Add a Review

  • This was better than it should have been. It should have been a stupid, horrible Class B movie - killer rocks threatening a town? - but it was quite interesting. It wasn't frightening but it succeeded in keeping my interest, which was no mean feat considering the outrageous storyline.

    I guess "pretty good" would be the best description of everything here: the acting, the characters, the special-effects and the story. One thing for sure: this certainly has a different premise. In a nutshell, rocks from a big meteorite that had crashed who-knows-when, suddenly begin growing when water hits them. As long as moisture touches them, they grow, multiple and crush everybody and everything around them. First a scientist loses his life, then a family loses the mother and day, the house, and almost their little girl. The girl is saved as they experiment and find out how to cure her. More experiments occur by the hour as the citizens in this small California desert town try to figure out what and why this is happening. An emergency erupts when a storm arrives and all the rain begins to cause those rocks (monoliths) to rise to huge proportions, fall, break up and then rise again and destroy everything in its path. It's course, of course, is the town and the race is on to stop them before the town is destroyed.

    For a 'B' film, it's well-acted with Grant Williams, star of "The Incredible Shrinking Man," in the lead and Lola Albright of Peter Gunn TV fame as his girlfriend. It's always good to see the gorgeous Albright in her younger days: a classic beauty. The supporting actors in here were fine, too. Nobody sounded wooden. The monoliths - the special-effects - were well-done, too, for its day. They were interesting (not scary) and the sound-effects that went with them were effective.

    In all, not something you'd watch over and over, but certainly worth one look and it is a worthy additon to the recently-released Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection pack. The DVD transfer is very good, too.
  • I always try to catch this movie when I can. When you run out of lizards and spiders and ants and octopus tentacles, is there another horror that you can unleash on the world. Yes, it's black rock crystals from outer space. At least I think they are black since the movie is in black and white. They grow fast, rise to an enormous height, and then fall over, crushing everything in their path. This sounds so stupid, yet the movie isn't all that bad. There is the obligatory scientist, the police officer, the young woman, and the small town in the path. What can they do? Can they outwit these rocks? As is usually the case, there is something that these things are vulnerable to. Now, can we deliver the goods and stop them. I have so much affection for these B science fiction movies that I just can't help myself. One thing about this one is that it has never been copied. Maybe it's time for Peter Jackson to do the new Monolith Monsters.
  • In San Angelo, California, the geologist Ben Gilbert (Phil Harvey) finds a piece of meteorite in the desert and brings it to his office. However the black rock has a chemical reaction with the rain water and on the next morning, Ben´s co-worker Dave Miller (Grant Williams) finds him petrified in the office. Meanwhile Dave ´s girlfriend, the teacher Cathy Barrett (Lola Albright), brings her class to the desert and the girl Ginny (Linda Scheley) takes a piece of meteorite home. When Cathy sees Ben´s rock, she recognizes and she goes to Ginny´s house with Dave and a police officer. They find the farmhouse destroyed, Ginny´s parents dead and the girl in shock with one hand turning into stone. Dave seeks out his former professor Arthur Flanders (Trevor Bardette) to help him to solve the mystery while Ginny is taken to a Medical Research Institute in Los Angeles to the famous Dr. Steve Hendricks (Harry Jackson) to try to find the cure. Will they succeed?

    "The Monolith Monsters" is a horror film from Universal with the original story of rock monsters from outer space. The screenplay is well-developed and highly entertaining but the rushed conclusion disappoints. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Rastros do Espaço" ("Tracks from the Space")
  • Ok you Sci-Fi B Movie Fans! This is an "A" of the "B" movies! It has it all..dialogue with "talk-over" at times that reminds me of "The Thing" and the interplay between characters is terrific. The special effects for this movie are very good, considering the time frame...the plot pretty good, and the actors fair as well.

    The Plot is pretty typical of the Sci-Fi Movies of the time..there is a town in the middle of the desert, a child who ends up traumatized by her first encounter with the "entity". The female lead is a fairly independent woman on her own making her living as a teacher..the male lead is a geologist who is in love with the teacher...and they find themselves instant "guardians" of the girl after losing her parents. Then, it's the race to find a way to beat the monoliths before it destroys their town. The only thing missing from this one is the usual Nuclear Radiation theory that was so prevalent in the Sci-Fi movies of this time. It's just a plain old fashioned meteorite that causes the trouble in this one!

