The Invisible Man Appears
Monochrome Madness
•
1h 22m
Finally released outside Japan for the very first time, these unique riffs on H.G. Wells' classic character (though undoubtedly also indebted to Universal's iconic film series) are two of the earliest examples of tokusatsu (special effects) cinema from Daiei Studios, later the home of Gamera. In The Invisible Man Appears, written and directed by Nobuo Adachi in 1949, a scientist successfully creates an invisibility serum, only to be kidnapped by a gang of thugs who wish to use the formula to rob a priceless jewel. In addition to being the earliest surviving Japanese science fiction film ever made, the film's entertaining special effects were an early credit for the legendary Eiji Tsuburaya, five years before he first brought Godzilla to life.
Up Next in Monochrome Madness
-
Deputy Marshal
1949 • United States • Directed by William Berke
Wrongly suspected of murder, a deputy marshal (Jon Hall) devises a plan to draw all the actual suspects out into the open and prove which one of them committed murder in order to profit off of the coming railroad line. Based on the best-selling we...