DONOVAN'S BRAIN
MOVIE REVIEW

Movies Kelly Parks Review by
Kelly Parks
Donovan's Brain
 

DONOVAN'S BRAIN

- 1953
USA Release: Sept. 30, 1953
Dowling Productions, UNited Artists, MGM
Rated: NR

DONOVAN'S BRAIN was directed by Felix Feist (THE OUTER LIMITS [TV]) and written by Mr. Feist and Hugh Brooke (FEAR HAS BLACK WINGS), based on the novel by Curt Siodmak (THE INVISIBLE MAN RETURNS, BLACK FRIDAY, THE APE, THE INVISIBLE WOMAN, THE WOLF MAN, INVISIBLE AGENT, FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN, MANTRAP, I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE, SON OF DRACULA, THE LADY AND THE MONSTER, THE CLIMAX, HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE BEAST WITH FIVE FINGERS, BRIDE OF THE GORILLA, THE MAGNETIC MONSTER, RIDERS TO THE STARS, CREATURE WITH THE ATOM BRAIN, EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS, CURUCU: BEAST OF THE AMAZON, THE BRAIN, RITUAL, THE WOLFMAN).

It opens with the arrival home of Dr. Patrick Cory (Lew Ayres: SALEM'S LOT [TV], BATTLE FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES) to the isolated community of Greenville. His wife Janice Cory (Nancy Davis: TALK ABOUT A STRANGER - you may know of her as former First Lady Nancy Reagan) picks him up at the train station. On the drive home a third passenger is revealed: a rhesus monkey. Janice holds the little animal lovingly but her husband tells her not to get too attached.

Clearly the monkey has an experiment in his future.

The Cory home is in the middle of nowhere and includes a medical lab, giving you the impression that Dr. Cory is independently wealthy and conducting research on his own although this is never really explained. Passed out in front of the fireplace is Dr. Cory's friend and assistant Dr. Frank Schratt (Gene Evans: A KNIFE FOR THE LADIES, DEVIL TIMES FIVE). Frank has a serious drinking problem but Dr. Cory and Janice are very understanding.

After some hot coffee (which does not sober you up - it just makes you a wide awake drunk) Dr. Schratt helps Dr. Cory to remove the unfortunate monkey's brain and place it in a fish tank. An oscilloscope still shows brain activity and they declare the experiment a success. Huzzah!

TRIVIA

This was the second time a movie was made from Curt Siodmak's novel, DONOVAN'S BRAIN.

To date, DONOVAN'S BRAIN has been made four times.
THE LADY AND THE MONSTER (1944),

DONOVAN'S BRAIN (1953),

DONOVAN'S BRAIN (Studio One In Hollywood - TV, 1955)

THE BRAIN (1963)


Producer Tom Gries apparently despised the fact that Curt, a mere writer (with a Dotorate in Mathematics), was more famous and successful than he, and fired him from the job of directing this picture days before shooting began (giving the job instead to the screenwriter, Felix E. Fiest, a director whose father was the late, and still revered MGM Executive Sales Manager, Felix F. Fiest). Tom also left Siodmak's name off of the poster.

A call comes in from the local cops. A plane has crashed nearby and since they couldn't get a hold of Dr. Schratt (who was supposed to be at the local medical center instead of passed out drunk), would Dr. Cory come and help? Dr. Cory does and the only survivor is brought to his house for medical attention. The man dies on the table from his injuries and normally that would be that. But Dr. Cory has an agenda and points out to his wife and the quickly sobering Dr. Schratt that this man's body may be dead but his brain is still alive and can stay that way if they act fast. Schratt correctly points out that this amounts to desecrating a corpse and they could all end up in jail but Cory's enthusiasm is too strong and before you can say "bone saw" there's a human brain in the fish tank.