    Enjoy this great Sci-Fi "B" movie....!!
  • Cosmoeticadotcom19 September 2008
    Warning: Spoilers
    Perhaps it is all because of Grant Williams. Williams was a B film actor who was best known for his starring and titular role in The Incredible Shrinking Man, generally acknowledged as one of the most literate and high quality B sci fi films from the 1950s. In watching the DVD of his next noted film, The Monolith Monsters, I was struck by how well written a film that film is also, even as it is another B sci fi film. No, Williams' role in the 77 minute black and white film, from 1957-as was The Incredible Shrinking Man, is not as important as his role in the prior film, but his mere presence, it seems, raises the bar for the other actors. In a sense, he was a B film version of Marlon Brando, who always seemed to elicit the best out of his A film co-stars.

    Another positive for the film is that, of all the 1950s horror/monsters from space films, The Monolith Monsters is likely among the most plausible scenarios to be explored- almost like an early version of The Andromeda Strain, save that the monsters are not microscopic and biological, but huge and chemically reacting black crystal columns that have no agenda. They are not aliens nor atomically irradiated mutants, just meteor debris that grows when it comes into contact with regular water, and is destroyed by salt water. The former property is shown early in the film when a rock gets some water accidentally poured on it when a car radiator overheats and its driver pours in water. Even worse is that the rocks can turn people to stone, once the water has activated their mysterious otherworldly properties.

    The credit for the bulk of this film's success, however, belongs less with its director, John Sherwood, who was directing only his third low budget film, and more with the film's co-writer- the science fiction writer and film director Jack Arnold, who also helmed two classics of 1950s sci fi and horror: The Creature From The Black Lagoon and This Island Earth. There are the standard sci fi inexplicabilities; such as all the right folk are right where they are needed at exactly the right time, no one calls the Feds, nor the National Guard, petrifying limbs would fall off with gangrene, etc., and other sorts of silly science, but the wit and dialogue (especially in a brief scene with veteran B film actor William Schallert as a discombobulated meteorologist trying to tell Dave Miller when the thunderstorm is expected to end) are first rate. Arnold's co-writers on this film were Robert Fresco and Norman Jolly, but the film has all the hallmarks of a classic Arnold film. Why he did not direct it is probably only because he was juggling many other film projects at the same time.

    The film also pulls off a rare feat- its ominous opening voice-over monologue by Paul Frees, who forebodingly intoned the opening of many sci fi films, marveling over the wonders of 'Science!', and such, and was also a voice for The Rocky And Bullwinkle cartoon a few years later. His booming voice was ripe for parody, and that he undercuts some of his own pomp shows how good an orator he was, for he opens this film with a monologue that both satirizes and pays homage to even worse monologues from far worse films. It starts out, 'From time immemorial, the Earth has been bombarded by objects from outer space; bits and pieces of the universe, piercing our atmosphere, in an invasion that never ends,' and gets even better, or worse, from there. Then we see the meteor crash, which is another version of the same scene from the earlier Arnold-directed Universal film, It Came From Outer Space. But, the film also succeeds with some fairly innovative low budget special effects, from cinematographer Ellis W. Carter. The effect of the growing monoliths, which grow in size and depth, was never revealed, but likely done by the optical illusion of forced perspective, by pushing the monoliths through the set, for the upward height, and moving the camera toward them as the camera zooms outward. A similar technique was used to great effect in Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo.

    The DVD is part of a five film, three DVD package called The Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection. Well, not really, but The Monolith Monsters shares its DVD with Grant Williams' other film of note, The Incredible Shrinking Man, directed by Arnold. The other three films in the set are Tarantula- another Arnold flick, The Mole People, and Monster On The Campus- which featured Troy Donahue. Despite the Ultimate in the pack's title, the only extra feature The Monolith Monsters comes with is its original theatrical trailer. As Arnold and Williams are key 1950s sci fi figures, an expert in that era's genre films would have made for a potentially great audio commentary. On the plus side, Universal did a superb job in restoring the film- the transfer is stunning and almost wholly blemish free, and in its original 1.33:1 aspect ratio. Also, of note, is a quite effective film score by a young and uncredited Henry Mancini.

