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Mesa of Lost Women
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Mutated spiders, mad geniuses, childlike mental patients, gold-digging blondes, and vengeful little people are only part of the madness in this legendary bit of oddball science fiction. Grant (Robert Knapp) and Doreen (Mary Hill) wander into a shack in the wastelands of Mexico's Muerto Desert, where the sunburned and dehydrated pair tell their tale to a surveyor for an American petroleum firm. Grant was working as a pilot for millionaire businessman Jan Van Croft (Nico Lek), who was to marry the much younger Doreen when engine trouble stranded them in a Mexican border town. Jan and Doreen were killing time in a roadhouse when they were joined by the eccentric Dr. Leland Masterson (Harmon Stevens), who had recently escaped from a mental hospital. Before Masterson's nurse, George (George Barrows), can lure his patient back to the hospital, Masterson pulls a gun and shoots entertainer Tarantella (Tandra Quinn) while she performs a wild dance routine; Masterson then takes Jan and Doreen hostage and demands that Grant fly them away. Further engine trouble strands the traveling party on a mesa, where they discover a handful of strange, tiny men and statuesque women. In time, we discover that Masterson knows the story behind the Mesa's unusual residents -- they're the products of a series of experiments by Dr. Aranya (Jackie Coogan), whose research into the pituitary glands of spiders has produced unusual results. The only screen credit for screenwriter and co-director Herbert Tevos (who helmed the project with Southern exploitation icon Ron Ormond), Mesa of Lost Women also features a memorably irritating guitar-and-piano score and a brief appearance by Dolores Fuller, best known for her work with one-time beau Edward D. Wood Jr. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:Re:The search fo the worst m ...
by Dr_Gor in Worst Movie Ever
"I don't know if any of these have already been mentioned in another discussion in here but try watching The Flesh Eaters or Mesa Of Lost Women or (and it pains me to say this) [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: How About your Favorite FUN ...
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
"Edward D. Wood Jr. is among my top 5 favorite directors of all time! his work was PHENOMENAL... there is no other word to describe it!.... "Plan 9..." is NOT the 'worst' movie ever made! Try watching "Mesa Of Lost Women" or&nb " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
In Mesa of Lost Women, viewers get two bad films for the price of one. First, there's the footage shot by Herbert Tevos for a film that was to be called Tarantula. That name was scrapped when the result was so poor that the film was deemed to be unreleasable. When a shortage of product for movie houses developed, the Tevos footage was taken over by Ron Ormond, who filled out the film with silent-era child star Jackie Coogan, some spider-babes, and a few dwarfs. Unfortunately, even the energetic presence of Angelo Rossitto didn't help enough. This is one of those films that's fun to read about and tedious to watch. The story is more incoherent than non-linear, the characters are woodenly constructed, and the overall film is a dull, tepid mess. Several people with notable credentials worked on Mesa of Lost Women, including cinematographer Karl Struss, who won a richly deserved Oscar for his work on F.W. Murnau's silent-era classic Sunrise. Composer Hoyt Curtin would later go on to write the television theme songs for The Flintstones and The Jetsons. Bit player Dinky Dean Riesner (credited here as "Dean Reisner") had, like Coogan, worked as a child actor with Charles Chaplin. Later he would become a successful screenwriter, working on such Clint Eastwood classics as Dirty Harry. Unlike the auteur efforts of Ed Wood, the spliced together parts of Mesa of Lost Women lack the single-visioned sincerity of such "so bad they're good" efforts as Plan 9 From Outer Space. Incidentally, the copyright date on the film is 1952, though there are indications that the film didn't receive much distribution until 1956, following the success of Universal's Tarantula. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide
 

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