The
Psychotronic Zone
By
Ed Garea
Attack
of the 50 Foot Woman (Allied
Artists, 1958) – Director: Nathan Juran (as Nathan Hertz). Writer:
Mark Hanna. Stars: Allison Hayes, William Hudson, Yvette Vickers, Roy
Gordon, George Douglas, Ken Terrell, Otto Waldis, Eileen Stevens,
Michael Ross, & Frank Chase. B&W, 65 minutes.
By
any reasonable standard, Attack of the 50 Foot Woman is
a bad movie. Just how bad can be seen in the fact that director
Nathan Juran changed his credit to Nathan Hertz in a desperate
attempt to escape responsibility. The film suffers from a dreadful
cheapness, which manifests itself in a lousy script and totally
laughable special effects. However, it does manage to boast some good
performances from a cast that somehow manages to act their way
through this mess with straight faces. And it is one of those great
absurd movies that’s so bad it’s entertaining to watch. For that
reason it’s considered a camp classic today.
The
movie was produced by Bernard Woolner, who with his brothers Lawrence
and David, owned a chain of drive-in theaters in the Deep South. To
obtain product for their theaters, the brothers expanded into film
distribution of Roger Corman’s Swamp Women in
1956, and production of Corman’s Teenage Doll in 1957).
Looking for a sure fire drive-in hit, the Woolners noticed the
success of Bert I. Gordon’s The Amazing Colossal
Man (1957) and figured that a distaff version would do
as well, if not better.
For Attack
of the 50 Foot Woman, the Woolners partnered with Marquette
Productions, the brainchild of cinematographer Jacques R. Marquette,
who founded the company with the intention of making low-budget
pictures. He had cranked out three for distributor Howco Pictures
(including his biggest hit, the dreadful The Brain From
Planet Arous, 1957), but due to Howco’s creative accounting,
Marquette and his investors never saw a dime.
The
Woolners decided to throw in with Marquette because he would operate
the camera and also secured the services of director Nathan Juran,
who helmed Brian From the Planet Arous. The brothers
decided Bernard would represent them on this production and they
secured Allied Artists as a distributor. Allied Artists fronted
Woolner and Marquette a budget of $99,500. Juran directed the picture
for union scale, provided he was billed as “Nathan Hertz” (his
middle name), the same name he used to direct Brain. He
was afraid the material was so awful it would hurt his future job
prospects.
Shooting the film in only eight days (the film was brought in at a final cost of $89,000) with some of the shoddiest special effects ever committed to film. It was somewhat of a hit, grossing $480,000 in its initial theatrical run. As Allied Artists’ accounting methods were much more honest, both the Woolners and Marquette shared in the profits. A sequel was considered and a script written, but the project never got off the drawing board.
Shooting the film in only eight days (the film was brought in at a final cost of $89,000) with some of the shoddiest special effects ever committed to film. It was somewhat of a hit, grossing $480,000 in its initial theatrical run. As Allied Artists’ accounting methods were much more honest, both the Woolners and Marquette shared in the profits. A sequel was considered and a script written, but the project never got off the drawing board.
The
film opens with a television reporter reading reports from around the
world of a glowing ball heading in the direction of California. As he
announces that it should shortly be over California we cut to a
speeding car tooling down Route 66. Driving the car is heiress Nancy
Fowler Archer (Hayes) fresh off an argument with her shitheel
husband, Harry (Hudson). Suddenly the glowing orb alights in front of
Nancy’s car, causing her to swerve, hit the brakes, and stall the
car. She flees the car as a giant hand reaches out for her.
The
scene now shifts to Tony’s Bar, where Handsome Harry is
entertaining his squeeze, Honey Parker (Vickers), as they discuss how
to get their hands on Nancy’s fortune. When Nancy, who has spent
some time on the funny farm after she and Harry temporarily
separated, runs into town barefoot, looking for Harry and frantic
over her sighting, Sheriff Dubbitt (Douglas) assumes she’s had a
relapse. In order to placate her, Dubbitt agrees to return to the
desert with her and his deputy Charlie (Chase) to look for the UFO
and its occupant. However, on arrival, the group finds only Nancy’s
abandoned car. Dubbitt, however, does get to lecture Nancy on the
dangers of wearing her Star of India diamond, especially when out
driving alone. Nancy, peeved that all she gets for her trouble is a
lecture, returns home in a huff.