    The Monolith Monsters is not a great film, by any means, but it's a damned good B sci fi film, leagues above the usual crap from that era, or any era, and because of its hints of plausibility, and being played straight, it traverses that thin line between cheesiness and real drama, and tropes toward the better side. Let all things sway in such a way.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It is amazing that you can make a movie with so little and the movie could turn up decent. The movie has no great budget but the idea behind it it's so great and simple. Meteors that crushed to earth and they threaten it!

    Rocks that broke in thousands of small parts and they multiply with water! The quit life of a small graphic town want be the same again. People's bodies turn into rock and the only ones who can help is the geologists. The biggest enemy now is rain! Rain that gives life, now threatens this little town. Rain will help the rocks to grow and everything around the rock will seize to exist.

    In general this is pretty much a typical scifi movie. We have the girl, the scientist, love, a big threat by a strange unknown enemy and we are waiting for science to find a solution and save the day. The acting is OK and the scenario is great! The movie it's really entertaining and for those of you who love science fiction, I think you will enjoy it too.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The residents of the small California desert town are under attack. The fragments of a meteor that struck nearby the community of San Angelo possess the strange capability of growing to skyscraper proportions when activated by water. The alien monoliths crumble under their own weight, shattering into even more pieces capable of growing and destroying everything in their path. But the danger goes beyond the destruction caused by the falling rock formations. Any living being that comes into contact with the monoliths is turned into stone. It's up to geologist Dave Miller (Grant Williams) and a band of plucky locals to find a way to stop the threat to San Angelo and, ultimately, the world.

