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Unknown Island

Unknown Island (1948)

October. 15,1948
|
5
| Science Fiction

Adventure-seeker Ted Osborne has convinced his finacee Carole to finance his expedition to an uncharted South Pacific island supposedly populated with dinosaurs...

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Alicia
1948/10/15

I love this movie so much

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Cubussoli
1948/10/16

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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VeteranLight
1948/10/17

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

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Juana
1948/10/18

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Michael_Elliott
1948/10/19

Unknown Island (1948) ** 1/2 (out of 4)Carole Lane (Virginia Grey) agrees to finance her fiancés (Philip Reed) trip to a tropical island where there are rumors of prehistoric monsters. They hired Captain Tarnowski (Carton MacLane) to take them there but he forces an alcoholic (Richard Denning) into going with them because at one point he claimed to have been on the island and saw the monsters.I stumbling into this movie because I was looking for Unknown WORLD but this one came up. I'm really shocked that I hadn't seen it before since I had seen a lot of these KING KONG inspired movies but I'm glad I got around to this one because it was a lot better than I was expecting it to be. Obviously they were working on a very small budget but the screenplay offered up some entertaining character and the rubber monsters are certainly fun as well.The main reason people are going to be watching this movie are for the monsters and for my money they certainly delivered. The monsters were played by actors in rubber suits and this is quite obvious as the movements are very slow and it's obvious that the people inside are having trouble walking in them. There's also a large ape, which is obvious a rip of KING KONG but I actually liked the costume and its rat face. Again, the rubber suits are rather laughable but there's plenty of action with the ape and the dinosaurs, which help keep the entertainment high.When the monsters aren't on the screen we're also entertained by the very good cast. Bruce is certainly as lovely as ever and MacLane is perfect as the snake Captain who I'm sure people hissed at when this was first released. The supporting players are strong as well. With all the silly action and good characters, UNKNOWN ISLAND is a real winner for such a low-budget movie.

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henri sauvage
1948/10/20

Filmed in gloriously murky Cinecolor, Barton MacLane dominates this 1948 entry in the "Lost World" genre as a rough, tough, sea captain who likes to hang out down by the pier and dress in women's clothing.OK, I stole the cross-dressing bit from Monty Python, but MacLane's character is definitely several hotcakes shy of a full stack, with a disturbing habit of cackling wildly over things that aren't very funny at all. I wouldn't hire this obvious psycho for a day-cruise on a koi pond, but even though Laughing Boy scarcely bothers to hide his lecherous intentions toward Virginia Grey, she and her fiancé Phillip Reed seem to have few qualms about chartering his ship for an expedition to the Unknown Island.We learn that back during WWII, former fighter pilot Reed was on a solo recon mission in this part of the Pacific, when he flew over an island where he spotted a dinosaur cavorting in the bush. Naturally, he kept this incident to himself, although he did note his position and snap a photo for evidence. Now that the war's over, he's itching to cash in on his discovery.Richard Denning -- a beachcomber and alcoholic who's bumming drinks at the very same low dive where Grey and Reed rendezvous with Laughing Boy to discuss hiring his ship -- is the lone survivor of a group of war buddies who got shipwrecked on the title island. Seeing his friends devoured by prehistoric beasties and then spending a week adrift on a raft with no shelter or provisions has understandably left him a basket case. After seeing Reed's photo, MacLane -- who may be nuts but he isn't stupid -- realizes that Denning's crazy story about dinosaurs scarfing down his mates must be true. Figuring his experience on the island might come in handy, they try to sign him up for the expedition. Denning sensibly wants nothing to do with it, but MacLane's one of those "Getting to 'Yes!'" types, so he has the bartender slip Richard a mickey and shanghais him.The voyage to the island gives Denning a chance to dry out and clean up nicely. MacLane gets an opportunity to try out his beefy, blustering charms on Grey, and there's also a quickly-put-down mutiny among his Laskar crew thrown in for some needed padding (the film's only got an hour-and-a-quarter running time) and to underscore just how rough and tough he is.They finally arrive at Unknown Island, to find it populated by a grab-bag of rubbery puppets, guys in very uncomfortable-looking Ceratosaur (kind of like a T-Rex, with a horn on its nose) suits, and special guest star Ray "Crash" Corrigan as a Giant Sloth. (Unfortunately, his costume looks even less like a Giant Sloth than the other guys' suits look like Ceratosaurs, which is to say, "Not much at all.") I'll give them this much: At least they didn't go for the standard old school cut-rate dinosaur effect of gluing fins on lizards.I confess the Ceratosaurs scared the spit out of me when I first saw this film on TV, but I *was* only six years old at the time. Even though the suits are an interesting design -- early versions of the sort of thing which would later make Toho Studios famous -- the best their poor operators can manage is to lurch about and waddle stiffly toward their prey. A moderately spry 90-year-old with a walker could easily outdistance these fearsome predators.After one of their slower-moving shipmates is fatally mauled by a couple of Ceratosaurs, the Laskars abscond with the ship's boat, leaving our protagonists stranded on the island. A carelessly discarded cigarette starts a fire which destroys their provisions and ammo. Reed turns out to be a money-obsessed jerk, and Grey falls for Denning. After Laughing Boy -- who's now lost a bit of his sunny disposition -- finds a boat, he plans to kidnap Grey and leave the other two men to end up as dino kibbles.But Laughing Boy's treacherous scheme is foiled at the last moment by Denning, and in one of the few truly entertaining scenes in this not-so-very-gracefully aging low-budget thriller MacLane gets eaten by the Giant Sloth.This is 1948, so he's not devoured on-screen, but I'll say this much for MacLane: His reaction shots did a fair job of making me believe he's about to get savaged by a monster ape ... er, I mean, "sloth". Unless you've watched the movie to this point, it's difficult to convey just how immensely satisfying it is to hear Captain Chuckles shriek like a little girl right before the sloth chews his insufferable face off.Now, there are worse movies in this genre (e.g. "The Lost Continent"). Being the first color film of its sort gives it a certain historical cachet. Some of the effects, like the Brontosaurs, are halfway convincing; the Dimetrodon puppets don't look too bad the first time you see them (though I guarantee you that won't last). Besides having a natural warmth and some ability as an actress, Virginia Grey isn't hard on the eyes, either. Richard Denning has been in so many B-films, his presence here fits like a comfortable old sneaker.With some better supporting actors, a better script, and a bigger fx budget, this one might have been considerably more memorable. But if you're not a die-hard fan of this type of adventure, it's more likely to convince you that some worlds should remain lost.

