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The first three chapters of The Phantom Creeps were riffed in season two of Mystery Science Theater 3000, in the episodes Jungle Goddess, Rocket Attack U.S.A., and Ring of Terror. Footage from the serial was used in the 1982 video for Automaton by the Canadian band United State .
The Phantom Creeps: Directed by Ford Beebe, Saul A. Goodkind. With Bela Lugosi, Robert Kent, Dorothy Arnold, Edwin Stanley. A military intelligence officer and a pretty reporter try to find a scientist whose inventions can destroy the world.
- (1.1K)
- Action, Family, Horror
- Ford Beebe, Saul A. Goodkind
- 1939-01-07
The Phantom Creeps is a 1939 12-chapter science fiction horror serial starring Bela Lugosi as mad scientist Doctor Zorka, who attempts to rule the world by creating various elaborate inventions. In a dramatic fashion, foreign agents and G-Men try to seize the inventions for themselves.
The Phantom Creeps (1939) - Directed by Ford Beebe, Saul A. Goodkind, produced by Henry MacRae and starring Bela Lugosi, Robert Kent, Dorothy Arnold, Edwin Stanley, Regis Toomey, Jack C. Smith, Edward Van Sloan, Dora Clement,and more...
- (103)
May 16, 2014 · The Phantom Creeps begins quite strongly, individualizing its central villain and giving him a memorably dramatic “origin” in the serial’s first two chapters. However, its narrative becomes much more ordinary in Chapter Three, in which the three-way struggle for control of the meteorite fragment begins; this struggle sidetracks Zorka’s ...
16 01/07/1939 (US) Science Fiction, Horror 4h 25m. User. Score. What's your Vibe? Overview. A mad scientist attempts to rule the world by creating various elaborate inventions. Saul A. Goodkind. Director. Ford Beebe. Director. Mildred Barish. Screenplay. Basil Dickey. Screenplay. George H. Plympton. Screenplay. Wyllis Cooper. Story.
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It was released on January 7, 1939. The serial was popularized in the Nineties when the first few episodes were aired as part of several episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000, and the robot in the series appearing in the music video for Rob Zombie 's "Dragula". Tropes for the film: