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Mesa of Lost Women is a 1953 American low-budget black-and-white science fiction film directed by Herbert Tevos and Ron Ormond [1] from a screenplay by Tevos and Orville H. Hampton, who is given on-screen credit only for dialogue supervision. Plot. Grant Phillips and Doreen Culbertson get lost in the " Muerto Desert ."
- G. William Perkins, Melvin Gordon
- Hoyt S. Curtin
- Herbert Tevos, Ron Ormond
- A Ron Ormond Production
Mesa of Lost Women is a 1953 American low-budget black-and-white science fiction film directed by Herbert Tevos and Ron Ormond from a screenplay by Tevos and Orville H. Hampton, who is given on-screen credit only for dialogue supervision.
Mesa of Lost Women: Directed by Ron Ormond, Herbert Tevos. With Jackie Coogan, Allan Nixon, Richard Travis, Lyle Talbot. A mad scientist named Arana is creating giant spiders and dwarfs in his lab on Zarpa Mesa in Mexico. He wants to create a master race of superwomen by injecting his female subjects with spider venom.
A final scene shows that at least one spider-woman survived the destruction of the laboratory. Mesa of Lost Women – one of the poorest Horror in SF films of the 1950s – is confusingly structured, being told in two flashbacks rather than one. At one point Masterson meets Tarantella in a cantina after escaping the asylum, apparently fails to ...
A mad scientist, Dr. Aranya (Jackie Coogan), has created giant spiders in his Mexican lab in Zarpa Mesa to create a race of superwomen by injecting spiders with human pituitary growth hormones. Women develop miraculous regenerative powers, but men mutate into disfigured dwarves.
Film Details. Notes. Brief Synopsis. A mad scientist named Arana is creating giant spiders and dwarves in his lab on Zarpa Mesa in Mexico. He wants to create a master race of superwomen by injecting his female subjects with spider venom. Cast & Crew. Read More. Herbert Tevos. Director. Jackie Coogan. Doctor Aranya. Richard Travis. Dan Mulcahey.
A mad scientist attempts to create a race of super-women by injecting them with the life-fluids of insects.
- Sci-Fi