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Attack of the 50 Foot Woman: what's not to like about this B-movie? So what if the premise is silly and the special effects terrible

Godzilla had been a monster hit, so why not make another movie about a giant figure spreading mayhem - only this time a woman 50 feet tall? 

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Attack of the 50 Foot Woman

The short of it: a gigantic woman goes on a rampage in a California town staffed with inept police. Yes, is the sort of glorious black-and-white B movie where the title doubles as a spoiler and the special effects are amusing rather than dazzling. (Think visible wires on flying objects and shoddy "giant" props.)

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In the opening scene, a news anchor reports that there have been international sightings of a strange fireball in the sky. Cut to a car on Route 66 being driven by a woman. She spots a mysterious white orb, which causes her to swerve and scream in a most dramatic fashion. Then the vehicle won't start. A giant hand reaches out for her, but she manages to get away.

The woman, a hard-drinking socialite named Nancy Archer (Allison Hayes), has a problem bigger than this alien encounter: a philandering husband, Harry Archer (William Hudson). Harry's side piece is Honey Parker (Yvette Vickers), the sort of brazen hussy who says delightful things such as: "The trouble with us is we both have the same disease - money." A relationship this toxic can only end with the wife morphing into a 50-foot giant clad in a bikini and causing sweet, sweet mayhem.

So how does a film like this get made? Producer Bernard Woolner, who owned drive-in movie theatres, knew exactly the sort of fare his audiences wanted. In 1956, was a hit in the US, raking in US$2 million at the box office. Armed with a fantastic title, Woolner raised US$99,500 from Allied Artists. was shot over eight days for US$89,000 and grossed US$480,000.

Nathan Juran, winner of an Academy Award for art direction for the John Ford film (1941), directed . Film critic Richard Harland Smith writes: "Juran had agreed to direct for union scale with the proviso that he be billed as Nathan Hertz, using his middle name. He insisted on the same credit for , again fearing the material was subpar and likely to damage his status in the studio system."

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Despite the terrible effects, flat characters and silly premise, is never lethargic. It doesn't matter that it's not explained why there is a flying orb powered by diamonds, piloted by a 30-foot bald man.

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