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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 28, 2020 0:09:47 GMT
Krakatit , Czechoslovakia (1948) Dir. Otakar Vávra, in the Lab , Karel Höger
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Post by bravomailer on Apr 28, 2020 0:24:19 GMT
The Abominable Dr Phibes
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Post by jervistetch on Apr 28, 2020 0:36:01 GMT
TARANTULA Professor Leo G.Carroll’s experiments have unexpected side effects. On his lab animals. And himself.
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 28, 2020 5:01:48 GMT
The Invisible Ray (1936) Dir. Lambert Hillyer. In the Lab Dr. Benet Bela Lugosi develops the serum...
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Post by BATouttaheck on Apr 28, 2020 5:14:55 GMT
"After losing their son, Adam (Cameron Bright), to a freak accident, Paul (Greg Kinnear) and Jessie Duncan (Rebecca Romijn-Stamos), are approached by Dr. Richard Wells (Robert De Niro), with a risky and illegal idea--to try "replacing" Adam with a clone."
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 28, 2020 5:19:04 GMT
Just Imagine (1930) Dir. David Butler. Starring El Brendel, Maureen O'Sullivan in an entertaing odd mix of pre-code sci-fi, music comedy & romance...Notable are the elaborate art deco set designs and the sequence in which character Single O is revived from the dead featuring the first screen appearance of the spectacular electrical Lab equipment assembled by Kenneth Strickfaden, seen again and more legendary in Frankenstein (1931).
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Post by Doghouse6 on Apr 28, 2020 5:50:11 GMT
Just Imagine (1930) Dir. David Butler. Starring El Brendel, Maureen O'Sullivan in an entertaing odd mix of pre-code sci-fi, music comedy & romance...Notable are the elaborate art deco set designs and the sequence in which character Single O is revived from the dead featuring the first screen appearance of the spectacular electrical Lab equipment assembled by Kenneth Strickfaden, seen again and more legendary in Frankenstein (1931). When viewed today, what's perhaps among the film's more remarkable attributes is that El Brendel was ever a popular screen personality. Just Imagine that!
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Post by BATouttaheck on Apr 28, 2020 5:57:34 GMT
When viewed today, what's perhaps among the film's more remarkable attributes is that El Brendel was ever a popular screen personality. Just Imagine that! Just had an El Brendel WHO ? moment: Yumpin' Yimminy, 'til now, I never hoid a him !
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Post by Rufus-T on Apr 28, 2020 6:18:39 GMT
Some love for Lovecraft?
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 29, 2020 5:03:06 GMT
The Man They Could Not Hang (1939) & The Man with Nine Lives (1940) Both entertaining crime horror sci-fi films were directed by Nick Grinde. The films were based in part on the real-life saga of Dr. Robert Cornish, a University of California professor who, in 1934, announced he had restored life to a dog named Lazarus, one he had previously put to death by clinical means... In the Lab is Boris Karloff first up Dr. Savaard who is obsessed with experimenting in cryonics... Likewise Dr. Leon Kravaal
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 29, 2020 5:17:03 GMT
Hey there Rufus-T Many Thanks interested to learn of Re-Animator looks like an entertaining classic & considered a cult film , will have to check out...
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Post by london777 on Apr 29, 2020 13:15:08 GMT
The Serpent's Egg (1977) is Ingmar Bergman's most atypical and unloved work and his only Hollywood-backed movie. Set in Berlin in 1923 it is a pastiche of the Expressionist style. Much of the plot concerns the attempts of a mad scientist to breed Supermen in his laboratory. He is played by Heinz Bennent, father of the extraordinary child actor David Bennent in "The Tin Drum", a rather more successful attempt to portray the rise of Nazism.
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Post by teleadm on Apr 29, 2020 17:29:10 GMT
The Mad Doctor of Market Street 1942: Lionel Atwill plays the mad doctor or misunderstood genius who has invented a way to wake up the dead within three days. This is a Universal low budget programmer, played for laughs and not horror, and very lame comedy too.
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 29, 2020 23:41:02 GMT
The gadgetry-filed laboratory of Ming the Merciless from the entertaining Flash Gordon Serial (1936) With a large budget of its own the serial also used re-decorated sets from Universal’s bigger-budgeted films, among them the Bride of Frankenstein and Dracula. This lavish deployment of resources for the Serial creates a wonderfully exciting futuristic & sinister atmosphere...
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Post by manfromplanetx on Apr 30, 2020 1:14:01 GMT
Forensic Science in the Lab... William Gillette was the first actor to be universally acclaimed for portraying Sherlock Holmes, having written and staged the first authorized play in 1899. The 1916 film pictured is the only preserved record of him doing Sherlock Holmes. For ease of delivering his lines it was Gillette who discarded the straight pipe & gave Sherlock Holmes his famous trademark curved pipe. This film was thought to have been lost forever until it was discovered in the archives of the Cinémathèque Française in Paris in 2014... In the Lab with Basil Rathbone as Holmes
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Post by Rufus-T on Apr 30, 2020 19:08:31 GMT
Hey there Rufus-T Many Thanks interested to learn of Re-Animator looks like an entertaining classic & considered a cult film , will have to check out... The first time watched back then I found it very gory. I learn about H.P. Lovecraft a few years ago and re-watched it and found it very funny in many ways. It is based on a Lovecraft short story, very different from the short story though. It is worth watching if you like horror/comedy like those of Evil Dead 2 or Slither.
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Post by fangirl1975 on Apr 30, 2020 19:35:53 GMT
Sil in SPECIES was an escaped lab creation.
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Post by london777 on Apr 30, 2020 19:45:05 GMT
Sil in SPECIES was an escaped lab creation.
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Post by bravomailer on Apr 30, 2020 19:59:28 GMT
Chuck searches for a cure in Omega Man but is handy with an M76 too.
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Post by bravomailer on May 1, 2020 15:23:25 GMT
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