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Robert Lansing's got mail in 4D MAN Year: 1959 |
Robert Lansing can make just about anything believable. His performance in director Irvin S. Yeaworth, Jr. and producer Jack H. Harris's sophomore vehicle 4D MAN is slowburn, natural and patient: Like their THE BLOB, the plot takes time to not only build, but to make things understandable
since the hard-to-explain science isn't a gooey space
alien...
As close to Noir as these filmmakers got, 4D MAN is about flawed humans like Lee Meriwether and
James Congdon as the assistant and brother of our leading man,
Lansing's Dr. Scott Nelson: the latter busy at a corporate lab to make
what's called "Cargonite" stronger than steel. In the acting department, James
Congdon's Dr. Tony Nelson, though high-spirited and intense, seems
either miscast, acting more like a small town quarterback than a brilliant scientist on the
verge of a literal breakthrough; or perhaps he's just underwhelming
compared to Lansing, who's broodingly tortured even before it becomes literal...
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Robert Lansing as Dr. Scott Nelson in 4D MAN |
Meanwhile, to an
extremely annoying level, little bro and
Mariwether... as tall and pretty Linda Davis... flirt way too obviously from the get-go, especially given
that her boss/workmate Lansing is understandably smitten. Then again, Congdon's
b-character
is the most important; a sort of White
Rabbit who seems the lead at first: Introducing the concept of breaking
into the fourth dimension by sticking a pencil through metal: a fluke he
wants to successfully recreate and perfect...
All backed by a Jazz score featuring slinky vibes as if a jovial game show were held in a coffee shop full
of hopped-up beatniks; and yet it
does move the story along, especially as both the music and suspense
perks up when Lansing, pushed to the edge because of a double dose of
paranoia that's obviously true... especially to the audience, who
witnesses the young couple's budding romance... makes the kind of
leap that changes everything i.e. the point of no return...
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DVD Signed by Lee Meriwether FILM SCORE: **** |
Though this 11th hour revenge-driven push feels a
tad late, it's better late than never as the now sinister scientist goes
from curiously crooked to downright lethal: First reaching his hands
through a mailbox, and then through a jewellery store window, and then scoring at a bank: and inevitably having the
power to kill by touch and, at this point it's the characters no one
really cared about who become 11th hours heroes...
And while people tend to root for mad scientist types, especially when their discovery moves the story along, it's somewhat irritating when our man's bad luck brother speaks the final line,
looking into the future BATMAN theatrical Catwoman's eyes and saying: "It was beauty who
killed the beast." Which he doesn't actually say — but he might as well have. And while
4D MAN is probably the least known picture of the one-hit BLOB makers, it's arguably their best since it starts with a strong point and purpose and never loses touch.
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Lee Meriwether whips towels in 4D MAN |
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James Congdon and Lee Meriwether flirt like obvious idiots in 4D MAN |
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Robert Lansing in 4D MAN |
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Robert Lansing in 4D MAN |
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Robert Lansing in 4D MAN |
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Robert Lansing and Chic James in 4D MAN |
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Robert Lansing and Chic James in 4D MAN |
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Patty Duke in 4D MAN |
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Lee Merriwether in 4D MAN |
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James Congdon and Robert Lansing in 4D MAN |
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REVIEW OF 4D MAN BY JAMES M. TATE |
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