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Botanist Dr. John Rollason (Peter Cushing) decides the join the exploration team of crass, American showman Tom Friend (Forrest Tucker) on a dangerous expedition into the Himalayas to search for the legendary Yeti. Soon after setting up camp, the group is attacked by a large beast which is shot by trapper Ed Shelley (Robert Brown) and stored in a cave to attract a live specimen. Before long, the strain of the expedition is felt and the party begins to lose control. To his growing terror, Dr. Rollason suspects that the race of giant "monsters" not only exists, but is capable on invading the thoughts of human beings.
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Made the same year as the gory gothic hit The Curse of Frankenstein, this smartly written, philosophically grounded Hammer studios adventure written by Nigel Kneale (who also wrote the excellent science fiction thriller Quatermass and its two sequels) was lost in the flesh and blood of Hammer's new vein of horror. Peter Cushing, best known for his ruthless portrayals of Dr. Frankenstein and his more tempered rationalist skew on vampire hunter Van Helsing, plays another scientist driven to prove his unpopular theories. Against the advice of his wife and a kindly but firm Tibetan monk, he leads blustery American showman Forrest Tucker and his party of explorers up the frozen peaks (the Pyrenees standing in quite spectacularly for the Himalayas) to track the fabled Yeti. When he discovers that this is no scientific expedition but a hunting party he starts to have second thoughts, which are only reinforced by Tucker's mercenary behavior when he kills one of the creatures. Director Val Guest keeps the "monsters" hidden until the final showdown, where their hulking silhouettes loom over the cave entrance, but their mournful cries haunt the camp like wailing ghosts, slowly driving the party members mad. While it lacks the edgy desperation and inventiveness of Kneale's Quatermass features, The Abominable Snowman is a taut thriller that contrasts the gorgeous aerial mountain photography with the claustrophobic atmosphere of the tents and caves of the base camp. --Sean Axmaker
Nothing abominable about this great movie!Reviewed by Greg Howard, 2010-01-22
I have to say, I was skeptical about picking up this movie in DVD-R
form. But given the choice between overpaying for the original DVD
release, or trying this, I made the right decision. Thankfully, the
movie played and looked great! It's very hard to tell this was not
the genuine original except for the mildly fuzzy main menu and
Hammer Films Peter Cushing extra (parts of that extra were
pixilated at points). Everything worked well, and the movie, which
is the main thing, didn't have any problems and came across
vividly.
And if you haven't seen this film, you're missing out. It's a very
even keel horror/suspense movie. Peter Cushing, as always, did a
phenomenal job of coming across as the sophisticated hero. Along
with Forrest Tucker, the movie is believable, especially given it
was made in the 1950's. You really feel like you are going on the
search for the creature, but nothing about the film is overdone.
It's just a classic well made film!
the abominbile snow manReviewed by J. tanquary, 2009-12-26
this is like a four star but because its a classic now it five star and the special effects and the real effects blow away the new digitial effects, now days they look so phoney the new stuff now days. any way the snowman little scary to. good for kids
What if we are the savages?Reviewed by bernie, 2009-12-14
Dr. John Rollason (Peter Cushing who played Winston Smith in
"1984") leaves his lovely devoted wife Helen (Maureen Connell)
behind to become part of an expedition that includes Dr. Tom Friend
(Forrest Tucker) and others; each has their own agenda. The local
Lama (Arnold Marl) knows what they seek and that that each person
in the expedition may find what he seeks.
The encounter turns out a tad different than you would suspect. We
find we are up against survivors with more ability than planed
on.
Will they survive?
If anyone should survive will he/she have learned something?
What about you?
One year later Forrest Tucker one again chances the cold Alps to
find "The Crawling Eye" (1958)
The Crawling Eye (Widescreen European Edition)
CAVEAT EMPTOR - BUYER BEWARE!!!Reviewed by Dead Elvis 1988, 2009-12-10
I was so glad when on a whim one day I noticed that old Hammer
horror titles previously released by Anchor Bay Entertainment
appeared to be getting a re-release. Boy, was I wrong about that!
Don't be fooled. DVD-R's are no substitute for a real factory
manufactured product. The pictures appear murky, bleeding and
washed out even though its obviously a direct burn from a genuine
Anchor Bay DVD. The sound drops in and out. I played each disc on 3
different players manufactured by 3 different companies. In all I
wasted $20 dollars a piece on 3 of these pathetic knock offs.
Originally when I purchased these titles there was NO mention of
them being bootleg quality DVD-R's. I don't know who's ingenious
idea it was to propose such a gross misuse of wasted effort. Either
shame on Anchor Bay or shame on Amazon for perpetuating such poor
quality knock offs at such an absurd price. They even use the
original Anchor Bay DVD's cover art printed by a laser printer
however most of the special features listed will not appear.
I.E. - The Legend Of The 7 Golden Vampires does not include the
U.S. cut of the film as mentioned.
What a crime in itself either release the film correctly or don't
bother at all. What a tease. What a waste of my money and
time.
The movie had this been a genuine product released through Anchor
Bay would've received 5 stars.
I threw my money away on:
Dracula Prince Of Darkness
Frankenstein Created Woman
The Legend Of The 7 Golden Vampires
Save your money until somebody with half a brain decides to do the
right things with the old deleted Hammer titles. I'm still very
dissatisfied with this scenario.
Good story on a snow-shoestringReviewed by Victor Hugo, 2009-09-07
I recently watched this movie, having seen it originally many years ago. I'll admit, my memory did not due it justice. I found it much better now than I did as a teenager. No expense was spent in the making of this movie. No fancy sets, no special effects, no great camera angles. Just simple story telling and yet very effective and satisfying. I've always appreciated Peter Cushing as an actor and he turns in another fine performance here. Forrest Tucker - tho never to be mistaken for Laurence Olivier, was competent in an undemanding but vital role to the film. This appears to be a one camera film, with the camera moving as the scenes cut. So there are no multiple angles. Not a problem. From my childhood memories I thought I recalled a different ending, in which Tucker turned out to be a Yhetti himself disguised as a human. Am I confussing this with another movie, possibly another one he did? In any event, that is not the ending of this movie. The story is simple and somewhat moralistic. Action is decent for single location and no special effects. Overall not a bad way to spend 90 minutes. I would recommend this for anyone who is a movie buff. Don't expect Star Wars or Mission Impossible and you won't be disappointed.