Overview:
A young man visits his fiancé's estate to discover that her wheelchair-bound scientist father has discovered a meteorite that emits mutating radiation rays that have turned the plants in his greenhouse to giants. When his own wife falls victim to this mysterious power, the old man takes it upon himself to destroy the glowing object with disastrous results.| Status: | Released (1965-10-26) |
|---|---|
| Screen: | Jerry Sohl, H.P. Lovecraft |
| Productions: | Alta Vista Productions, American International Pictures |
| Production Countries: | United Kingdom, United States of America |
| Spoken Languages: | English |
Casts
- 2922: Boris Karloff - Nahum Witley
- 2787: Nick Adams - Stephen Reinhart
- 81246: Suzan Farmer - Susan Witley
- 39002: Freda Jackson - Letitia Witley
- 100790: Terence de Marney - Merwyn
- 2264: Patrick Magee - Dr. Henderson
- 2276: Sheila Raynor - Miss Bailey
Crews
- 28236: Daniel Haller - Director - Directing
- 67054: H.P. Lovecraft - Short Story - Writing
- 1588242: Philip Martell - Music Director - Sound
- 30669: Don Banks - Original Music Composer - Sound
- 15664: Jerry Sohl - Screenplay - Writing
- 29296: Paul Beeson - Director of Photography - Camera
- 51730: James H. Nicholson - Executive Producer - Production
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Reviews
Wuchak
Review text:
Some highlights, but mostly tedious RELEASED IN 1965 and directed by Daniel Haller, "Die, Monster, Die" (aka “Monster of Terror”) is a semi-Gothic horror about a young man (Nick Adams) who travels to the estate of his fiancé (Susan Farmer) in England. Unfortunately, her wheelchai ....
Continue reading ->CinemaSerf
Review text:
American "Reinhart" (Nick Adams) arrives in a small English village seeking the home of his girlfriend "Susan" (Susan Farmer). Shunned by the villagers, he must walk to the stately pile of her wheelchair-bound father "Naham" (Boris Karloff) whereupon things begin to become mysterious ....
Continue reading ->Sierbahnn
Review text:
Lovecraftian sci-fi This is all very Lovecraftian, and they do credit him for the story. They lifted elements from several stories, but the 'Color out of space' is the primary one. The plucky American can sort it out through, surely. The mention of cults and things don't get explore ....
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