    I just love these 1950s era Universal sci-fi/horror movies. They're so much fun to watch. From the steady, enjoyable cast (headlined by Grant Williams and Lola Albright) to the crisp, clean black and white cinematography to the familiar but effective stock monster music, The Monolith Monsters is the kind of movie that never fails to provide a great deal of entertainment value given its relative modest budget. I get a kick out of the number of Universal films from this era that take place in some small, remote South Western desert town like San Angelo (you can thank Jack Arnold for the desert setting). It's a perfect location or this kind of movie. The Monolith Monsters also features some nice special effects. I'm sure it was difficult task to make rocks look menacing. The scene where one towering rock formation after another rises from the desert floor and crushes a small farm is very effective. Another plus for The Monolith Monsters is the intelligent script (again, you can thank Jack Arnold for this). Sure, the movie is filled with a lot scientific mumbo-jumbo, but in this case, it actually has an air of believability to it. Finally, The Monolith Monsters benefits greatly from the steady hand of director John Sherwood. He may have only directed three movies, but he capably pulls all of the elements I've mentioned together with nice pacing and interesting camera shots to create a rock solid (pun intended) movie experience. Overall, it's a job well done.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Making a movie about killing stones is a hard one. Don't slate me for this because I'm between a rock and hard place with this film. It's somewhat good, but not really. If the movie was boulder with its horror, maybe it would be more well-known. It was weird that this movie was released to theater as a double feature with the movie 'Love Slaves of the Amazons'. These two, have nothing to do with each other. Sadly, this movie didn't rock my world, too much. I did find it funny that the title of the film is 'The Monolith Monsters' because there's no actual monster, in the film. Even the DVD cover is misleading as it has a Frankenstein like creature on the cover. No, the Monoliths are just a bunch of big stones that has destructive like power. Given the Cold War hysteria of the 1950's, Monoliths was a stand-in for the perceived threat of nuclear war. The monoliths act like sponges that suck up any silicon based life form around them turning those objects into stone figures similar to what a nuclear blast might do. The monoliths then reproduce by growing a certain height, and then falling over, shattering so each piece becomes a new creature. Ready to threaten to swallow the whole North America continent if somebody stop them. It seem to be a symbol for the spread of communism at the time. Another big fear of the time was the unknown of space itself. The space age hasn't yet embark so many people dreamt up stories and rumors of what space might be like. The fear by the general audience of the unknown space was key to the large amounts of sci-fiction movies and books being produce at the time. Nearly nobody at the time, knew much about space, or in this case, meteors to the point that the writers of this film, Robert Fresco and Norman Jelly capitalize on that fear of an unknown extraterrestrial source entering Earth that might pose harm. To give you an example of what the monoliths look like, if you haven't saw this film. The Monolith Monsters extraterrestrial meteorite fragments served as the basis for what would become Tiberium in the Command & Conquer video game series and works the same way. They also remind me of kryptonite crystal from the Superman comic book. Instead of it, only hurting superman, it's killing everything in sight. The mineral turning into people into stone rather sucking them dry is a bit outlandish, but in the 1950's era, there was a limited on how gory you can have in your horror movies. It was a safe way to keep the movie from being banned. Too bad, most of the stone turning kills happen off camera, so we don't see them turning to stone, just the aftermath. I thought that was a downer. I wanted to see how this was able to happen. There was a few plot-hole about that, as it is established that contact with water "activates" the monolith rocks, and that contact with the rocks, results in turning the victims to stone. But it is never explained why everyone else who handles them afterward is unaffected by the results. It's like the mineral choose who to inflect and who not to. The movie was directed by John Sherwood, a veteran with over 50 films with his name. The movie plot seems unique and interesting, but can't help it wasn't scary or suspense enough. The only person that would probably be scare of this movie, would be people with silicone breast implants. This movie gives a new meaning to getting stoned. There isn't much to be afraid of a stone-faced rock. The acting in the film was pretty alright. Everybody fit in the roles that they were given. Grant Williams as Dave Miller was a pretty convincing geologist and Lola Albright works well as the female lead, Dave's girlfriend, teacher Cathy Barrett. The effects were pretty good for the time with the use of paint backgrounds, and mini-models. Great use of optical illusion composite shots forced perspective to make the monoliths look huge. There were a lot of recycle stock footage that I didn't like. It felt weird that they use the footage from 1953's 'They came from Outer space' for the meteor crashing on earth shot. The locations used was great and make sense to the plot as there isn't supposed to be that much rain fall. If the town looks familiar to you, it's should. It was reused for 1950's Hill Valley in Back to the future films. One thing that bugs me is the ending, without spoiling it too much. When you think about the solution, they come up with to stop these things, when you think hard about it, you notice that the 'solution' only neutralized their grown. Therefore, once it rains again the rocks will again begin to grow and spread. So it a bittersweet ending when you think about it. For 77 minutes, it's pretty good. Some things, I didn't like, the music can be a bit overbearing, and the science is a bit out there. Overall, it's worth checking out, if you like 1950's Sci Fiction movies.
  • The Monolith Monsters makes a pleasant change from all those giant animal and alien invasion movies. This time, we have giant crystals threatening the world, which multiply when in contact with water and make people turn to stone. Jack Arnold, who made the very enjoyable Tarantula (1955), was responsible for this eerie movie.

    This movie stars Grant Williams (The Incredible Shrinking Man), Lola Albright as his love interest and Les Tremayne (The War Of the Worlds). Williams plays a good part and is normal size in this!

    The special effects are very good and the desert settings make the movie rather eerie.

    This movie is a must see for all 1950's sci-fi fans. Great stuff and interesting.

    Rating: 4 stars out of 5.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    They're not monoliths. They're not monsters.

    Now that we got the incorrect title out of the way, let's talk about the movie itself.

    I thought it was going to be yet another horror flick, but it turned out a lot different. First of all, the acting in this movie is quite good. Although there is silly dialog at times, in overall I'd say the acting was enjoyable enough.

    The music is... classic. If you have watched other black-in-white monster movies, you will feel right at home with this score. Over-dramatic at times, completely unneeded. It adds a certain charm to the film.

    Crazy scientific theories AND solutions are also one of the movie's high perks. Don't even try to understand what they are going at in some parts of the movie, because you will only ruin your fun. Just watch and set your brain on zero for just an hour.

