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5/10
Lionel Atwill, Mad Doctor at large
the_mysteriousx27 September 2004
This very minor Universal horror film from 1942 is significant for it was the last time Lionel Atwill received a starring role in a film. He was on the outs after this due to the sex scandal that ruined his career and health. He played only minor roles after this and died 4 years later of cancer.

The film is very easy to be hard on and Universal has obviously regarded it so low, that it has never made it to video, despite the millions they still make off their classic horror films. What kills the film is a lack of mood or suspense. It is super-pedestrianly directed by Joseph H. Lewis.

What makes the film are the change-of-pace settings including a doomed cruise ship and an exotic island. The actors are all excellent too, even if Nat Pendelton and Una Merkel get a little tired with their comic relief act.

Ultimately, Atwill rules and is as menacing and sinister as ever. He revives a dead native and is revered as a god by the island tribe. He very selfishly dictates how the other ship survivors will live as only Atwill so slimily could (Sounds like a reality show plot). The other standout is Noble Johnson as the village leader. He is given more dialogue than he ever had in his many previous horror films and he ultimately gives Atwill a run for his money. It was nice to see him in a larger role.

Don't expect too much - this is a B film. Atwill fans will delight in seeing his last great lead performance. Atwill may have never had a definitive mad doctor film, but I've always regarded him as the maddest doctor of them all.
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5/10
The Mad Doctor Of Market Street (Joseph H. Lewis, 1942) **
Bunuel197630 July 2008
As some of you may know, for the longest time I was only familiar with the more popular of the classic Universal horror/sci-fi films; recently, however, I managed to get my hands on a number of their lesser and/or non-monster outings – needless to say, few if any of these proved as rewarding in the long run…though they were never less than entertaining, something which the vintage Hollywood product could always be relied upon to deliver.

This, then, marks Lionel Atwill’s last starring role as a result of his fall from grace in a trial which exposed scandalous behavior in private – and which would subsequently relegate him to Poverty Row or virtually nothing parts in Universal chillers! In any case, he gives the titular role his all – in fact, I don’t think I’d seen Atwill being so arrogant (spouting lines such as “I’ll be the most important man to have ever walked the earth” with complete immodesty, as if it was second nature to him!) and wild-eyed since the delightfully Pre-Code MURDERS IN THE ZOO (1933). Incidentally, I may be attributing undue importance to the fact but I wonder whether the script intended to give his character’s ‘control’ over death a religious undertone – at one point, Atwill mentions that he’ll be able to bring back to life someone who’d been dead for three days (a reference to Jesus Christ?), while the unwilling ‘guinea pig’ hero is buried in the rocks and the entrance to the tomb covered by a huge stone (as we’re told in the Bible that Lazarus was)…!

Not knowing all that much about the film beforehand, I was surprised to see this turn out to be more of a jungle adventure (especially given the title) – following the opening moments set in the city and a brief stint on board ship which, pretty soon, ends up submerged and the only six survivors eventually land on a tropical isle. Atwill is a “pseudo-doctor” whose notorious experiments with suspended animation (recalling the Boris Karloff vehicle THE MAN WITH NINE LIVES [1940]) has landed him in professional disrepute, not to mention in hot water with the Law – I’m sure the irony of the situation wasn’t lost on the beleaguered actor!; anyway, he flees on a cruise-liner traveling all the way to New Zealand and, as I said, ends up ashore in uncharted territory with a bunch of other passengers. This doesn’t stop him from continuing his experiments (for one thing, finding the locals convenient and gullible subjects) – actually, he’d been traveling incognito but, when the native leader’s woman goes into a coma from a heart attack, he can’t resist impressing them with his life-giving ‘magic’…after which they name him “God Of Life” and, naturally, he appoints himself there and then supreme ruler of the island (these obvious Fascist attributes more than anything expose it as a product of the war years)!