When
she gets there, who should Nancy find waiting other than her
wandering husband, Harry? The two waste no time getting into an
argument over Harry’s philandering, with Nancy demanding that Harry
leave, telling him they never should have reconciled, despite the
fact that she still loves him. She then tells him what happened in
the desert, begging him to believe her. Harry humors her before
giving her a sleeping pill and heading back to Tony’s, where he
informs Honey that Nancy might flip out again. This time, he may be
able to gain legal access to her fortune by having her committed.
The
next day, Harry calls Nancy’s personal physician, Dr. Cushing
(Gordon), hoping the Doc will see things his way, but Cushing tells
Harry that Nancy could not endure another vacation at the nuthouse.
Later that day, Nancy picks up with Harry where she left off,
accusing him of publicly conducting his affair with Honey and trying
to drive her back into the sanitarium. She tells Harry that her
experience in the desert was real and after watching a skeptical news
reporter mock her encounter, she demands that Harry accompany her
back into the desert to find the UFO. Harry demurs. When Nancy tells
him she’ll return to the looney bin if they find nothing, Harry
takes the bait, even though Nancy’s loyal butler, Jess Stout
(Terrell) protests vigorously.
Harry
and Nancy take an all-day road trip with no results. At sunset,
however, Nancy spots the sphere and runs towards it, banging on the
outside. When the amazing see-through giant emerges, Harry fires
several shots at him with his revolver but to no effect. The giant
grabs Nancy, and while she’s screaming for help, Harry beats it in
the car, returning to the house, where he starts packing.
As
Harry begins to leave, he’s intercepted by Jess, who wants to know
where Nancy is. The two engage in a brief fistfight before Harry lams
out. Jess telephones the sheriff and Charlie intercepts Harry and
Honey just as they’re leaving Honey’s hotel. Meanwhile, Dubbitt
finds Nancy, unconscious with mysterious scratches, atop the pool
house. While Cushing attends to her, Charlie brings Harry and Honey
to the house for questioning. Cushing tells the assembled party he
believes Nancy has radiation burns in addition to those strange
scratches on her neck. The sheriff releases Harry and his squeeze
with the admonition that they remain in town.
Back
at their favorite watering hole, Honey tells Harry she overheard
Cushing caution his nurse that the slightest increase of Nancy's
medication could be fatal. Harry agrees to return that night and give
Nancy an overdose, but after sneaking back into the house he and the
nurse are horrified to find that Nancy has mutated into a giant.
The
next morning, Cushing chains the unconscious Nancy and consults with
specialist Dr. Von Loeb (Waldis). Meanwhile, Dubbitt and Charlie have
found an enormous set of footprints in Nancy's garden. Along with
Jess, Dubbitt follows the tracks into the desert, where they discover
the sphere. They explore inside, finding Nancy's Star of India and
other jewelry apparently used for fuel. When the men see the giant,
they run away, and fire at the creature, who is giving chase. He
retaliates by picking up their car and destroying it. Dubbitt then
hurls grenades at the giant, who retreats to the sphere, which then
takes off and disappears into the night sky.
Back
at the Archers’, Nancy awakens and begins screaming for Harry.
Charlie finds Harry at Tony's with Honey and tries to get him to
return. Harry, who has decided to withhold all approval for medical
treatment for Nancy, refuses. Cushing and Von Loeb attempt to
tranquilize Nancy with an elephant syringe, but she awakens and,
breaking the chains, bursts out of the house, searching for Harry.
Charlie finds Dubbitt and Jess walking back from the desert and
returning to the Archers', discovers the house in shambles and that
Nancy's on the loose. Giant Nancy arrives in town and, as people flee
in terror, she destroys Honey’s hotel, looking for Harry.
Charlie
returns to Tony's and desperately tries to convince the drunken Harry
to hide. Nancy begins to break into Tony’s. Harry shoots at her,
but with no effect, as Nancy rips the roof off and drops a beam on
Honey, killing her. Nancy then grabs Harry and wanders off, crushing
him in her fist. Dubbitt fires several shotgun blasts at Nancy with
no effect, but as she walks by the city power lines, he fires again
and the lines explode, shocking Nancy. She staggers back and
collapses, dead, still clutching Harry's lifeless body.
