Telluride 2008 Festival
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Dr. Cyclops
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The first Technicolor horror film since Mystery of the Wax Museum, Dr. Cyclops was directed by Ernest Schoedsack, of King Kong fame. Albert Dekker chews the scenery as mad scientist Dr. Thorkel, who has developed a process that will shrink human beings to doll size. His first victims include mining engineers Bill Stockton (Thomas Coley) and Steve Baker (Victor Kilian) and biologists Mary Mitchell (Janice Logan) and Dr. Bullfinch (Charles Halton). At first willing to play-act the role of benevolent despot with his miniaturized captives, Thorkel reveals the more sinister side of his personality by abruptly murdering Bullfinch in cold blood (easily the film's most frightening sequence). The rest of the picture details the escape efforts of the three pint-sized protagonists as they hack their way through a jungle of gigantic foliage and do battle with oversized wildlife. Though the cheery Technicolor hues tend to dilute the "scare" quotient in Dr. Cyclops, the special effects are superbly convincing throughout. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Ernest B. Schoedsack, who had earlier co-directed King Kong, once explained that the entire technical side of Dr. Cyclops had been "plotted on blueprints before shooting began," a common enough method today, but apparently unusual in 1940. The result is one of those early science fiction-thrillers that it is very hard to dislike. Although the once so frightening aspects of the tale may have been lessened by later explorations into the art of shrinking living tissue -- The Incredible Shrinking Man from 1957 immediately comes to mind -- Dr. Cyclops remains an entertaining treatise on the subject. It is still fun to watch a group of stock company players deal with the sudden dangers of giant-sized household items and one can still marvel at the obvious ingenuity that went into making the film, Albert Dekker's rather obvious mechanical hand notwithstanding. Unfortunately, the story that screenwriter Tom Kilpatrick concocted and the performances of the mostly unknown cast are routine at best, and the garish Technicolor seems an unnecessary addition. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 

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