    The monolith monsters is an enjoyable movie with a few unique twists and a nice, well-paced story. Recommended for any fans of movies of this era. Seven stars out of ten.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "The Monolith Monsters" follows the usual scenario of Universal's 1950s monster movies. An ill-understood menace threatens the town (or the country or mankind). Men wearing uniforms try to deal with it, but it's the scientists who come to the rescue. (Sounds like the Cold War.) In this case -- in this inexpensive and late case -- the imagination of the writers had just about reached rock bottom.

    The "monsters" are rock pylons generated by a meteorite. They grow at a phenomenal rate when they are in contact with water, sucking all the silicon out of whatever material they touch, including human flesh. The victims are turned to stone.

    The meteorite has landed on a mountain top in the desert, but unfortunately a rain storm activates it. These huge black towers grow visibly, then crash and splinter into hundreds of smaller pieces, which grow in turn. The rock itself looks something like obsidian, flinty, shiny, and smoothly fractured.

    The local geologist and the sheriff are at a loss and they call in "the professor," whom everyone calls "the professor." Together with the local newspaper editor (the reliable Les Tremayne) and with the help of the supernumerary Lola Albright, they experiment on rock samples and try to find something that will check their growth. Nothing seems to work. The colossal towers are crashing inexorably towards San Angelo and, beyond that, "the citrus region," after which there will be no stopping them. At the last moment, the antidote is discovered. The rocks stop growing when they are exposed to salt water. And fortunately there is a salt mine just outside town, and next to it a dam which must be blown up, so that the released water can rush over the salt mine and out into the salt flats and tell those rocks where to get off.

    The formula was getting kind of old by 1957, I guess. Much of the story is easily anticipated. Some of it is shamelessly ripped off. A young girl at the site of an early and mysterious catastrophe that has killed her parents, is found wandering about in shock. She doesn't blink when a hand is waved in front of her eyes. (Cf., "Them".) Sherwood's direction is strictly functional. If a group of six people is standing together, as in the last shot of the film, they don't huddle together. They stand in line and congratulate each other sideways, so that we can see them and all their faces at once in medium shot. And though the monsters make a lot of noise, crashing about through the canyons, they're not really as scary as, say, a giant tarantula would be, because they move so slowly. On top of that, they're insensible. They aren't alive, so they can't see anything or chase anything or eat anybody. The dialog seems to have been written in a hurry.

    Lola Albright: Dr. Higgins says that the girl has only eight hours. Maybe.

    Les Tremayne: And maybe -- not?

    Albright: Maybe not.

    Yet, there is something unspeakably creepy about the sinuous colonies of black towers. The texture of the colony is revolting. It's like looking at a photo of a skin disease with pustule crowding against pustule. Yukk. And the fact that the rocks are mindless puts them in the category of things that can't be outwitted, like disease or death itself.

    It's a short, minor film, but I kind of enjoyed it. Despite the urgency, the tone of the movie is relaxed, as if nobody was really putting too much effort into it. And it's always fun to see the 1950s monster formula invoked for still another go.
  • Leofwine_draca2 May 2022
    This sci-fi effort from the 1950s is a real winner just because it feels so fresh and original in comparison to many genre efforts. There's no rampaging lifeform here, just a chemistry puzzle that the good guys have to solve allowing them to prevent disaster. It's brisk and to the point, creative in terms of SFX, and generally looks very nice indeed. A treat!
  • I saw this film many years ago expecting from its name a living or something kinda living with a human shape, but was I surprised. Big black rocks growing and moving, no not moving with feet but just by falling down and starting the process of growing and falling. Huge skyscraper rocks reaching for the skies and toppling over. If a human touches it, the human begins to turn into a "rock." Water causes the rocks to grow and Grant Williams alias Dave Miller trying to save his small little town cannot stop a rain storm from causing the rocks to grow faster and heaven forbid, toward a dam, filled with water. Is there a way to stop something you can't touch or even get close too? Fire and bombs cannot stop rocks, so just what can? A rather unusual film but an enjoyable one.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I like 1950s sci-fi/horror films--both the well-made and intelligent ones (like "The Day the Earth Stood Still") and the cheesy ones ("Invasion of the Saucer Men"). And, if you like these films, you'll probably enjoy "The Monolith Monsters"--and it's about average for the genre. However, if you don't like these films, then I seriously doubt if this one will change your mind.

