From Hell It Came

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From Hell It Came
Directed by Dan Milner
Produced by Jack Milner
Written by Bruce Jay Friedman
Jack Milner
Music by Darrell Calker
Distributed by Allied Artists
Release date(s) 1957
Running time 71 mins.
Language English

Richard Bernstein

From Hell It Came is a 1957 Horror Film and Sci-Fiction Film directed by Dan Milner and written by Bruce Jay Friedman and Jack Milner. It was released by Allied Artists.

'Tagline:' "Beast-Thing from the Flames of Hades!"

Contents

[edit] Main Cast

[edit] Plot Summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Tabanga, a killer spirit reincarnated as a scowling tree stumps, comes back to life and kills a bunch of natives of a South Seas island. A pair of American scientists save the day.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • Inspired one of the most infamous movie reviews of all time: "And to hell it can go!"

[edit] Goofs

  • The graveyard where Kimo is buried varies from scene to scene between a single roadside grave and a mountainous cemetery .

[edit] Quotes

  • Dr. Arnold: Terry, will you stop being a doctor first and a woman second?!
  • [After drinking]

Dr. Arnold: You better lay off that stuff, Professor. You'll wake up in the morning with a hangover, but the drums will still be here. Prof. Clark: The drums don't bother me, Doc. As a matter of fact, they have a nice anthropological beat. Dr. Arnold: Well, maybe we ought to record it, get it on the hit parade!

  • [Talking about a witch doctor]

Prof. Clark: He's afraid of losing his patients to modern medicine. He wants to keep them steeped in their centuries-old superstitions. They worship him like some kind of high priest! Dr. Arnold: Back in the States they don't regard doctors that way. Sometimes they don't even pay their bills!

[edit] External Links