Rotten Tomatoes

Movies / TV

    Celebrity

      No Results Found

      View All
      Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

      From Hell It Came

      Released Aug 25, 1957 1h 11m Sci-Fi List
      Reviews 26% 100+ Ratings Audience Score Atomic researchers (Tod Andrews, Tina Carver) flee from a tribal prince, back from the dead as a walking tree stump. Read More Read Less

      Where to Watch

      From Hell It Came

      Prime Video

      Rent From Hell It Came on Prime Video, or buy it on Prime Video.

      Audience Reviews

      View All (17) audience reviews
      Audience Member Sure, Paul Blaisdell created the effects for The She-Creature, Invasion of the Saucer Men, Not of This Earth and It! The Terror from Beyond Space, but this is the only movie in which he made a tree person. Yes, this film is about the prince of a South Seas island wrongly executed by a witch doctor who hated the fact that the prince became friends with Americans. Well, those foreigners pay him back by irradiating the island and reanimating the royal victim, who has been buried inside a tree. Now he is known as Tabonga, an angry tree stump that demands bloody retribution. This movie is one of the many reasons why quicksand concerned me as a child, as the tree man throws his unfaithful widow into the sinking muck and then tosses the witch doctor down a hill. He can only be stopped by white men and their guns, which hasn't really changed for so many since this was made sixty some years ago. Written by Richard Bernstein (Terrified!) and Jack Milner, this was directed by Jack's brother Dan, who worked as an editor on the Bozo the Clown TV show (he also made The Fighting Coward and The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues). Look, it's not great, but the tree man reveal is better than most entire movies. It has that going for it at least. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member You'll hoot,you'll howl,you'll roll with joy and laughs as you watch the slow,Jason like tree stalk and catch and kill it's poor victims. Honestly it's a so bad it's good flick. Saw this as a kid in the early 70s and the monster tree really stood out as different. It is kind of creepy looking no dout about it.it's the best thing for this flick.it's your typical 50s sci-fi type movie of the low budget type,true horror,sci-fi fans must see it once just to give it a shake and to enjoy it for what it is.I give it a 5 star for two reasons,one it's so cheap,cheesy and bad it's good and second I just love the tree monster get up it's just so wild.get your pop corn,soda and have at it folks. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/24/23 Full Review Audience Member Like 1953's "Robot Monster" and 1963's "They Saved Hitler's Brain", 1957's "From Hell It Came" is one of those movies that you just can't help but be entertained by to a small extent despite terrible acting, a terrible script and a story with plot holes so large a cruise ship can easily sail through them. The best thing about the movie is the creature that the native tribe calls Tabonga. Tabonga is the spirit of a young tribal prince executed for the murder of his father (A crime he did not commit.) reincarnated in a tree trunk. That's right, a tree trunk. He has come back to avenge his father and his wrongful conviction. However after Tabonga does just that he starts attacking the American scientists stationed at a research lab set up on the island to help treat tribe members from illness supposedly caused by nuclear testing in the area years ago. Why? I have no idea. However it is just a riot watching tabonga wreak havoc on the island and terrorize people who could easily escape if they just run faster. Still, I was entertained by this movie. I would recommend seeing it just once just to be entertained, if there is nothing else to watch. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review andrew p I'm giving this five stars, not because it's a cinematic masterpiece, but rather because it's exactly the opposite of that. This movie has everything you'd want in a cheesy 1950's horror movie...awful dialogue, check....casual racism, check....a decidedly non-tropical setting for a tropical island, check...completely ridiculous plot, terrible costumes, and just downright awful acting...it has all of that and more, in spades. If you are looking for a prime example of how awful old movies could be, this is it. I can't think of any reason that anyone would ever watch this movie seriously, so that's why I'm giving it five stars instead of zero stars. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review philip h Horror (and sci-fi) movies back in the good old 50's were silly, real silly at times, literally anything you can think of was most probably at some point used in a horror/sci-fi movie. Almost every type of bug you can think of, crabs, bats, octopuses, blobs, giant people, tiny people, bipedal lizards, X-ray vision, rocks, dinosaurs, ape men with space helmets on etc...The list just goes on, but here we have something a bit different, original for sure. What else could you possibly make a horror movie about when even killer rocks have been done? How about a killer walking tree? sound stupid? Not on your nelly sir, lets review this fucker! So there's this killer tree, it hobbles around and kills people, somehow, and that's your story folks. Oh you want more?? well there isn't really much more to tell, OK lets look a bit deeper. On an unknown south seas pacific island a Prince is put to death by having a knife driven into his heart for supposedly killing his father. The thing is he didn't murder anyone, the real murderer was the local witch doctor who didn't like the good relations the Prince was having with American scientists on the island. This was his dastardly scheme to get rid of the Prince and hopefully the Yanks too. The Prince is buried in a hollow tree and that's that, well it was until his body gets reanimated by nuclear radiation (always with the nuclear radiation). The Prince (or his body at least) comes back from the dead as the Tabanga, a well known myth in the local folklore that is said to allow someone revenge if they are wrongfully killed. Right there you already have a plot hole. In the local folklore it is said that the Tabanga only comes back when a person is wrongfully killed, so surely all the locals in the tribe would know straight away (going by their own folklore) that someone has been wrongfully killed, and all evidence probably points to the recent killing