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  1. The Incredible Shrinking Man

    The Incredible Shrinking Man

    1957 · Science fiction · 1h 21m

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  1. The Shrinking Man is a science fiction novel by American writer Richard Matheson, published in 1956. It has been adapted into a motion picture twice, called The Incredible Shrinking Man in 1957 and The Incredible Shrinking Woman in 1981, both by Universal Pictures .

  2. The Incredible Shrinking Man: Directed by Jack Arnold. With Grant Williams, Randy Stuart, April Kent, Paul Langton. After Scott Carey begins to shrink because of exposure to a combination of radiation and insecticide, medical science is powerless to help him.

    • (20K)
    • Horror, Sci-Fi
    • Jack Arnold
    • 1957-04-10
  3. The Incredible Shrinking Man, American science-fiction film, released in 1957, that features an inventive story, an intelligent script, and impressive special effects. After being exposed to a radioactive cloud, Scott Carey (played by Grant Williams) discovers that his body is shrinking.

    • Lee Pfeiffer
  4. Matheson’s 1956 novel The Shrinking Man is a tense and engaging tale about a man, Scott Carey, who, after coming into contact with radioactive waste, finds that he is shrinking at the rate of an inch per week. Once six feet tall, he is soon just one inch in height and living in his own cellar, estranged from his own wife and family, trying to ...

  5. Summaries. After Scott Carey begins to shrink because of exposure to a combination of radiation and insecticide, medical science is powerless to help him. Scott Carey and his wife Louise are sunning themselves on their cabin cruiser, the small craft adrift on a calm sea. While his wife is below deck, a low mist passes over him.

  6. Nov 3, 2021 · 4. The Incredible Shrinking Man ’s Butch the friendly house cat is played by feline screen star Orangey. By the early 1960s, Orangey had been in around five hundred films and won two Patsy Awards (the four-legged Oscars). He had the titular role in Rhubarb (1951), got on-screen billing as “Cat” in Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961), and was ...

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