The film falls into a category best described as comedy-horror or, if you like, horror comic; neither element is really all that successful – though the former (provided by Una Merkel, top-billed despite her character being clearly of secondary interest[!], and Nat Pendleton) isn’t overly intrusive, the latter is too familiar to generate much suspense…while the jungle setting eschews the fog-laden atmosphere usually representing the ‘in-house’ Universal style! The remaining members from the civilized world are a selfish ship’s officer who leaves the others behind when attempting to flee the isle in a canoe – only to be killed by a native, and the obligatory romantic couple (Merkel’s niece and another former crew member of the sunken liner) – typically, the two had gotten off on the wrong foot but are slowly drawn together…especially after Atwill is persuaded into taking a wife by the native woman he ‘resuscitated’ and, naturally, singles out the heroine for this role. By the way, the film’s biggest laugh is an unintentional one: during Atwill and Claire Dodd’s marriage, following the native custom, some doubt is deliberately thrown by his companions on the unethical activity he leads, which causes the celebrations to cease abruptly – at which, perplexed, Atwill asks the native leader to order his men to “dance…or something” (as delivered by the actor in his inimitable high-strung fashion, it not only shows all too clearly the character’s disdain of their lot but definitely edges the film into camp territory; I know I couldn’t stop giggling for a good five minutes afterwards!).

His status on the island takes further beating when the native who killed the escaping officer also turns up dead; the hero – belatedly introducing himself as being well versed in medicine himself (a plot point so contrived as to smack of lazy scripting!) – knows that Atwill’s miracles were performed on people who only had the semblance of death, so that he’ll never be able to reap results in this particular case (though, up until this time, it was never intimated that he could be a charlatan but rather came across as typically misguided but genuinely obsessed!) and the natives will turn on him as a result…which they do in a fiery climax that barely registers (incidentally, some rather important exposition in the fast-paced 61-minute film is entirely by-passed or taken for granted). Tying with my comments about the same director’s CRIMINALS WITHIN (1943), which I’ve also just watched, Lewis’ hand is apparent here via his choice of odd angles on a number of occasions (though the shot of an intense Atwill approaching the camera, holding a chloroformed cloth to subdue an intended victim, is unfortunately diluted through sheer repetition!). By the way, the music for the film – credited solely to “Musical Director” Hans J. Salter – includes recognizable cues from Frank Skinner’s classic SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939) score (Universal shamelessly, and habitually, re-cycled these…as hardened genre fans are surely aware!).
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5/10
SHOCK! entry first seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater in 1965
kevinolzak7 May 2011
1941's "The Mad Doctor of Market Street" was the second time Lionel Atwill starred as a crazed scientist after receiving top billing over Lon Chaney in "Man Made Monster," but settled for second below Una Merkel here, who was coming off one of her best known roles, playing the ditsy daughter of W.C. Fields in "The Bank Dick." Una's likability survives intact, despite her unfunny material (can't say the same for Nat Pendleton). Nearing the end of her screen career was lovely Claire Dodd, busy at Universal that year ("The Black Cat" and Abbott and Costello's "In the Navy"), while cowardly scoundrel John Eldredge is in familiar form ("The Black Cat" and "Horror Island"). Even Noble Johnson ("King Kong") appears as a dignified native chief, not easy under such studio bound conditions. Atwill's Ralph Benson escapes a murder charge in San Francisco, only to wind up a prisoner on a South Sea island, until a demonstration of his technique on suspended animation on a supposedly dead native woman makes him 'God of Life' among the savages, who grant him his every wish. I certainly can't blame him for coveting Miss Dodd, just as he eyed beautiful Anne Nagel in "Man Made Monster" (here reduced to a cameo as his first victim's widow). Writer Al Martin earlier scripted Lugosi's "Invisible Ghost" (also directed by Joseph H. Lewis), and in 1957 turned out "Invasion of the Saucer Men," a rare science fiction comedy. Included in Universal's popular SHOCK! package of classic horror films issued to television in the late 50's, and aired 3 times on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater, Dec 18 1965 (following 1959's "The Hideous Sun Demon"), Dec 28 1974 (followed by 1970's "Night of the Witches"), and Sept 3 1977 (the first feature), paired with the only screening of 1934's "Secret of the Château" (a Claire Dodd double feature!).
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5/10
'I love the Chinese, they're so...Oriental'
TheFinalAlias11 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
They say that a great movie is one which transcends all genres, what they didn't say is that a movie can cover all genres and not be great.

This belief of mine is reflected best by this obscure little programmer for Universal. This utterly mad little movie can't decide just what it wants to be. This can be considered a good thing or a bad thing, but the sudden shift in tone and settings definitely makes this one worth a watch.

The film begins like a noir thriller, as a man in a trench coat and fedora enters into a shadowy room in a shadowy building as lightning flashes and rain pours like a scene from a Will Eisner story. Then it shifts into horror mode as we meet mad doctor Ralph Benson( A delightfully deranged Lionel Atwill, yes our old friend from 'Doctor X'), who fouls up his experiment with suspended animation and accidentally kills his patient. Then it turns into a crime thriller as the police pursue Benson, then it becomes a murder mystery set aboard a ship where Benson kills a detective, then a romantic comedy, then a disaster movie, then a shipwreck adventure, then a redux of 'The Man Who Would Be King' with overtones of 'Hawaii' & the much later 'Gilligan's Island'.

Insanity, thy name is 'Mad Doctor of Market Street'.

That said, the film is fun to watch. The film's romantic lead initially starts out as yet another comedy relief character, then becomes a typical stolid hero after being upstaged by the heroine's obnoxious Aunt (Una Merkel, annoying as hell, but at least not as annoying as that other Una; 'O Connor.)and a rather likable big lug named Red(Nat Pendleton)in the comedy department. Such lines like the heading of my review abound, it's either charmingly cringe inducing, or infuriating depending on your point of view.

That said, Atwill gives a suitably creepy performance despite all the comedy, knowing when to ham it up and when to keep quietly restrained. An especially creepy moment is when he comes close to pointlessly murdering a curious native only to be narrowly stopped. There are some genuinely suspenseful moment as well, and when Benson is exposed by the natives it actually is a clever plot device. For such a stylistically disjointed film, it is amazingly cohesive, plot wise.

See this mad little movie to believe it.~
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2/10
Mad mess of a movie that shoots itself in the foot by badly blending comedy and horror. Only notable as Lionel Atwill's last leading role
dbborroughs17 February 2007
Lionel Atwill plays Br Benson a scientist experimenting with suspended animation. Atwill has found a way of putting animals in to suspended animation, then curing their disease and then bringing them back to life. Unfortunately when he tries to move to people the good doctor finds that he can not revive his subjects thus provoking the police to look for the murderer. Fleeing he boards a ship and heads for the south seas. When the ship catches fire, Atwill and several other survivors end up on an island where Atwill uses his medical tricks to enslave the natives.

B movie or not this is a mess of a movie. The film starts okay, with Atwill trying his experiment on a man trying to get money for his family. The police burst in and he's forced to flee. After that comedy sets in and the film doesn't know what it wants to be. Once the ship sinks and the survivors end up on the island things become a mixed bag.

Its it suppose to be serious or a comedy? First billed Una Merkel makes me think it was a comedy. Merkel as a crazy woman going to New Zealand for the fifth time to find love would usually be in the background to Atwill's craziness, but here she's often front and center. The problem is that the comedy is very heavy handed and not very funny. As a drama it isn't much better. Its natives in sarongs bowing before the mad Atwill, who looks bored and distracted. It reminded me of some of the dreadful jungle monster pictures from the 1950's where the mad scientist goes to the jungle and sets some creature loose like in From Hell it Came, except those movies were fun.