    The film begins with some strange meteorite falling in the desert. Little do people know that these odd rocks can both multiply AND grow to enormous proportions! But, what makes this even worse is that they can also turn people into stone-like dead folks! So, it's either us or the stones! In the end, fortunately, the people of the town apparently watched "Frankentein Meets the Wolfman" as they use this strategy to beat these evil alien rocks! While this all sounds pretty dumb, believe it or not, they handle it in a literate and reasonably credible manner. Brilliant? No. But it is watchable and fun.
  • Famed director Jack Arnold penned the original story on which this stand-out sci-fi film was based, directed with style and competence by John Sherwood from a screenplay by Norman Jolley and Robert M. Fresco.

    The concept is quite original. The fragments of a meteorite which falls near a desert town begin to grow into hugh black crystals when they come in contract with water. When people pick up the smaller fragments, the fragments draw the water out of their bodies and turn them to stone. A sudden thunderstorm accelerates the growth of the skyscraper-size crystals, and they threaten to overrun the Earth. Great special effects created under the supervision of Clifford Stine.

    Grant Williams (star of `The Incredible Shrinking Man') plays a geologist who struggles to solve the mystery of the strange growing crystals. Lola Albright is his gorgeous fiancé'. Les Tremayne (the general from `War of the Worlds' and the opening narrator of `Forbidden Planet') is good as the local newspaper man. Watch for a funny scene with William Schallert as a meteorologist.
  • bkoganbing11 January 2014
    I saw Monolith Monsters decades ago on television and to me it was one of the most frightening science fiction films I ever saw. The reason was literally the enemy is not life as we know it. I'm not sure you can even classify these growths from a meteor as life.

    Some kind of silica meteor crashes into earth and the application of water makes them grow. And when you touch them while growing the minute amount of silica leaves your body and you start to turn to stone as surely if you viewed Medusa face to face.

    This is the problem that scientists Grant Williams, Lola Albright, and Trevor Bardette face. How do you stop them because you can't kill them in a traditional sense. It's not like facing Godzilla or some space aliens who are alive and have life's weaknesses. Think about Gene Roddeberry and the prime directive from Star Trek. Would Star Fleet view the Monliths as life? I doubt it, but it's interesting food for thought.

    I think if you see The Monolith Monsters you'll agree with me. Or at least think about what I've written.
  • skallisjr30 April 2005
    Warning: Spoilers
    This film is a little like a detective story. All the clues to the solution are presented so that a quick-witted viewer can figure it out independently. It is also a legitimate science fiction film in that nothing is presented that was known to be technically contrary to the time is was written.

    Possible spoilers: The story proceeds logically, and it has a completely developed presentation that shows the "monsters'" weakness. Admittedly, the area where the "monsters" start to grow was fortuitous to the solution. But given that, the rest of the story had basic integrity.

    This is not a great science fiction film like Destination Moon, but it is far better than many others, such as The Beginning of the End or Slithis.
  • A fellow from the department of interior, who is completely oblivious to the big meteor crashing nearby, drives his groovy woody wagon into the desert and collects what looks like a piece of black obsidian. Adding water to the rock causes it to smoke and grow like a 4th of July Snake. What happens next will shock and terrify you. Will the rocks bring reporters and fortune hunters? Will the children find something interesting for their science fair? Will the young woman find love in the desert? These questions and more will be answered as you watch this critically acclaimed film.
  • A meteorite crashes into the desert, fragments of which absorb silica when wet, attaining colossal proportions before crashing down on whatever lies in their 'downhill' path. I'm no geologist but I suspect that the petrology underpinning the plot is a bit sketchy, but nevertheless, the film is an original, well-made (for the budget) 'nature-run-wild' adventure. The 'monsters' are unique in that they are simply a natural phenomenon, and refreshingly, are played that way (there is none of the anthropomorphising the undercut the similar premise in "The Magnetic Monster" (1953)). The desert locale (typical of a Jack Arnold story) is well used, and the script and acting are fine (for the genre), although most of the 'comic relief' falls a bit flat (an exception being the scene with the weather forecaster, which is amusing). The special effects and miniature work is quite good as the towering crystals fall on the buildings and even the bargain-basement 'chemistry' scenes are reasonably effective. The sub-plot about people getting turned to stone is a bit far-fetched (even within context) but provides an opportunity to see a vintage 'iron-lung' at work. Definitely one of the better science-fiction 'B' movies to come out of the 1950's, and perhaps the most imaginative.
  • A wonderfully silly plot and the monsters were very well done for 1957. There are some plot holes of course but it's so much fun that it doesn't matter. A very good 1950's Sci-Fi film not to be missed by lovers of 1950s "B movies".
  • A rather original Universal potboiler that return us to the California desert with elements of 'The Kraken Wakes' and 'The Crystal World' depicting alien life forms that resemble enormous chemical gardens.

    The tone is set from the outset by the stentorian opening narration by Paul Frees, there's an amusing cameo from William Schallert, anyone familiar with 'Dr Strangelove' will be amused by the chief of police's response to proposal that a dam be blown up by declaring "You can't do that it's privately owned!" and the film is to be commended for creating such an original non-anthropomorphic alien.
  • 13Funbags24 March 2020
    I have seen a lot of old sci-fi movies and this is definitely one of the better ones. The fact that they didn't require too many special effects really helped but the story, acting and fake science were above average. The end left a lot of loose ends to tie up but that's typical in movies like this.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A meteorite shower creates a bunch of lethal rocks which not only grow and multiply when wet, but also have the ability to turn folks in a small isolated desert hamlet into stone. It's up to puzzled, but diligent geologist Dave (a fine performance by Grant Williams of "The Incredible Shrinking Man" fame) and wise old Professor Flanders (superbly played by Trevor Bardette) to figure out a way to stop them before it's too late. John Sherwood's strong, punchy direction wrings plenty of tension and spooky atmosphere from the novel and intriguing oddball premise. Moreover, Sherwood expertly maintains a constant swift pace and coaxes commendably sincere acting from a sturdy cast (Lola Albright as Dave's worried girlfriend, Les Tremayne as a dedicated newspaper reporter, and William Schallert in a funny uncredited bit part as a pompous weatherman are all on the money excellent). The special effects are very up to par as well, with Bud Westmore's creepy and convincing make-up, the cool miniatures and a few gorgeous matte paintings still holding up pretty well even by today's more sophisticated standards. Kudos are also in order for the effectively booming'n'bombastic score, Ellis ("The Mole People") Carter's polished photography, the genuinely likable and well-developed characters, and the hugely entertaining and illuminating epilogue narration by the great Paul Frees. A real pip of a nifty 50's sci-fi/horror winner.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Here is a novel premise: the whole paranoia of "watching the skies" gets a unique sci-fi spins when meteorites, crashing into a mountainous desert outside a little township, whose ingredients consist primarily of silicate materials, grows when water is applied, enlarging at an alarming rate, towering to great heights, falling and breaking apart onto land, buildings, and anything else that they come in contact with. Humans who contact the meteorite pieces, when water is a major factor, start to stiffen into silicate themselves and it is a race against time to discover how to stop the meteorites from spreading, destroying everything in their path. I love these sci-fi B-movies from the 50s, particularly the ones released by Universal Studios. Shot in a serious manner, with a scientific approach applied to analyzing and conquering the threat, whether it be man-made or from space, movies like "The Monolith Monsters" are like rock candy to me…I have a sweet tooth for these sci-fi chillers/creature features, and especially fond of those movies shot in rural towns with small local farming communities or blue collar areas outside the big cities. This movie's threat is certainly unique—rocks as tall as skyscrapers falling, "Timber!", like trees cut by lumberjacks, with our heroes looking on from afar, is quite a visual, even if atypical of the genre. But that, I think, sets this apart from the usual fair…not a funny-looking monster made from scraps or rubber, or a giant creature of some sort, this movie has meteorites as a global threat against mankind, using water, of all things, as the source of their growth. As usual, there's a miracle cure for how to stop the meteorites (which have inherited plenty of mysteries from space during their travels to the earth's surface), and we get the big finale where a dam is exploded and a saline solution might be the key ingredient in how to trigger a reverse in the growing pattern. Seeing meteorites grow on spot when water hits them and the knowledge that large silicate rock formations are your threats to mankind might be a bit too silly for some viewers, but I had some fun with this regardless. It is cotton candy to me, really, and doesn't overstay its welcome. Sure, it might be a bit corny, but I always appreciate the earnestness of the performances regardless of what "monsters" might threaten their characters' local communities within the plots of these disregarded studio B-movie cheapies. I always credit the no-name casts of these movies during this era for providing credible portraits of ordinary people facing extraordinary circumstances, with the fate of mankind possibly in their hands.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Monolith Monsters starts as a meteorite crash lands near the desert town of San Angelo & shatters sending shards of black rock everywhere, the next morning & geologist Ben Gilbert (Phil Harvey) pick a piece of it up & takes it back to his laboratory to examine it. Later that night the wind knocks over a beaker of water which lands on the fragment of rock which then starts to grow. Ben's partner Dave Miller (Grant Williams) finds the laboratory wrecked with pieces of the rock everywhere & Ben dead, stiff as a board. Trying to work out what killed Ben leads Dave to discover that the rock is activated by water & grows to enormous heights until it cannot support itself & falls over & shatters in a thousand pieces each of which then also grow in a never ending cycle, then suddenly Dave realises that it's raining outside & all the other pieces of the meteorite start to grow & advance towards the town crushing everything in their way...