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lordzedd-2
1948/10/21

Bad. Really bad!! But it's not one thing wrong with it; it's many, many little things that turn this into garbage. The acting in this film was very good. But if the Captain had a disease like malaria then he should have been in a hospital and not on this trip. The goofy effects and dinosaur costumes were just lame. Now I know what the people who like this movie are saying to themselves. It's 1948, give them some slack, the technology was around. But take a look at King Kong of 1933 and tell me they could have done better if they tried.

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Teenie-1
1948/10/22

The year was 1948 and by this time Willis O'Brien had already had much success with the prehistoric special effects in "King Kong." Wasn't he around during this filming? The dinosaurs in this film look like mechanical toys with licorice for arms. Actually they were men in rubber suits with licorice for arms. Man, what a waste of time and money! And the "sloth man!"(?) When he appeared for the first time I said, "What the hell...?!"Was this Richard Denning's encore film or something? He must've been actually drunk to play this part (he plays a drunken, trauma-stricken sailor who is hired by horny drunk Barton MacLane to sail to this Unknown Island with a reject from the Three Stooges shorts, an air-headed photographer and an equally air-headed female accomplice (couldn't they have chosen a cockatoo instead?).The only sensible characters in the film were the "native" crew, and they all sounded like they had Brooklyn accents. They sail to the island, find these brand-X dinosaurs and this excuse of a cross between the abominable snowman and the Cyclops in "Sinbad," called a "sloth-man." Whatever it was supposed to be, the makeup sucked. I wasn't born at the time, but when I was old enough to see monster flicks at the movies, I certainly wouldn't have wasted my time with this junk. I caught it on American Movie Classics (I thought they showed classics, not crap) because I got tired of the early morning news (all bad); when I saw Richard Denning I thought it would be a pretty good horror flick on the lines of "The Creature from the Black Lagoon." It was worth a few giggles, though. I guess all wasn't wasted. But next time I'll opt for Johnny Bravo on the Cartoon Network.

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