Fiend without a Face
Criterion (1958)
Horror, Sci-Fi
In Collection
#826
8*
Seen ItYes
(6/13/2011)
715515011327
IMDB   5.6
77 mins USA/English
DVD  Region 1   NR
Marshall Thompson Maj. Cummings
Terry Kilburn Capt. Chester (as Terence Kilburn)
Michael Balfour Sgt. Kasper
Gil Winfield Dr. Warren
Shane Cordell Nurse
Stanley Maxted Col. Butler
James Dyrenforth Mayor
Kim Parker Barbara Griselle
Peter Madden Dr. Bradley
E. Kerrigan Prescott Atomic Engineer (as Kerrigan Prescott)
Kynaston Reeves Prof. Walgate
R. Meadows White Ben Adams
Terence Kilburn
Robert MacKenzie Constable Howard Gibbons
Meadows White Ben Adams (as R. Meadows White)
Lala Lloyd Amelia Adams
Launce Maraschal Deputy Mayor Melville
Director Arthur Crabtree
Marshall Thompson
Producer John Croydon
Writer Herbert J. Leder
Amelia Reynolds Long

Fiend Without a Face contains one of the most indelible images to emerge from sci-fi/horror movies of the atomic age: malevolent human brains, creeping like caterpillars on spinal-cord tails, choking the life out of their helpless victims! If that weren't enough to make any genre enthusiast drool with sick delight, the movie's also got an above-average plot (as B-movies go) and made genre history as an international success, independently produced in England, set in Canada, starring an American (Marshall Thompson), with magnificently grotesque special effects created in Germany!

The mystery begins near an American Air Force base in Manitoba, where unexplainable deaths are somehow connected to the base's atomic reactor, which is being used to power an experiment in advanced long-distance radar. Thompson (who later starred in the TV series Daktari) plays Major Cummings, who discovers that the lethal monsters--slurping, unseen "mental vampires"--are actually the horrific byproduct of thought-control experiments conducted by hapless, retired professor (echoes of Forbidden Planet's "monster from the Id"). Once visible, the fiendish brains are everywhere, attacking our heroes from every angle (in a scene that may have inspired Night of the Living Dead), and sputtering puddles of blood when riddled by bullets. This climactic scene--a triumph of latex rubber fiends, eerie sound effects, and stop-motion animation--was a gory breakthrough in 1958, and it's still a worthy precursor to every gross-out monster movie that followed in its trendsetting wake. Beware the faceless fiends! --Jeff Shannon

Edition Details
Edition Criterion Collection
Chapters 15
Release Date 2001
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio 1.66:1
Subtitles English
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 1/30/2001
Owner Thomas Eisenmann
Store DVD Planet
Purchase Price $15.99
Condition Excellent
Reviewed Widescreen Review
Bit Rate 384 KB
Anamophic Yes
Links IMDB

Features
Anamophic
The terrific extras include audio commentary with producer Richard Gordon and genre film writer Tom Weaver, still photos and ephemera with commentary, a lengthy and informative illustrated essay on British sci-fi/horror films by film historian Bruce Eder, vintage advertisements and lobby cards slideshow, liner notes booklet, the theatrical trailer, bonus trailers for “The Haunted Strangler,” “Corridors Of Blood,” “First Man Into Space,” and “The Atomic Submarine.”

Widescreen Review
Story Synopsis:
A weird and terrifying force has been unleashed on Planet Earth! Invisible to humans, the only indication of its presence is the sickeningly moist squishing sound it make as it mounts an attack! Beware the “Fiend Without A Face”! Equipped with only a brain and spinal column, this horrificly ee-vil Fiend is not from another planet...it’s a creation of atomic radiation gone awry and preys on mortal man and sucks the knowledge right out him-along with his extension cord! Yecch! (Laurie Sevano)

DVD Picture:
The anamorphically enhanced and windowboxed 1.66:1 DVD exhibits a black-and-white picture that is nicely rendered, with a generally well-defined gray scale. Blacks are deep and whites are bright. While images are sharp overall, there are some scenes that are softly focused. Minor edge enhancement is noticed throughout. Source element artifacts and film grain are evident throughout, but overall the picture is quite solid and pleasing for its age. (Suzanne Hodges)

Soundtrack:
The Dolby® Digital 1.0 soundtrack has an occasionally gritty, tinny, uncomfortable presence. Background noise is reasonably low, though some artifacts related to the optical soundtrack can be noticed throughout. (Perry Sun)