    Directed by John Sherwood this was yet another Universal monster film from the 50's that they churned out, to be fair to Universal they usually produced decent films & The Monolith Monsters is no exception thanks to a unique alien threat even if the basic story doesn't deviate too much from the stand small town comes under attack from some sort of alien or monster scenario. I must admit that I love the concept of the alien rock that simply grows like a skyscraper until it topples over & shatters in hundreds of shards each of which then goes through the same process as the alien rock just multiplies & engulfs anything that gets in it's way. It's a great idea, sure there's still some subplot about how it causes people to turn to stone by sucking the silicone out of them but otherwise The Monolith Monsters avoids the usual men in rubber monster suits & dopey science although some of the dialogue between Miller & the Professor is a bit dry & doesn't entirely convince. Once again The Monolith Monsters is a real product of it's time, it's amazing how polite & helpful everyone is here with a real post war community spirit where all the young kids in town decide to help out by delivering warning posters, the army, politicians, Doctor's & scientists all work together seamlessly without any arguments & even the local reporter decides not to cash-in on the story & keep it under wraps to avoid a panic. It feels a little naive when seen today but it's not a huge problem. At a brisk 77 minutes the plot takes no longer than it needs to & it moves along at a decent pace, the climax is a little rushed & everything works a little too well but the ending still works.

    With no aliens or monsters the special effects people had to somehow create huge rock formations that grow, fall over & shatter & start all over again & they do a fine job with some good model work & effects. The iconic scene of the huge monolith crashing to the ground & destroying the farm is still quite an impressive special effect. Less effective is the dam being blown up & the subsequent stock footage of gushing water. Apparently originally released by Universal as a double feature with Love Slaves of the Amazons (1957), the footage of the meteorite crashing during the opening sequence was taken from It Came from Outer Space (1953) which Universal made four years earlier.

    Probably shot on a low budget the makers did the best they could with decent production values & surprisingly good model effects work. Mainly shot on the back-lot at Universal studios like most of these sorts of films were. The acting is alright, it always seems a little wooden to me in these quick & cheap 50's sci-fi films but no-one really embarrasses themselves.

    The Monolith Monsters is an enjoyable slice of 50's sci-fi horror with a great central concept & some impressive effects work, for the time anyway. You could do a lot worse than spend an hour & a quarter watching this.
An error has occured. Please try again.