What
makes this movie fun to watch are two things. One, it takes itself
seriously, a requite for an entertaining bad movie. There are few
things worse than a bad movie with its tongue firmly implanted in its
cheek. It’s as if the production staff is laughing at the audience
for watching their film, which, of course, they are too superior to
take seriously themselves. The script by Mark Hanna takes the drama
very seriously indeed, and gives us a rather sympathetic leading lady
who fighting for her life against two despicable people out for her
money.
It’s also unusual in presenting us with a heroine who’s no shrinking violet (though she does need a shrink). Female characters in most other films made during this time are there to serve the hero. If she’s a scientist, she abandons all science as soon as she meets her hunk. Nancy Archer, on the other hand, is a successful and wealthy woman whose only Achilles heel is her dependence on her heel of a husband, who obviously married her only for the money.
It’s also unusual in presenting us with a heroine who’s no shrinking violet (though she does need a shrink). Female characters in most other films made during this time are there to serve the hero. If she’s a scientist, she abandons all science as soon as she meets her hunk. Nancy Archer, on the other hand, is a successful and wealthy woman whose only Achilles heel is her dependence on her heel of a husband, who obviously married her only for the money.
The other thing that makes this such an enjoyable bad movie is the tremendously shoddy special effects. Most of the credit should go to the spectacularly lousy optical printing, which makes the giant alien and the giant Nancy transparent and almost ghostly. We never see either giant in the same shot with the live-action townsfolk. When the giant reaches out for Nancy all we see is a huge papier-mache hand. The same occurs near the end when Nancy reaches into Tony’s bar for Harry. All we see is the same hand, but without hair.
When Nancy walks through town, we see the same footage of her walking several times. Sometimes it’s reversed with different backgrounds used. And when she’s standing behind the power pylon, the back projection is so shoddy as to be practically non-existent. Also, when Nancy grows to her outsize proportion it’s amazing that the bed need not be changed or that her added weight doesn’t knock her down to the first floor. When she decides to take her walk into town, her hair is noticeably longer and blonde. She is also conveniently draped in a huge bed sheet bikini, clutching a overdressed doll that’s supposed to be passing for her husband, Harry.
As
for the giant, he played by Michael Ross, who doubles as Tony the
Bartender. Looking silly in a costume with a giant ax and shield on
the front (Shades of Bunny Breckinridge from Plan 9!),
he, too, is practically see-through. His best scene comes when
chasing the sheriff and Jess. Angered because he’s being shot at,
the giant picks up the car that Jess and the sheriff arrived in.
After twirling it around, he throws it down to the ground, only the
car that hits the ground is an entirely different model than the one
he lifted in the air. After the grenades are tossed at him, he takes
on despairing look, like he did something he shouldn’t and will be
punished for it. He then saunters back to his ship (which, when the
sheriff and Jess were checking it out, seemed to have an interior of
pegboard), the cue ball UFO takes off into the sky, and we can just
about make out the wires.
It
was rumored that, doing the finale, Nancy was to have wrought more
destruction on the town, but the film’s budget wouldn’t allow
it.
The
acting, as mentioned before, is above average for this sort of film.
Allison Hayes is wonderful as Nancy Archer, covering the emotional
ground of a dysfunctional person whose financial stability enables
her to ignore the rejection and lack of love she receives from her
husband. And even though she’s aware of the extent of his
infidelity, she still wants to save the marriage. Instead of being a
shrinking violet, Nancy shows her strength when, angered by the
television reporter’s derisive comments about her experience, she
drags her husband out to the desert to find the UFO she ran across
earlier in the movie. Though she never managed to escape the B’s
(and Z’s), Hayes was not a bad actress – she just appeared in bad
films. Even though Hollywood had little use for her, she was a
frequent guest star on a number of television series, such as Perry
Mason. She did land a good supporting role in Elvis’ Tickle
Me (1965). She died Feb. 27, 1977, a week before she would
have turned 47.
Sexy
Yvette Vickers plays seductive Honey Parker so well she was cast in a
similar portrayal in the even cheesier Attack of the Giant
Leeches the following year (1959). Playmate of the Month for
July 1959, Vickers was mesmerizing: blonde hair, blue eyes,
breathless voice and a voluptuous figure. Her look provided a nice
contrast to the dark, sultry looks of Hayes.
