Curse of the Fly

Piece by Piece...Atom by Atom...Humans Invisibly Teleported Through Time and Space!!!

5.4
19651h 26m

The son of the inventor of a matter-transporter, which turned him into a monster when he tried to transport himself along with a tiny housefly, continues to pursue his father's experiment, while his own two sons attempt to extricate him, themselves and the family name from further disaster and scandal.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Curse of the Fly (1965) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Curse of the Fly (1965) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Cast

Photo of Brian Donlevy

Brian Donlevy

Henri Delambre

Photo of George Baker

George Baker

Martin Delambre

Photo of Carole Gray

Carole Gray

Patricia 'Pat' Stanley

Photo of Charles Carson

Charles Carson

Inspector Charas

Photo of Rachel Kempson

Rachel Kempson

Madame Fournier

Photo of Warren Stanhope

Warren Stanhope

Hotel Manager

Photo of Jeremy Wilkin

Jeremy Wilkin

Inspector Ronet

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

"Henri" (Brian Donlevy) is a scientist obsessed with matter transportation. He's got all sorts of gadgets in the basement of his rural home and his son "Martin" (George Baker) to help out. Thing is, his son has already had a bad experience with all of this mad science, and now remarried to "Patricia" (Carole Grey) he wants out. Fat chance thinks his dad - think of your grandad who concocted all of this up in the first place. Also, well think of the previous experiments that are currently occupying some locked rooms elsewhere on the property - and of one occupant in particular. "Patricia" - that's "Patreeshia" to the uninitiated, has an habit of exploring and when she discovers a little too much she begins to question her own sanity. Can she believe what she sees? Husband and father-in-law both tell her she's imagining things. Then the police show up looking for a missing woman. Who is she? Why are they looking there? As the net begins to close in, perhaps it's the teleport than can get them to safety and new lives? Hmmm. Neither Donlevy nor Baker carry this stodgy and over-scripted effort at all well and though there's quite a creepy effort from Yvette Rees, the rest of this is all pretty lacklustre fayre that is dragged out for at least half an hour too long. What visual effects there are are straight from the papier-mâché and glue factory and the story is just too thin.

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