of their Prince. Also, if the local folk know about and believe in this myth, why provoke it by doing exactly what you're not supposed to do?! Then of course you have the old plot problem with many of these old black and white horror pictures, why is the monster killing everyone?? If the Tabanga is the Prince and he's come back to enact revenge on the ones who killed him, why he is killing anyone and everyone?? As for the radiation, not really sure about that, they seem to discover the ground is full of it where the Prince was buried. I'm guessing fallout from nuclear testing going by the location. Again I'm not really sure but I think the Princes rotting corpse has slowly transformed into this gnarly, rotten wooden log and starts to grow from the grave in order to free itself. Not sure why it needed to grow though, couldn't it just dig itself up? The large stump also has an actual beating heart and the same knife used to kill the Prince still lodged in it. Anyway the Yanks dig up the Tabanga after wisely coming to conclusion that something is just not right with this. Yep this definitely isn't a new species of tree (you idiots), clearly the local folklore has been proven right in this case. Large tree stump with a heartbeat, green ooze, clearly visible beating organ and the same dagger that was used to kill the Prince lodged in the heart. Yep that's definitely a supernatural event in progress right there people, time to pack. Just one thing that still bugs me, did the Tabanga come back from the dead because of supernatural powers or because of the radiation? I suppose it was supernatural powers because back in the lab the Yanks discover the radiation is killing it, that's why the lead female scientist decides to inject a new anti-radiation formula into the stump to help it. Yep they're trying to save a living tree by injecting it?? How do you do that exactly? In all honesty, all sideswipes aside at the immensely ludicrous plot this movie isn't too bad. Lets be frank, if you enjoy corny black and white horror flicks then this will really rock your world. Watching this obvious man in a rubber suit waddle around the location awkwardly, is a pure joy to behold. You can almost see the blokes trousers in some scenes because the suit had split in the legs. This monster suit is beautiful in a terribly shitty way, it doesn't move at all, the arms only go up and down (just about), and the facial expression is fixed, although it is a tree so...The lack of movement could be seen as realistic (ahem!) but its hilarious when its trying to actually kill somebody. Most of the time it just leers and leans over the victim, they scream and die for no real apparent reason. Basically you could say this is the perfect representation of a walking, stiff lump of wood. But we all know its simply because the suit was limited and there wasn't the money to make anything better. Overall the suit is effective and it does actually look a bit eerie in some scenes, mainly when its by its grave, like some large spooky overgrown headstone. The casting is unknown to me but as with many of these movies its all highly predictable. The leads are all middle aged men and they are accompanied by one female for a bit of sex appeal. Totally sexist of course but you come to expect this in these old flicks. The same can be said for the blatant racism and stereotyping of the locals, all of whom seem to be played by white people (the main characters at least), oh the horror! You'd [b]never[/b] get away with this these days of course but I can't deny it does make the film so much more amusing. [b]LOVE[/b] the actors trying their best to speak in native tongue which basically sounds exactly like a 1950's impression of a native American in a western. I also just adored all the lame cliched trinkets they've stuck on the natives costumes. One guy (and many of the male natives) has a headpiece made of clearly plastic large teeth, by the looks of it. Like what the hell?! Where did he get those from a saber-toothed tiger?? The chief has little seashells dangling from his headpiece because of course you would have that living on an island in the pacific. They all look like prehistoric tribes people, oh and all the women are hot in mini skirts. Its a shame that with something so unique and quirky as a killer walking log, you don't really see much killing or action. There is an amazing amount of boring dialog and exposition is this movie, watching American scientists discuss what to do, how to go about it, methods, their experiences, their loves, their lives in general...ugh! It can be quite painful and dull for most of the run time. When the monster pops up things inevitably get much more interesting but for obvious reasons these scenes don't last too long. The finale is anti-climatic and makes no sense (wood floats right? right??!!), the music seems to be merely stock, the acting is pretty dire or bog standard and the fact that the monster moves slow, SLOW slowly begs the question, why can't anyone simply run away from it? Its literally never gonna catch you. Yet despite all the crud there is something about this movies monster that does appeal, it actually looks like a live action version of Treebeard from Ralph Bakshi's 1978 animated flick 'The Lord of the Rings'. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member es tan mala que da risa Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/31/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Critics Reviews

      View All (2) Critics Reviews
      Matt Brunson Film Frenzy Clearly, theres something about From Hell It Came that brings out the joker in all of us. Then again, that's probably the right approach when taking an ax to a film that's almost entirely sunk by its monster. Rated: 1.5/4 Apr 10, 2022 Full Review Mark R. Leeper Mark Leeper's Reviews The idea of a tribal folklore monster coming to life would not be a bad one, but that is about the only thing that is good about this often genuinely incompetent film. Rated: 1/10 Feb 14, 2021 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Atomic researchers (Tod Andrews, Tina Carver) flee from a tribal prince, back from the dead as a walking tree stump.
      Director
      Dan Milner
      Distributor
      Allied Artists Pictures
      Production Co
      Allied Artists
      Genre
      Sci-Fi
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Theaters)
      Aug 25, 1957, Limited
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Nov 20, 2016
      Runtime
      1h 11m
      Most Popular at Home Now