‘Bodies for sale!’
Monstrosity is a 1963 sci-fi horror film about a rich, unscrupulous old woman who plots with a scientist to have her brain implanted in the skull of a sexy young woman.
The movie was directed by Joseph V. Mascelli. It was co-produced by Jack Pollexfen (The Neanderthal Man; Captive Women; The Man from Planet X) who also had an uncredited hand in directing.
The movie stars Erika Peters, Judy Bamber, Marjorie Eaton and Frank Gerstle.
An elderly woman uses her vast fortune to convince an eccentric yet brilliant scientist to transplant her brain into a new, youthful body. The bodies are provided by three immigrant young women who are hired to be servants. The old woman then chooses which of the girls she finds most beautiful, and sets about replacing the young woman’s brain with her own…
Reviews:
“Before he teamed up with Steckler to lens the likes of The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies and The Thrill Killers, Joseph V. Mascelli directed Monstrosity, a whacked-out, sleazed-up variation on the venerable mad doctor theme. It’s slightly less loony than the typical Steckler picture, but only very slightly.” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting
Even at 65 minutes, Monstrosity could have used a little tightening up; some scenes drag on far too long […] even taking into account its ludicrous storyline, Monstrosity is a low-budget schlock-fest that could’ve been much worse than it is. Warts and all, I have to say I kinda liked it.” 2,500 Movies Challenge
“Aside from the film’s similarities to Wood’s late 50s oeuvre, a reliance on post-dubbing, dead pan narration, and a singular claustrophobic location (an old mansion located around Hancock Park in L.A.) is like cement in the mould. This is the kind of perfect strange film charm that inspires global searches to uncover its existence.” Bleeding Skull!
“I loved how horrible the old widow was throughout the film, and how cheesy all of the human/animal hybrid experiments wound up. The leads weren’t particularly enthralling or interesting, but a lot of the peripheral action and characters were entertaining and ridiculous enough to make the movie a pretty decent watch (as far as bad movies go).” Misan[trope]y
“All of the awkward and intrusive narration makes sense when you hear about the problems getting the film finished. When the film isn’t literally telling you what you need to know, the actual product is surprisingly-listless. This is a film about a man irradiating dead brains for a rich, crazy lady and it wasn’t interesting.” Mondo Bizarro
“There are some highly amusing scenes seeing Lisa Lang after her brain is supposedly replaced by one from a cat […] On the minus side, such a wonderfully lurid and amusing stew of B movie elements fails to come to a boil as a film. Joseph Mascelli’s direction is drearily dull and the photography downright primitive.” Moria
” …this feels like a 50s sci-fi film – or maybe one of those PRC mad scientist films from the 40s […] But the shots of pretty girls in their undies – and of course, the terrible things that happen to them! – put this solidly into the category of a 60s exploitation film. On the whole, it’s a somewhat uncomfortable combination with a few high points.” Rivets on the Poster
” …the rank incompetence odd visual style here is even more blatant than that of an Ed Wood movie. The editor occasionally inter-cuts material shot at night, with material filmed in broad daylight. Viewers are instantly transported to the sanity-challenged 2 a.m. Z-movie zone … where nothing is real.” Trailers from Hell
” …this is a treasure trove of tripe: drunk, horny mad doctors; wheelchair-bound old biddies living in dilapidated gothic mansions; forbidden experiments with atomic power; mutations run amok; and trampy Euro-dames (with atrocious fake accents). Add screamingly inept dialogue (by four screenwriters!), a droning narrator, and feel your own brain pan go nuclear. A must-see for bad-brain movie devotees; makes a cerebral double-bill with The Brain That Wouldn’t Die.” Videohound’s Complete Guide to Cult Flicks and Trash Pics
MOVIES and MANIA rating:
For YouTube reviews, the trailer, the film free online, choice dialogue, cast and characters and technical info please visit page 2
MOVIES and MANIA provides previews of new films, our own movie reviews/ratings, and links to other reviews from trustworthy recommended sources – all in one handy web location. Plus, links to legitimately watch 1000s OF MOVIES FREE ONLINE via platforms such as Amazon Prime, Plex, Roku, Tubi and on YouTube. As an Amazon Associate, we earn a very tiny amount from any qualifying purchases.
Visitor rating! What do you think of this movie? Click on a star to rate it
Related
Discover more from MOVIES and MANIA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.