I don't think that it helps that this film has something resembling a budget. Certainly the use of stock footage helped, but the fact that Universal spent probably twice what something like Republic, Monogram or a Poverty Row studio made me think that this would be something more than a really cheesy film. I know the reasonable look of the film made it hard to forgive the dopey script.

To be honest this is a hard film to really discuss. Its a light weight B movie that is not bad enough to make one want to spend time commenting on it. Its a bad movie that makes you want to forget it after you've seen it, with a "well that was a waste of an hour" before moving on to something else. Its a misfire and not worth saying anything bad about simply because the movie inflicts enough damage on itself.

Not worth bothering with except as a footnote in Lionel Atwill's career, his last starring role, and possibly his worst performance.
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4/10
Mediocre Thriller enlivened by Atwill's performance
Prichards1234513 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This B pic from Universal is not really a horror film, has only a brief opening sequence in Market Street (by far the best part of the movie), and is virtually carried by Lionel Atwill across the finishing line. He's the only thing worth watching in this rather nonsensical film that went out as support to The Wolf Man.

Atwill plays Dr. Ralph Benson, who bribes a struggling family man into submitting to a suspended animation experiment, only for the police to burst in to discover the patient dead, and the Mad Doctor (helpfully named as such by a radio announcer!) absconded though an open window, a somewhat remarkable feat for the portly Lionel! Such is the clumsiness of the movie that we're not really sure if the patient could have been revived, or if he has been murdered by Benson - particularly as later on Benson seems to be able to make his process work.

Escaping the police, our Mad Doc flees the country in a luxury liner, finding time to push a police agent hunting him over the side! He's no lottery winner that's for sure, as the ship promptly catches fire forcing him to make for the lifeboats. He and some of his fellow passengers - including the compulsory love interests and comic relief types - wash up on a tropical island inhabited by some very peculiar 1940s natives.

Atwill quickly takes charge of the situation, posing as The God Of Life by reviving a heart attack victim with an adrenalin shot! The islanders now his willing slaves, he decides to proceed with his dastardly experiments...

Apart from the opening scene in Market Street this is a film with little atmosphere, even the familiar Son Of Frankenstein music, used countless times by Universal in the 40s, fails to enliven the proceedings. A few location stock shots are complimented by a fair number of back-projection scenes on the island. The natives all look like they wandered in from Mutiny On The Bounty.

In all honesty this isn't a very good movie even by B standards. The comic relief is irritating in the form of Una Merkle and Nat Pendleton and the rest of the characters are briefly sketched stereotypes - even Benson is a bit of a poor specimen of a mad scientist. Lionel Atwill makes the most of it, however, resulting in a performance that's a delight to watch. This is a film that's rarely revived though, and is really for Atwill completists only. It might pass a slow hour on a Sunday afternoon.
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6/10
"Aren't we gonna say goodbye?"
Hey_Sweden15 October 2019
Ever-delightful Lionel Atwill plays another of his crazed scientist roles in this minor but amusing Universal genre picture of the period. It marked his last starring role in a motion picture after the scandal that would derail his career and ruin his health. Here, he plays Dr. Ralph Benson, a nutcase working to perfect suspended animation: killing subjects and bringing them back to life. When his first human victim goes missing, authorities are quick to respond, and he must take it on the lam. He arrives on a tropical island, where his medical abilities endear him to the natives - but his fellow shipwreck survivors want to get away A.S.A.P. Knowing that they'll report him the first chance they get, he refuses to let them leave, while enjoying his new role of "God" on this exotic locale.

Overall, "The Mad Doctor of Market Street" is nothing special, but it IS B-level horror designed to be over and done with quickly, and it entertains quite adequately for a fairly painless 61 minute run time. The supporting cast - top-billed Una Merkel as annoying airhead Aunt Margaret, Nat Pendleton as dumb boxer Red Hogan, Claire Dodd as the lovely Patricia, the briefly seen Hardie Albright and Anne Nagel as hard-luck Saunders and his despairing wife, Richard Davies as likeable deck hand Jim, John Eldredge as the cowardly Dwight, and Noble Johnson as the native chief Elan - are all fine. But Atwill, as was so often the case, is the main reason to watch. He clearly did enjoy playing characters like the evil Benson. He also does well at selling a sense of panic towards the finish as he is given a time limit to prove just how good he is at restoring life.

