Monster ipod video download

Download Monster

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Monster

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Monster (Video Preview).avi18.83 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Monster” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

The Human Monster (1939)

March 25, 1940

THE SCREEN; ‘The Human Monster,’ Featuring Bela Lugosi, at the Globe, Latest Horror Picture–2 Foreign Films

By B.R. CRISLER
Published: March 25, 1940

Even connoisseurs of the horror film will doubtless be constrained to admit that nothing quite so consistently horrid as “The Human Monster,” at the Globe, has ever befallen this hapless city. Brooded over by the batlike spirit of Bela Lugosi, it comes like an evil visitation compared to which the hunch-backs of Notre Dame (first and second string); the two Doctors Jekyll and Messrs. Hyde, and both King Kong père and fils are about as intimidating as Ferdinand the Bull. To begin with, all Mr. Lugosi has to do is to look at people and they either get hypnosis or cramps from laughing. Our personal reaction was more hysterical than horrified, but that’s a matter of taste.

Up to now, the most popular screen grotesqueries have had a certain lightness of touch; when Quasimodo, for instance, was beaten by knouts in the cathedral square, the camera mercifully averted its lens, or gave the streaming blood the merest glance, purely for verificative purposes. Not so “The Human Monster,” in which not only is Wilfred Walter more unglamorous than even Charles Laughton as the hunchback, but is totally blind in the bargain. Consequently, his homicidal technique is the more deliberative and, so to speak, stately, giving the camera plenty of time to dwell with sadistic relish on the more recherché details of his method of doing his victims in. But Jake, as the Monster is more familiarly known, is just a stooge, a sort of shipping clerk for Bela, who does a wholesale business in select and artistic submersions.

Bela, in fact, covers the waterfront with highly insured clients (he solicits insurance in his spare time) and so annoys Scotland Yard with this marine Blitzkrieg of bodies that even the conservative Yard is compelled to assign its brightest inspector (Hugh Williams) to the case. A pretty, blond daughter of one of the victims, who floats a loan with Bela and then goes floating down the Thames himself, is mixed up very attractively in the matter, and there are numerous incidental people who give a good if sometimes barely intelligible account of themselves, as is sometimes the wont of English actors. In fact, if the British accent gets much worse, they will soon have to provide incidental titles for America.

At the Cine Roma

The homely humors and obvious sentimentalities which reside in the oft-told story of the generous and innocent old man who marries a young girl to give her unborn child a name are being recounted with simple charm and wit in the Italian film “Pensaci, Giacomino” (”Think It Over, Jack”), at the Cine Roma. The story is taken from a play by Luigi Pirandello and, thanks to a couple of mild indelicacies which have oddly got past the censors, trips neatly along the edge of propriety to a suitable conclusion, which permits every one to eat his cake and still have it.

Angelo Musco gives a broadly comic but credible performance as the ancient; Dria Paola is blondely beautiful as the erring maid. There are no English subtitles, so you must understand Italian to catch the none-too-subtle drift.

At the 48th Street Theatre

When Per Axel-Branner wrote and directed “Paa Kryss med Albertina” (A Cruise in the Albertina), the Svensk Talfilm production (with English titles) now entertaining the Scandinavian patrons of the Forty-eighth Street Theatre, he threw restraint to the winds and chucked in almost all the standard movie ingredients except blood.

The result, if a bit weird at times, is an amusing comedy romance, somewhat on the burlesque order, featuring Adolf Jahr, a popular Swedish singing actor, and Ulla Wikander, a new and rather pleasing blonde. Honorable mention must be given to Emil Fjellström for making the helmsman of the wind-jammer Albertina a figure to break down anybody’s laugh resistance. Aake Engfeldt also is good as the timid city man who vainly hopes to win the fair Ulla.

The uncomplicated story of the rich and spoiled girl taken for an involuntary cruise in a merchant ship under command of the stalwart Mr. Jahr furnishes the excuse for many merry episodes afloat and ashore and for some fine scenes in sunshine and storm.


THE HUMAN MONSTER, directed by John Argyle, screen play by Patrick Kirwin, Walter Summers and J. F. Argyle, based on “The Dark Eyes of London” by Edgar Wallace; produced by Mr. Argyle for Monogram Pictures. At the Globe.

Dr. Orloff . . . . . Bela Lugosi

Inspector Holt . . . . . Hugh Williams

Diana Stuart . . . . . Greta Gynt

Lieut. O’Rielly . . . . . Edmon Ryan

Jake (The Monster) . . . . . Wilfred Walter

Grogan . . . . . Alexander Field

Dumb Lew . . . . . Arthur E. Owen

Secretary . . . . . Julie Suedo

Henry Stuart . . . . . Gerald Pring

Walsh . . . . . Bryan Herbert

Policewoman . . . . . May Haliatt

The Drunk . . . . . Charles Penrose

divx movies
download full Monster dvd
download full movies
video downloads
Monster movie to watch
full length films
Monster movie to watch

Leave a Reply