Vickers’ looks and body language typecast her in future films, such
as Hud (1963), where she had a brief, but memorable
role as Lily Peters. Her death in 2011 was one of Hollywood legend:
living in seclusion in a small cottage in Benedict Canyon, Vickers
was rarely seen by neighbors. One day, her neighbor Susan Savage was
walking her dog when she noticed yellowing envelopes and cobwebs
outside the home. She went to the front door and called inside
several times before entering. Inside, she found a mummified body.
The police identified the remains as that of Vickers and an autopsy
revealed that she had died the year before from heart disease.
William
Hudson was best known for his portrayal of Ranger Clark in the 1954
sci-fi show, Rocky Jones, Space Ranger, and as Special
Agent Mike Andrews in the television show I Led 3
Lives (1954-55). He was a supporting player in mainstream movies
and a lead or featured player in B’s or below. Besides Attack
of the 50 Foot Woman, other films include The She
Creature (1956), The Man Who Turned to Stone (1957),
and The Amazing Colossal Man (1957). Most of his
work was in television. He died on April 5, 1974, at the age of 55
from cirrhosis.
Director
Juran was born in Gura Humra, Bukovina, Austria-Hungary (now part of
Romania), in 1907. After coming to the United States, he studied
architecture at M.I.T., and while seeking work in California, he
became an art director at 20th Century Fox in 1937. He won an Oscar
for art direction for How Green Was My Valley in
1941. The film’s director, John Ford, was so impressed with Juran
that when World War II broke out, Ford had Juran assigned to his
unit, where he used his skills as a draftsman to determine the
dimensions of enemy structures in captured photographs for the O.S.S.
(Office of Strategic Services).
Returning
to Hollywood after the war, he was working as an art director at
Universal when the studio offered him a chance to direct after firing
Joseph Pevney from the Boris Karloff film The
Black Castle (1952).
Juran is known primarily for directing B-movies, among them The
Deadly Mantis (1957), Hellcats
of the Navy (1957),
20
Million Miles to Earth (1957),
The
7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958),
Good
Day for a Hanging (1959),
Jack
the Giant Killer (1962),
First
Men in the Moon (1964),
and The
Boy Who Cried Werewolf,
his final film (1973). In addition, he directed several episodes of
various television series, including My
Friend Flicka (1955-56), Crossroads (1956), Men
Into Space (1959-60),
A
Man Called Shenandoah (1965-66),
Voyage
to the Bottom of the Sea
(1965-66), The
Time Tunnel (1966-67), Lost
in Space (1965-68),
Land
of the Giants (1968-70),
and Daniel
Boone (1965-70).
The only time he used pseudonyms was when he directed Attack
of the 50 Foot Woman and The
Brain From the Planet Arous (1957)
as Nathan Hertz. He even directed an Italian sword and sandal
adventure called Le
imprese di una spada leggendaria (The
Story of the Legendary Sword)
in
1959.
As mentioned earlier, a sequel was considered (in color, no less), and while the script was written, the project never got off the drawing board.
In the mid-1980s,
filmmaker Jim Wynorski was considering a remake starring Sybil
Danning in the title role. But after going so far as to begin
preliminary work by photographing Danning in costume, Wynorski opted
instead to direct the 1988 remake of Not
of This Earth.
A remake was finally
made in 1993 for HBO, directed by Christopher Guest, written by
Joseph Dougherty (Thirtysomething), and starting Darryl Hannah
(who also produced) in the title role. In 1995, director Fred Olen
Ray made the T&A farce Attack of the 60-Foot Centerfold.
In 2012, Roger
Corman, through his New Horizon company, released the
made-for-cable Attack of the 50 Foot Cheerleader.
Directed by Kevin O’Neill and written by Mike McLean (who also
wrote Sharktopus for Corman), it starred former Miss
Georgia Teen USA Jena Sims in the title role. Originally airing in 3D
upon its premiere, it played in 2D thereafter.
Trivia
The poster for the
movie, a Raymond Brown illustration of supersized Nancy Archer
straddling a freeway while holding a car, has become a prized
collectible, fetching thousands of dollars for mint condition. It was
voted No. 8 of “The 25 Best Movie Posters Ever”
by Premiere magazine in 2008.
Most informative, thanks!
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