Low-budget filmmaker Joseph H. Lewis, renowned for some of his later works (especially the noir classic "Gun Crazy"), does a perfectly acceptable job at directing this routine, amusing little programmer. The setting for the tale - including the doomed cruise ship and the island - helps to give it a breath of fresh air. Benson spends barely any time at his lab of horrors on Market Street before the story kicks into gear and he must head for the hills.

A must for Atwill fans and Universal sci-fi / horror completists, if no-one else.

Six out of 10.
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Decent
Michael_Elliott11 March 2008
Mad Doctor of Market Street, The (1942)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Decent Universal horror film has a mad doctor (Lionel Atwill) experimenting with bringing the dead by to life through frozen animation. Your entertainment level will depend on whether or not you like comedy mixed in with your horror. I think the two genres can go together in certain cases and I found the comedy here to be pretty good. Nothing great but nothing bad either. The film's story certainly isn't original but it is fun enough to keep the short film going strong until the end. Atwill, in his final lead role, turns in a fun performance, which is something we've all come to expect out of him.
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4/10
After the ship sinks, so does the film.
BA_Harrison21 September 2022
This one stars Lionel Atwill, and it probably won't come as much of a surprise to learn that he's the one playing the titular mad doctor. A self-appointed physician, Dr. Ralph Benson (Atwill) conducts an experiment on a man, the pseudo-scientist attempting to put his subject in suspended animation and them revive him. The man dies, and Benson flees, wanted for murder.

Benson changes his identity and books himself on a luxury cruise bound for New Zealand, but the ship catches fire and he is forced to get into a lifeboat with several other passengers and seek refuge on a nearby island. The natives of the island think that the white people are evil and plan to burn them alive, but Benson uses his medical knowledge to resuscitate a woman who they think has died (in reality, she has suffered a heart attack); the group is spared and Benson is declared a god.

Benson plans to stay on the island and continue his experiments, using the other passengers as guinea pigs, and so they decide to make a bid for freedom...

A routine B-movie elevated slightly above awful by Atwill, The Mad Doctor of Market Street offers very little to get excited about. The best scenes are of the panic-stricken passengers clambering over each other to get off the burning ship - almost everything that occurs on the island is predictable and dull low-budget nonsense using left-over jungle sets from other South Seas potboilers. At the end of the film, Atwill is roasted alive (off-screen) for being unable to revive a drowned native, while the other passengers are rescued by a search plane that spots them in the nick of time.

3.5/10, rounded up to 4 for Atwill.
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6/10
Atwill redeems this flick that doesn't know what it wants to be
Roddenhyzer8 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Alright, let's get the story out of the way: "The Mad Doctor of Market Street" tells the tale of "Dr." Ralph Benson, a hobby scientist who likes to do occasionally fatal experiments in the fields of resuscitation and suspended animation. When the law catches up with him, he attempts to flee the country, but alas, his means of transportation sinks into the Atlantic ocean, where he ends up washed ashore an island with a handful of other survivors. There, Doc Benson sees a chance to continue his experiments, as he manages to fool the resident tribals into thinking he could bring the dead back to life.

