Telluride 2008 Festival
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Tour Spout | Sign up
The Fly
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement
Directed by Kurt Neumann.
Wealthy Helene Delambre (Patricia Owens) is discovered late at night in the factory owned by her husband Andre (David Hedison). Helene stands beside a huge metal press, which has crushed the head and arm of her husband. Held for murder, the near-catatonic Helene refuses to tell anyone--not even Andre's brother Francois (Vincent Price)--why she did it. Francois cannot help but notice that Helene reacts in mortal terror when a tiny flies zips through the room. Nor can he disregard the statement made by Helene's son Philippe (Charles Herbert) that the fly has a curious white head and leg. When Francois pretends that he's captured the fly, Helene relaxes enough to tell her story. It seems that Andre, a scientist, had been working on a matter transmitter, which he claimed could disintegrate matter, then reintegrate it elsewhere. After a few experiments, Andre tried the transmitter himself. Just as he stepped into the disintegration chamber, a fly also flew into the chamber. We aren't immediately shown the results of this, save for the fact that Andre afterward insists upon keeping his head and arm covered. Alone with her husband, Helene abruptly removes the covering, revealing that Andre now bears the head of a fly! His atoms have become mixed up with the fly, and now he is unable to reverse the procedure. Deciding that his transmitter will be a bogy rather than a blessing to mankind, Andre smashes the apparatus and burns his notes. He then instructs Helene, via body language, to crush his fly-like head and arm in the press. Neither Francois nor inspector Charas (Herbert Marshall) believe the story...until, while staring intently at a spider's web in the garden, they see a tiny entrapped fly with Andre's head and arm, tinnily screaming "Help me! Help me!" as the slavering spider approaches (If you're wondering why Vincent Price and Herbert Marshall do not look one another in the eye during this scene, it is because they couldn't deliver their dialogue without dissolving into laughter). Infinitely subtler than the admittedly excellent 1986 remake, the 1958 The Fly is one of the definitive big-budget horror films of its decade. Best bit: the prismatic "fly's eye view" of the screaming Patricia Owens. The Fly was adapted from George Langelaan's short story by James (Shogun) Clavell. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Weekly Theme for August 25: ...
by leeroy711 in Weekly Theme
liked it.
"[quote user="mercurial"] I loved how Matinee made fun of and embraced the cheesy monster movies of the 1950's and 1960's with MANT! And the really hardcore monsters in my book are Jeff Goldblum in The Fly (especially when he gets his prickly fly penis and wants to mate), the monster in Jeepers Creepers (that opening scene with the monsters truck steadily approaching the brother and sister is intense), and King Kong (the 1933 original) is great aside from the racist subtext. [/quote] I just bought Matinee used on VHS for $2 at Bookmans so I could show my kids. They loved it and I had forgotton how much I liked it. I made me wish I had grown up a few generations earlier. As far as The Fly is concerned, I liked the Jeff Goldblum version but another movie I made my kids sit through was the original with Vinnie Price. My seven year old ate it up. He loves the end with the little fly with a human head crying, "HELP MEEEEEE, HELP MEEEEE" It's interesting, he will quote that and "FEEEEED ... " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: They Creep Up On You...
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
liked it.
"Yes, Froggy, I saw The Tingler a long time ago when I was pretty young. It was a HUG centipede suppose to be brought on my people when they are afraid, that is what makes shivers go up your back. hee hee. I remember seeing it and then I got really paranoid that I actually had one in my spine, you know it looked like vertebrae, how would anyone know. It was a silly movie, but I LOVE Vincent Price, he made it good. The original FLY is pretty funny the ending always cracks me up in a sad sort of way. heeeellllpppp meeeeee (in a teeny little fly voice) The Fly Remake was pretty awesome but it was really gross I STILL cannot watch the arm wrestling scene...UGH. That just freaks me out. I can't remember about the medicine cabinet, did he have body parts that kept falling off? " [More]
FroggyBaBe15876FroggyBaBe15876 Re: They Creep Up On You...
by FroggyBaBe15876 in HORROR MOVIES 101
hasn't rated it.
"Ahhh. Well, even if he is the Love BUG, he's still a Volkswagon BEETLE. And beetles are bugs, damn it.On the flip-side, I was just wondering, whilst looking at posts on Spout and coming across this one again, The Tingler, I know, has Vincent Price. And Vincent Price is a bad-ass. But that is neither here nor there. I've never seen this one and is it really about a centipede dealy like the picture of the cover alludes to? Don't think I'm stupid! I'm just...lazy.Oh oh oh! And The Fly! The remake and the original! Being a youngster, I saw the remake first and then thought the original was a bit lame, but still creepy and scary. Does anyone know what Jeff Goldblum has in his medicine cabinet? Besides his fingernails and teeth? " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
While time has added a patina of camp to The Fly, it still holds up surprisingly well. Vincent Price, often willing to ham it up in a lesser story, plays this film quite straight, to the benefit of the story, and director Kurt Neumann's pacing is thankfully subtle, beginning on a note of anxiety and maintaining an eerie unease throughout. If David Hedison and Patricia Owens don't come off as much more than the standard-issue Dedicated Scientist Meddling In What Man Should Leave Alone and his Loving But Concerned Wife, at least they walk through the clichés with conviction. Visually, The Fly is several cuts above typical 1950s sci-fi fare; Karl Struss's CinemaScope camerawork uses color and the widescreen frame with style and understated intelligence, and the effects makeup for the Human Fly (as well as the fly-sized human) still merits a startled jump. While David Cronenberg's 1986 remake certainly beats the original for visceral impact, the original The Fly still feels like one of the best fright films of its era, and its impact and influence are still being felt today. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
are neutral about it.
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
TuffGirl
TuffGirl
loved it.
digitalconquest
digitalconquest
loved it.
razordead
razordead
is not interested.
Arconna
Arconna
is not interested.
patbanks
patbanks
is not interested.