writers
    • Jimmy Sangster
    • Peter Key
    • Giles Cooper
  • Stars
    • Forrest Tucker
    • Laurence Payne
    • Jennifer Jayne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    5.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Quentin Lawrence
    • Writers
      • Jimmy Sangster
      • Peter Key
      • Giles Cooper
    • Stars
      • Forrest Tucker
      • Laurence Payne
      • Jennifer Jayne
    • 136User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Official Trailer

    Photos44

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Alan Brooks
    Laurence Payne
    Laurence Payne
    • Philip Truscott
    Jennifer Jayne
    Jennifer Jayne
    • Sarah Pilgrim
    Janet Munro
    Janet Munro
    • Anne Pilgrim
    Warren Mitchell
    Warren Mitchell
    • Crevett
    Frederick Schiller
    • Klein
    Andrew Faulds
    Andrew Faulds
    • Brett
    Stuart Saunders
    • Dewhurst
    Colin Douglas
    • Hans
    Derek Sydney
    Derek Sydney
    • Wilde
    Richard Golding
    • First Villager
    George Herbert
    • Second Villager
    Anne Sharp
    Anne Sharp
    • German Woman
    Leslie Heritage
    • Carl
    Jeremy Longhurst
    • First Student Climber
    Anthony Parker
    • Second Student Climber
    Theodore Wilhelm
    • Fritz
    Garard Green
    • Pilot
    • Director
      • Quentin Lawrence
    • Writers
      • Jimmy Sangster
      • Peter Key
      • Giles Cooper
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews136

    5.25.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5japhryder1

    Good Drive In Movie

    I kind of liked this movie for all of it's B movie glory. It's a great 50s sci-fi movie. It's a little boring but I thought the monster was pretty good. A great late night or after noon viewing, not even all that scary. Good solid drive in movie or the kind of movie that you would watch on TV late at night. I laughed at various points during the movie but they did a pretty good job with the monster. Even though, it's kind of boring, it's good to watch if you like schlock movies from the 50s like I do. I wish it had been a little more entertaining and scary. But I do have affection for the movies of this period. You can tell that they were trying to keep the cost down. The acting was okay, what you would expect to find in these types of movies. All around fun and excitement for a lazy afternoon.
    7ma-cortes

    Sci-Fi suspenser including creepy scenes and crammed with traditional but effective special effects

    A Swiss peak is engulfed in fog , leaving UN scientific Forrest Tucker a furrowed brow. While , there occurs unexplained and gruesome deaths with decapitations among mountaineers of the Trollenberg and are investigated by Tucker . Along the way two tourist sisters : Janet Munro, Jennifer Jayne , stay at a hotel and one of them has telepathic powers. Hidden in a radioactive fog on a mountaintop , the crawling eye kills his victims and returns these humans to Earth to threaten mankind . If you have ever been hypnotized, do not come alone !. A man dissolves .. and out of the oozing mist comes the hungry eye , slave to the demon brain! . The nightmare terror of the slithering eye that unleashed agonizing horror on a screaming World! It's looking for you ! .

    A frightening and terrifying tale adapted from Peter Key's school of Doctor Quatermass serial . Based on a TV Series 1956 formed by six episodes starred by Sarah Lawson , Ronan O'Casey , Michael Anthony and Laurence Payne , the same director Quentin Lawrence made this film version of this called The Crawling Eye or The Trallenbeg Terror in 1958 . Thrilling and eerie film , more to the point , the scary extraterrestrian monster in Ray Harryhausen style attacks unfortunate climbers and skiers by beheading them . This is a short budget B movie , a tribute producers Robert S Baker and Monty Norman and their skillness for going the extra mile in resourceful invention and their knack for providing in low budget some decent special effects . As the presence of a weird force , a fantastic visitor explains it all and prompting resulting in the spectaculal final climax with primitive but decent FX.

    The motion picture was professionally directed by Quentin Lawrence . He was a craftsman who produced and directed several TV episodes of notorious series (Suspense, Invisible Man, Guillermo Tell, Web, The Voodoo Factor , The Avengers ,Albert and Victoria , Trapped , The Baron, Crown Court, Village Hall, Sam) and occassionally directing films (The Trollenberg Terror , A month in the Country, We Shall see , Playback , Cash on demand, The Secret of Blood Island). Rating 6/10 . Passable and acceptable terror Sci-Fi movie .
    6mstomaso

    X-Files, 1950s style. But better!

    I have a huge and very soft spot for 1950s sci-fi films with freakish aliens and/or monsters. Be forewarned - my view of this film is definitely colored by my unhealthy interest in these films.

    This is a true archetypal classic of the genre.

    *** Weird psychic sisters, *** alien mystery clouds, *** giant creeping cyclopes with tentacles, *** secret government agencies investigating the paranormal, *** possession, *** zombies, ***

    Forest Tucker(!)

    • it's all here.


    This is a very entertaining low-fi, low-brow, B/W monster movie. I am convinced that the writers were asked to include every element of contemporary supernatural, sci fi and imaginative fiction stories and, kudos to them - they pulled it off! Stephen King's Dreamcatcher owes a huge debt to this beauty. If you think about it, Dreamcatcher is almost a rewrite of this film, with aliens that are just a little less ridiculous and a different narrative. And the biggest surprise of all - Forest Tucker can act! His F Troop character was not the only personality in his repertoire!