No one's ever pulled off the classic mad scientist with quite as much cold, sociopathic, yet strangely gleeful enthusiasm as Lionel Atwill did. It was for this very reason that I sought out this movie, and as it turned out, it was also its only saving grace. It's not that the movie is lousily produced; quite the contrary. The production values are rather high, as evidenced by the convincing and rather varied sets. What mars this one is simply the lack of a clear thematic focus. The movie shifts between wacky comedy, island romance, morbid medical thriller and (very mild) science fiction pretty much by the minute. I suppose this *could* all work together, but in this one, these elements just don't blend very well. Whenever there's a sense of tension, one of the comic relief characters pulls a stupid face or says something silly. Whenever the mood is lighthearted and even romantic, someone dies or Doc Benson schemes evilly. There's also a tad bit too much going on in terms of threats and dangers. The supposed villain of the movie is the titular doctor, but the real dangers are a fire on and the subsequent sinking of the ship, and a tribe of islanders, who are always on the verge of burning the group of survivors at the stakes for superstitious reasons. In between all of this, Doc Benson is more of an opportunistic, overachieving charlatan than a properly menacing villain, which only adds to the movie's overall vibe of inconsistency.

Literally the only thing that manages to be consistent throughout is Atwill's performance. It's just a delight to watch him deliver his admittedly awesomely megalomaniac lines (the character refers to himself as the "God of Life" and aspires to become the "greatest man who has ever set foot on this earth") with this unique inflection of his. Ultimately, this is why I'm giving this a 6 instead of the maybe much more appropriate 4. As mediocre as everything else about it may be, there's no denying that this one really is an absolute treat for Atwill fans.
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5/10
Good direction, silly plot!
JohnHowardReid27 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Director: JOSEPH H. LEWIS. Original screenplay: Al Martin. Photographed in black-and-white by Jerry Ash. Film editor: Ralph Dixon. Art directors: Jack Otterson and Ralph M. DeLacy. Set decorations: Russell A. Gausman. Costumes: Vera West. Music director: Hans J. Salter. Sound recording: Bernard B. Brown and Jess Moulin. Producer: Paul Malvern.

Copyright 8 December 1941 by Universal Pictures Co., Inc. New York opening at the Rialto: 3 January 1942. U.S. release: 27 February 1942. Australian release: 7 May 1942. 6 reels. 5,449 feet. 60 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Shipwrecked on a tropical island, a mad doctor uses his suspended animation techniques to impress the natives.

COMMENT: Early "B" film directed by Joseph H. Lewis starts off promisingly but ends up unexpectedly with stock natives on a Pacific Island. Still, director Lewis shows an occasional flair with imaginative compositions, though the plot is one of the silliest we have ever come across. The star of the film, Una Merkel, plays a totally superfluous character and the support cast proves not much better, but Lionel Atwill goes through his role as if believing that his every word was of the greatest importance!
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7/10
Review for the Mad Doctor of Market Street
Reviews_of_the_Dead5 October 2022
This is a movie that I discovered thanks to Letterboxd when searching for horror from 1942. What was interesting here is that this is another starring, Lionel Atwill. He's an actor that I recognized but didn't know he was as prolific as he was. Other than that, from the title I figured we are getting another mad scientist film from the era.

Synopsis: a mad scientist is forced to leave San Francisco when his experiments become known. A shipwreck lands him and other survivors on a tropical island, where he takes control with his experiments and terrorizes the local populace.

We start this as the synopsis says in the city of San Francisco. Dr. Ralph Benson (Atwill) wants to shift his experiments from animals to test on humans. He puts out the word and it draws William Saunders (Hardie Albright). Dr. Benson offers him $1,000 dollars to be a guinea pig. When he doesn't return home, this worries his wife, played by Anne Nagel. She alerts the police. Dr. Benson flees, unable to finish his experiment to bring William back to life. Dr. Benson is wanted for murder.

The movie then shifts to a cruise ship. On it are Aunt Margert Wentworth (Una Merkel) with her niece, Patricia (Claire Dodd). There is also Red Hogan (Nat Pendleton) who is a boxer on his way to fight. There is also a crewman, Jim (Richard Davies). Dr. Benson is also on board, going by the name of Graham.

A police officer or a private detective notices Graham and confronts him. To avoid capture, Graham knocks him out and tosses him overboard. Jim sees and sounds an alarm. The ship then catches fire, causing everyone to abandoned. Ending up on an island are Aunt Margert, Patricia, Red, Jim and Graham. I also believe there's another survivor with them.

