The Mad Monster is a 1942 American horror film directed by Sam Newfield (credited as Sherman Scott), produced by Sigmund Neufeld for Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC)—one of the so‑called “Poverty Row” studios. It stars George Zucco and Glenn Strange, with a runtime of about 77 minutes.
Plot Summary
The film tells the story of Dr. Cameron (George Zucco), a disgraced scientist who has been ridiculed by his peers for his unorthodox experiments. Seeking revenge, Cameron develops a serum that can transform men into wolf‑like creatures. He tests it on his simple‑minded gardener, Pedro (Glenn Strange), turning him into a murderous beast under Cameron’s control.
As Pedro prowls the countryside, killing Cameron’s rivals one by one, suspicion grows among the townsfolk. Meanwhile, Cameron’s daughter Lenora (Anne Nagel) becomes increasingly horrified by her father’s obsession and the violence unleashed by his experiments. The climax pits science against morality, with Pedro’s tragic fate underscoring the dangers of unchecked ambition.
Cast
- George Zucco as Dr. Cameron
- Glenn Strange as Pedro
- Anne Nagel as Lenora Cameron
- Johnny Downs as Tom Gregory
- Henry Hall as Professor Fitzgerald
- Robert Fiske, Reginald Barlow, and Gordon De Main in supporting roles
Production Notes & Trivia
- Directed by Sam Newfield, one of the most prolific B‑movie directors of the era.
- Produced by PRC, a studio known for ultra‑low‑budget genre films.
- George Zucco, often cast as sinister intellectuals, plays the archetypal mad scientist.
- Glenn Strange, later famous as Frankenstein’s Monster in Universal’s House of Frankenstein (1944) and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948), appears here in an early monster role.
- The film’s wolf‑man transformation sequences were achieved with minimal makeup and camera tricks, reflecting PRC’s limited resources.
- Released in 1942, it capitalized on the popularity of Universal’s The Wolf Man (1941), though with far less polish.
- Often cited as an example of “Poverty Row horror,” where atmosphere and melodrama substituted for production value.
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