Now if this brain had belonged to a nobody then the experiment probably would have gone smoothly but as it turns out the brain is that of W.H. Donovan, world famous ruthless millionaire. Donovan's "death" brings with it a great deal of attention including that of a down on his luck tabloid reporter named Herbie Yocum (Steve Brodie: THE GIANT SPIDER INVASION, FRANKENSTEIN ISLAND). Yocum asks Cory if he can stop by the Cory house and take a picture of the room where Donovan died. Cory is reluctant until Yocum hints that he already took pictures of Donovan's corpse in the morgue, including some odd stitching around the head.

Cory and Schratt bring Yocum out to the house and let him take a couple pictures, hoping to get rid of him quickly. Yet for some reason they don't call ahead and tell Janice to throw a blanket over the brain in the fish tank. So naturally Yocum's reaction when he enters the lab is, "Hey, a brain!" The Cory's try to play it cool, like, "Yeah, so we have a brain in the fish tank. So what. Doesn't everybody? And if you think this brain has anything to do with the stitches around Donovan's head you can just forget it!"

Yocum leaves and everyone gets back to the experiment. This involves trying to monitor the brain's activity and trying to understand what it means. If only they could communicate with the brain some how. Then Cory has a flash of inspiration: telepathy!

Of course!

That made me feel dirty. Time for a cleansing

!!!SCIENCE MOMENT!!!:
The science, even for the early 50's, was fine up until Cory mentions voodoo - I mean telepathy - as though it were a perfectly natural connection1. Aside from that the concept here is actually sound. In fact, I'll make a prediction: Within the next thirty years it will become normal procedure in emergency rooms that if a body (which is just a life support system and mobility unit for a brain) becomes damaged beyond repair, the brain will be removed and kept alive until a new body can be grown.

The telepathy plan works too well as the over nourished and ever growing, pulsating brain begins to take over Dr. Cory's mind. The will of the evil Donovan drives Cory to many illegal acts and the nosey reporter, Herbie Yocum, is close behind. Schratt and Cory's wife Janice discuss what to do about the situation and then they discuss it some more. When they finally take action it's laughably too little too late.

It's a cool idea surrounded by bad acting and a slapped together ending (unless "contrived" is what they were going for). I give it two shriek girls.

Shriek GirlsShriek Girls
This review copyright 2006 E.C.McMullen Jr.

Donovan's Brain (1953) on IMDb
GET COVERED
YOU MIGHT ALSO ENJOY
BRAINS!
The Brain That Wouldn't Die The Brain From Planet Arous The Atomic Brain
THE BRAIN THAT WOULDN'T DIE!
MOVIE REVIEW
THE BRAIN FROM PLANET AROUS
MOVIE REVIEW
THE ATOMIC BRAIN
MOVIE REVIEW

Return to Movies

 

For those who scroll -

1
The Science of Siodmak

In his time, mathematician, physicist, and engineer, Doctor Curt Siodmak, was a Hugo Award winning, best selling novelist, Science Fiction writer, and screenwriter.

In short, Curt was something of an Overachiever.

The Telepathy in his 1942 novel, DONOVAN'S BRAIN was considered hard science, Science Fiction in that period as Curt took inspiration from science research articles in the magazines of his day. The book was so popular it was made into a movie four times in only twenty years.

Well into the new millennium, as of 2006, some of the top universities on earth offer research and Doctorates in Paranormal Science. They are -
Cornell, Harvard, Lund University, Princeton, University of Adelaide, University of Amsterdam, University of Arizona, University of Edinbergh, and University of Virginia to name a few (source - Mental Floss).

Columbia University Press still brings in bucks from its publication of Paranormal Science Books.

Curt often found his work nominated for the esteemed Hugo Award, but finally won it for his screenplay, FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN (1943).

 

FEO AMANTE'S HORROR THRILLER
Created by:
E.C.McMullen Jr.
FOLLOW ME @
Amazon
ECMJr
Feo Blog
IMDb
Instagram
Stage32
Twitter X
YouTube
Zazzle Shop