This island is inhabited though. The chief is Elan (Noble Johnson). They believe that 'white people' bring bad luck. That's how they explain that his wife, Tanao (Rosina Galli) is dying. Graham reveals that he's Dr. Benson and claims he can help her. In doing so, he wants to be leader on this island and has the natives capture the other survivors. He doesn't want them to get away and turn him in. Dr. Benson is ruthless and wants to expand his experiments while here. He also has an eye for Patricia, who has taken a liking to Jim.

That should give you a better idea of what this story is doing and the characters themselves. Where I'll start is that we have an interesting idea here. To me, it feels like this is borrowing from H. G. Wells' The Island of Dr. Moreau, or at least the basic premise of taking a mad scientist and putting him on an island. I like the concept though and what they do with it. It is taking people that do not know science. They're primitive in that sense. Dr. Benson takes advantage when they see he can help the chief's wife. There is commentary here about us following what doctors say. I mean I think we got more of this back in this era, but even today individuals will without question. This is also interesting that we have another film from this year depicting a bad doctor like this.

Sticking with science, I want to go over to the experiment. Dr. Benson can put people in a state of suspended animation and then bring them back. What is interesting is that something happened to get the police after him and it is when William dies that he is wanted. I believe they are originally after him for wanting to conduct his experiment on people, but until he tries, their hands are tied. What is interesting is that if the police don't show up, William is alive. He dies when Dr. Benson flees without taking him out of this status. I thought that was interesting angle. The movie doesn't delve too much into the science of what he is doing, but we don't need to. Watching this with modern eyes, we put patients in comas for certain procedures to help them so it is plausible to me. We can also take them out of it and that is what I believe Dr. Benson is doing.

Where I want to go then would be the setting. I like that it establishes things in the city before Dr. Benson goes on the run. From there, we are on a cruise ship which contains it while still giving room to move. Finally, it goes to the island. I love this because they're stranded. Dr. Benson doesn't want them to be discovered as he know he could face prosecution. He is also treated like a king here. Being shipwrecked is great and I love movies set on an island like this. Having a mad doctor in charge of a tribe of natives also adds tension as well which works.

That should be enough for the story so I want to take this to the acting. I'll start with Atwill who is great as this evil mad scientist. There are things he says that I can see the logic behind. He is a villain and plays it well with the arrogance he brings to the role. Merkel is funny as Aunt Margaret. She is a gossip which gets her into trouble. Pendleton is fine as our rough boxer. He also adds levity in that he's ready to brawl whenever. Dodd is fine as our 'damsel in distress' even though she isn't given a lot to work with. I like Davies in his role. There are cameos by Nagel and Johnson who were good. The acting was solid across the board in my opinion.

Finally, I'll come to the filmmaking. I said I like the settings so I'll give credit to the cinematography. It doesn't feel like sets which are good. The island feels like the characters are there with adds realism for me. I would then say that the rest of the cinematography is fine. There aren't a lot in the way of effects, but we also don't need them either. The soundtrack didn't necessarily stand out to me, but it also fit for what was needed.

In conclusion, this is an interesting film for the era. We are getting a mad scientist and then stranded him on an island inhabited by natives. This isn't the first to do that, but it does enough different there. I thought that the acting was good, being led by Atwill. The rest of the cast around him works. I'd say that the filmmaking aspects are fine without necessarily standing out. I did like the settings though. This is a quick watch, which I appreciate. It doesn't do a lot to set itself apart though.

