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Mysterious Island Poster

Mysterious Island

A world beyond imagination! Adventure beyond belief!
1961 | 101m | English

(9382 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

During the US Civil War, Union POWs escape in a balloon and end up stranded on a South Pacific island, inhabited by giant plants and animals. They must use their ingenuity to survive the dangers, and to devise a way to return home. Sequel to '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea' .
Release Date: Dec 19, 1961
Director: Cy Endfield
Writer: Crane Wilbur, Jules Verne, Daniel B. Ullman, John Prebble
Genres: Adventure, Science Fiction
Keywords submarine, jules verne, based on novel or book, exotic island, cave, hot air balloon, beehive, war correspondent, giant insect, giant bird, stranded, romance, escape, marooned, pirate, struggle for survival, giant animal, confederate soldier, escaped prisoner, cooperation, american civil war, noblewoman, prison break, captain nemo, giant crab, volcanic island, ammonite, food supply, union soldiers, anti-war activist, atomic power
Production Companies Columbia Pictures, Ameran Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $2,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Michael Craig Capt. Cyrus Harding
Joan Greenwood Lady Mary Fairchild
Michael Callan Herbert Brown
Gary Merrill Gideon Spilitt
Herbert Lom Captain Nemo
Beth Rogan Elena Fairchild
Percy Herbert Sgt. Pencroft
Dan Jackson Cpl. Neb Nugent
Harry Monty Pirate (uncredited)
Name Job
Cy Endfield Director
Crane Wilbur Screenplay
Jules Verne Novel
Bernard Herrmann Conductor, Original Music Composer
Ray Harryhausen Visual Effects
Daniel B. Ullman Screenplay
Wilkie Cooper Director of Photography
Frederick Wilson Editor
Raymond Anzarut Production Supervisor
Peter Handford Sound Recordist
Jack Mills Camera Operator
Bob Gill Title Designer
John Prebble Screenplay
William C. Andrews Art Direction
Robert Sterne Production Manager
Bob Jones Sound Recordist
Marjorie Lavelly Continuity
René Dupont Assistant Director
Egil S. Woxholt Underwater Camera
John Cox Sound Supervisor
Name Title
Charles H. Schneer Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 24 42 12
2024 5 27 37 18
2024 6 22 44 12
2024 7 24 49 12
2024 8 19 33 12
2024 9 18 27 11
2024 10 22 41 11
2024 11 16 26 11
2024 12 19 52 9
2025 1 15 25 11
2025 2 11 17 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 5 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 4 6 2
2025 10 5 6 3

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

What I did was in the name of peace. Your war, like all wars, glories in devastation and death. Mysterious Island is a loose adaptation of Jules Verne's novel of the same name. It's out of Columbia Pictures and was filmed at Shepperton Studios in England with exteriors on the coast of Spain. Dire ... cted by Cy Endfield, with Ray Harryhausen working his stop motion genius for the creatures, it stars Michael Craig, Joan Greenwood, Michael Callan, Gary Merrill, Herbert Lom, Beth Rogan, Percy Herbert & Dan Jackson. Bernard Herrmann provides the score. The plot sees three Union soldiers escaping in a gas balloon from a Confederate prison camp during the American Civil War. Also caught up in the escape is a Confederate rebel and a newspaperman. As they battle the elements they are forced to crash land on some island they think is in the Pacific. Here they encounter giant animals that threaten their survival. Soon two ladies are shipwrecked onto the island too, but the strange animals are not the only thing to worry about, the island volcano is close to eruption and they appear to not be the only humans on the island? Though something of a lesser light in the pantheon of fantasy adventure films, Mysterious Island, in spite of its flaws, is rather good fun. Dramatically it's OK, with the creatures particularly memorable, but those in search of a science story befitting Jules Verne are in for a let down (though some small science interest does come in the last quarter). This is an out and out desert island survival movie with some Harryhausen kickers. There's a nice group dynamic as soldiers from opposing sides are forced to come together to survive. While the arrival of "posh stock" ladies throws up a class distinction issue, that is nice, if not fully exploited. There's the usual clichés of course, and as much as I enjoyed it as a red blooded man, did they really need to make Beth Rogan's newly made island dress the shortest in the land? And true enough, some of the matte paintings and effects have aged better in our childhood memories than actually on the print of the film. It's nicely photographed by Wilkie Cooper in Eastman Color using the Super-Dynamation process, but the film also suffers in parts for the restoration. For the prints that exist on DVD now are beset by spotting, fading and scratches. While of course the resolution now shows the flaws of the source material that were once never evident. Still this is a must have film for fantasy adventure enthusiasts.Yes, as with many Harryhausen based movies, the action sequences involving his creations light up an episodic picture. But with giant animals intent on eating our survivors, a Vernian turn of events in the last quarter, Herrmann's brilliant bombastic score and Rogan's dress! Who cares about routine narrative eh? 7/10

May 16, 2024