The Invisible Man's Revenge (1944)
The Invisible Man's Revenge (1944)
Plot.
Where to Watch.
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
Jon Hall
Robert Griffin
Evelyn Ankers
Julie Herrick
Alan Curtis
Mark Foster
Leon Errol
Herbert Higgins
John Carradine
Dr. Peter Drury
Gale Sondergaard
Lady Irene Herrick
Lester Matthews
Sir Jasper Herrick
Halliwell Hobbes
Cleghorn, the butler
Leyland Hodgson
Sir Frederick Travers, chief constable
Cyril Delevanti
Malty Bill, shopkeeper
Jimmy Aubrey
Wedderburn, the Innkeeper (uncredited)
Billy Bevan
Police Sergeant (uncredited)
Ted Billings
Bettor in Pub (uncredited)
Lillian Bronson
Norma, the Maid (uncredited)
Leonard Carey
The Police Constable (uncredited)
Russell Custer
Pub Patron (uncredited)
Janna DeLoos
Nellie (uncredited)
Tom Dillon
Ned Towle, Darts Expert (uncredited)
Arthur Gould-Porter
Tom Meadow (uncredited)
Bobby Hale
Pub Patron (uncredited)
Olaf Hytten
Gray, a Cabman (uncredited)
Guy Kingsford
Bill (uncredited)
Skelton Knaggs
Alf Perry, Cabman (uncredited)
Doris Lloyd
Maud, Barmaid (uncredited)
William J. O'Brien
Bettor in Pub (uncredited)
Beatrice Roberts
Nurse (uncredited)
Grey Shadow
Grey Shadow (uncredited)
Yorke Sherwood
Jim Yarrow (uncredited)
Cap Somers
Pub Patron (uncredited)
Dan White
Pub Patron (uncredited)
Ian Wolfe
Feeney (uncredited)
Ford Beebe
Director / Associate Producer
Saul A. Goodkind
Editor
Bertram Millhauser
Screenplay
Hans J. Salter
Original Music Composer / Music Director
William Lava
Original Music Composer
Eric Zeisl
Original Music Composer
Milton Krasner
Director of Photography
John B. Goodman
Art Direction
Harold H. MacArthur
Art Direction
Media.
Details.
Release DateJune 9, 1944
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 18m
Content RatingNR
Box Office$1,669,226
Genres
Wiki.
The Invisible Man's Revenge is a 1944 American horror film directed by Ford Beebe and written by Bertram Millhauser. The film stars John Carradine as a scientist who tests his experiment on a psychiatric hospital escapee, played by Jon Hall, who takes the invisibility serum and then goes on a crime spree. The film was announced on June 10, 1943, and began shooting on January 10, 1944 finishing in mid-February. On its release, reviews in The New York Herald-Tribune, The New York Daily News and The New York World-Telegram noted that the film series and its special effects became tired, while a review in The Hollywood Reporter declared it as one of the best in the series.
Although Hall’s character shares the name “Griffin” with characters in other Universal “invisible man” films, the film does not follow the continuity of the series.