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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| RETURN OF THE FLY (director/writer: Edward L. Bernds; screenwriter: from the short story "The Fly" by George Langelaan; cinematographer: Brydon Baker; editor: Richard C. Meyer; music: Paul Sawtell & Bert Shefter; cast: Vincent Price (Francoise Delambre), David Frankham (Alan Hinds), Brett Halsey (Philippe Delambre), Danielle De Metz (Cecile Bonnard), John Sutton (Inspector Beauchamp), Dan Seymour (Max Berthold), Jack Daly (reporter); Runtime: 80; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Bernard Glasser; 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment; 1959) |
| "Makes for passable
'killing time' entertainment."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz B-film director
Edward L. Bernds ("Alaska Passage"/"World
Without End"/"Quantrill's Raiders")
writes and directs this
cheapie sequel to Kurt Neumann's The Fly (1958), which
follows the original shocker as another shocker and
makes for passable 'killing time' entertainment. It's
based on the
short story "The Fly" by George Langelaan. It picks up at the
Montreal funeral of Philippe
Delambre's (Brett Halsey) mother
Helene. Some fifteen years ago Philippe's
scientist father André
died
under a cloud of mystery after his matter transmission
experiment failed when a fly accidentally entered the
machine's chamber while he was reintegrating the
molecules with him as guinea pig and that turned him
into a half-man and half-fly monster. Unable to face
the world as a freak show, the inventor destroyed in a
rage the lab and got his wife to crush him to dead.
This murder was covered-up by Inspector
Beauchamp (John
Sutton), and at her trial Helene
was acquitted. After an intrusive reporter at the
funeral brings the cover-up to the
attention of Philippe's uncle Francoise
(Vincent Price), uncle is forced
under duress from his nephew to tell him the
truth. Against Francoise's advice, Philippe decides to
resume his father's daring groundbreaking work
as a memorial to him and coerces Francoise
to fund him in his research with the foundry
factory business money they are partners in to
build a new lab
at his late grandfather's mansion he inherited
outside Montreal. Philippe hires his
friend Alan
Hinds (David
Frankham),
an escaped British fugitive, to be his lab
assistant. Which turns out to be a bad move, as
Alan has larceny in mind more than science when
he partners with the fence Max (Dan
Seymour)
to steal the machine. Anyway, work begins
when Phil reads over his father's experiment
notes. There's also a pretty French gal, Cecile
(Danielle
De Metz), living with Phil at the mansion, but
he's too caught up in his work to pay her enough
attention. It all leads to the
son following in his father's footsteps and the
belief that he will come to the same fate by
repeating dad's mistake, but this time the
accident happens through a criminal act and
there's a twisty ending. It's a chip off the old
block sci-fi thriller that's cheerless and
uninspiring, but that didn't completely throw me
off since I found it so insane that I felt
peculiarly drawn to its fly story.
REVIEWED ON 5/3/2010 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |