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The Incredible Shrinking Man
Description
The Incredible Shrinking Man is a science fiction film. When Scott Carey starts shrinking because of exposure to a combination of radiation and insecticide. There is no way to help him, even medical science is powerless to help him.
The Incredible Shrinking Man is a science fiction film. When Scott Carey starts shrinking because of exposure to a combination of radiation and insecticide. There is no way to help him, even medical science is powerless to help him.
Actors:
Chet Brandenburg,
Randy Stuart,
Regis Parton,
Lock Martin,
John Hiestand,
William Schallert,
Billy Curtis,
Frank J. Scannell,
Grant Williams,
Paul Langton,
Charles Perry,
...»
Chet Brandenburg
15 October 1897, Peoria, Illinois, USA
Randy Stuart
12 October 1924, Iola, Kansas, USA
Regis Parton
27 January 1917, Johnstown, Pennsylvania, USA
Lock Martin
October 12, 1916 in Pennsylvania, USA
John Hiestand
January 16, 1907 in Madison, Wisconsin, USA
William Schallert
6 July 1922, Los Angeles, California, USA
Billy Curtis
27 June 1909, Springfield, Massachusetts, USA
Frank J. Scannell
7 May 1903, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Grant Williams
18 August 1931, New York City, New York, USA
Paul Langton
17 April 1913, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Charles Perry
26 December 1900, New York City, New York, USA
Director:
Jack Arnold
Jack Arnold
14 October 1916, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Country:
United States
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May 04, 2006
A pulp gem.June 24, 2006
A moving, strangely pantheist assertion of what it really means to be alive. A pulp masterpiece.
Lawrence Journal-World
October 01, 2004
One of the landmark sci-fi efforts of the 1950sAugust 29, 2015
A case of tangible metamorphosis and spiritual expansion, a unique Jack Arnold mastery
Old School Reviews
April 06, 2007
Surprisingly provocative 50's sci-fi that goes beyond the thrilling spider battleJuly 25, 2015
A pretty terrific example of its genre, despite some rather obvious and avoidable flaws of story structure.March 26, 2009
Director Jack Arnold works up the chills for maximum effect by the time Williams is down to two inches and the family cat takes after him.January 01, 2000
The surreal intensity of outsize objects that loom as the hero shrinks is handled effectively, and the mystical happy ending is a better payoff than one would expect of the genre.June 06, 2007
Notable for its relatively intelligent script, for some imaginatively amusing special effects, and for an existential streak which finally has our (tiny) hero pondering the meaning of existence.
New York Times
March 25, 2006
Unless a viewer is addicted to freakish ironies, the unlikely spectacle of Mr. Williams losing an inch of height eachOctober 28, 2011
Earns its ponderous tone, and the final moments are as fitting as they are unexpected.October 20, 2016
Williams gives a sensitive portrayal of a man hounded by the media and consigned to a freak's world, whose descent into being and nothingness provides a memorable climax.