    Remarkably, the absurdity of the plot is not used as an excuse for exceedingly bad special effects.

    This is a little gem of a 50s pulp film. It's goofy as hell, fun, well executed, and well worth a sleepless night. Far more entertaining that the Creature from the Black Lagoon, and many others.
    reptilicus

    Still a good movie, and what an original monster!

    Not every monster to come out of the fifties was a guy in a rubber suit or a double exposed giant something-or-other. This effective British thriller offers one of the most original monsters ever. The creatures are aliens looking to colonise our planet but first they have to lower the temperature and eliminate one small obstacle . . .us! The cyclopean, tentacled terrors are prone to tearing off the heads of their victims but they possess the technology to kill certain Earth people and bring them back from the dead to do their bidding. Interestingly, the creatures brain waves are easily intercepted by anyone with even latent psychic abilities. This makes Janet Munro our required damsel-in-distress from not only the monsters but from the man (Andrew Faulds) they reanimate to get rid of her. Luckily this movie has two heroes, rough hewn Forrest Tucker (to make the movie appealing to American audiences) and British Lawrence Payne (later to star in Hammer's VAMPIRE CIRCUS). Okay I have a question. Midway through the film we see 2 mountain climbers, Brett and Dewhurst, halfway up the mountain where the aliens are. They take shelter in a small cabin. During the night Brett hears the aliens telepathic call and wanders up the mountain alone. Later Dewhurst gets up to look for him and (I guess) sees one of the aliens coming toward the cabin. He quickly bolts the door but then turns around and screams. Later a search party has to break down the front door and they find Dewhurst dead with his head torn off. WHAT THE HECK GOT HIM? The cabin is intact, not even a window broken, so how in the world did the alien monster kill him? And how does Dewhurst's head get inside the knapsack of Brett who is miles away? No, it isn't Brett who kills him because he could not have gotten into the cabin either. It is indeed a scary moment but very implausible if you stop to think about it. The rest of the movie is very good and quite memorable. Way back in 1957 it played on a double bill with THE STRANGE WORLD OF PLANET X (a/k/a COSMIC MONSTERS) in America. That was a bit before my time and now I am kind of sorry I missed the era of the drive-in. Thank goodness for home video.
    7gavin6942

    Influential 1950s Science Fiction

    A series of decapitations on a Swiss mountainside appear to be connected to a mysterious radioactive cloud, not unlike one that appeared in the Andes years earlier.

    Although one of the earliest films to be lampooned on "Mystery Science Theater 3000", there is no denying the growing reputation this movie has received over the years: not only was it referenced in Stephen King's "It", but was also the primary influence behind John Carpenter's minimalist masterpiece "The Fog" (which itself has gone on to influence others).

    "Crawling Eye" was the debut feature for director Quentin Lawrence, and probably remains his best-known work. Writer Jimmy Sangster (adapting the work of Peter Key) had only been working a few years, but was a rising star with such Hammer classics as "Dracula" and "Curse of Frankenstein" under his belt. Here he crafts a tale of science gone wrong mixed with the living dead, and done to perfection.

    Most interestingly, shortly before the film was released, Lawrence directed a 6-part television miniseries with Key writing the episodes. Today, no copies are thought to exist, and there is no way to know what changes were made for the big screen, as well as what cuts had to be administered to accommodate the shorter running time.

    Leading the cast is Forrest Tucker as United Nations troubleshooter Alan Brooks. Tucker had been in nearly 100 films during the 1940s and 50s, and easily handles his role here as the hero -- part action star, part scientific genius. He is assisted by Warren Mitchell as a caricatured Swiss professor (a portrayal which provides the film's only comic relief).

    The standout performance comes from Janet Munro as a semi-psychic young woman who goes into trances when she nears the cloud. One gets the impression that she had a bright career before her, and indeed was given a Golden Globe in 1960. Sadly, she passed unexpectedly at age 38.

    Today's audiences might find some of the special effects cheesy. Obviously the crew used miniature sets and plenty of rear projection. But in general, there is no denying the impressive use of fog, the freezing effects and the creepy realism of the titular eye. While other 1950s films were busy using radiation as a plot device for large bugs, this one went in a completely different direction -- possibly the only film of its kind.

    Notably, "Crawling Eye" was the final film to be produced by Southall Studios, one of the earliest pioneer film studios in the UK, which had made a steady stream of films since 1924. They went out on a high note, which is always nice.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      John Carpenter has said that this film, with its creatures hidden in the clouds, was partly the inspiration for his film The Fog (1980).
    • Goofs
      After Brett gashes his forehead in a fight, they discover he does not bleed and that he is already dead. Yet Professor Crevette gives Brett an inject-able sedative in the arm. No blood means there is no way for the drug to travel to his brain.
    • Quotes

      Sarah Pilgrim: *Was* there an accident, Mister Klein?

      Mayor Klein: O-On a mountain, uh, dese things sometimes happen.

    • Crazy credits
      The film's opening credits flash onto the screen when the passenger train rolls into the darkness of a tunnel.
    • Connections
      Edited into FrightMare Theater: The Crawling Eye (2017)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 31, 1958 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Die Teufelswolke von Monteville
    • Filming locations
      • Alliance Film Studios, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK(studio: made at Alliance Film Studios Ltd)
    • Production company
      • Tempean Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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