My Rating: 7 out of 10.
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3/10
More Mad Than Doctor.
AaronCapenBanner25 October 2013
Lionel Atwill is the whole show here(practically) as he plays an unethical doctor whose experiments in suspended animation fail miserably. Now wanted for murder by the San Francisco police, he flees the city and boards a ship bound for the South Pacific. Unfortunately, there is a fire on board, and the ship sinks, leaving him and other survivors stranded on a remote island populated by primitive natives who come to worship him after he saves the life of the tribal chief's wife, though the worship goes to his head, really making him power "mad"! Can the other survivors expose him as a fraud? Despite Atwill's lively performance, this film is incredibly dull and forgettable.
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3/10
Cheesy fun in spite of how bad it is.
mark.waltz3 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
There was "The Three Faces of Eve" years after this Universal programmer which I refer to sarcastically as "The Ten Faces of Celluloid". It is a film that has so many genres involved that all it seems to be missing is a big production number and a stampede of cattle out in the wild west. It's a handsome looking little B film, utilizing pretty much every standing set on the Universal lot to cover all of these genres which includes horror, science fiction, crime drama, shipboard romance, island adventure and silly comedy that usually utilized Universal contract player Leon Errol, sadly not used in this.

The plotline surrounds determined mad scientist Lionel Atwill, another one of the hundred doctors determined to better mankind by discovering a way of getting rid of disease once and for all and ending up creating chaos instead. If I saw someone like Atwill coming at me with a sponge towards my face, I'd get the heck out of there, and he does it several times in this movie. When first seen, Atwill is aiding a struggling husband and father in trying to make some extra dough by being the subject of one of his experiments, and before the experiment can be completed, the police and the man's wife are breaking into the room. Atwill escapes, and the man dies, leading him to become a wanted murderer.

The insanity continues when a cruise ship featuring Anne Nagel, Una Merkel, Claire Dodd and Nat Pendleton catches on fire and they end up on a tropical island were Atwill is hiding out, in the process of bringing the chief's wife back to life. They recognize him but he's under the protection of the chief, so they find himself at the mercy of his madness. Atwill's efforts to continue his work leads to a bunch of silly twists that induce laughs more than chills. The result is a fun time passer that gives Atwill a lot of scenery to chew and Merkel and Pendleton plenty of opportunity to recite idiotic dialog that you can't help but be amused by. Worth checking out purely for its audacity.
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Only worth while for Lionel Atwill fans
Mikel316 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I've been on a Lionel Atwill kick lately, watching some of his less famous films. Luckily I can find some of them on youtube to view for free. Last night I watched 'The Mad Doctor of Market Street. Youtube had a pretty decent copy. I'd never seen this one before. The title was intriguing. Turns out it really wasn't much of a horror movie or worthwhile except for Lionel Atwill fans. He does always play a good villain. The story starts out in the the city, San Francisco I think, where a "Mad Doctor' is conducting illegal experiments in suspended animation. He believes he can eventually conquer death. Unfortunately he kills a test subject who submits to the experiment in order to get money to feed his hungry family. The police know of his experiments and are after him. The story quickly moves from the city to an ocean liner where he is hiding out and then to a south seas tropical island, castaway style. I really wasn't expecting that. The plot as I said, is nothing to write home about...oh wait I am writing about it. To me the best part was the use of well known sound track music to effectively make a scene much scarier than it has a right to be. I believe it's the music from 'Son of Frankenstein' or one of the other Frankenstein Films. Also, Mr. Atwill is fun to watch as always. The down side besides the predictable story was the annoying characters in the film for comic relief. The IMDb gave the film an average rating of 5.2 out of 10. In my opinion it's barely a 3.
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5/10
The Mad Doctor of Market Street
Scarecrow-8826 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
THE MAD DOCTOR OF MARKET STREET sadly marks the end to Lionel Atwill as a major star in Universal horror(and film in general)due to a sex scandal. I won't dwell on those details, instead focusing on his attributes as they pertain to THE MAD DOCTOR OF MARKET STREET. He's the whole show in this rather mediocre island mad scientist thriller as the diabolical antics of Atwill's crazed, narcissistic Dr. Ralph Benson put the lives of stranded passengers in danger as the restless, superstitious natives consider him a "god of life" when he heals one of their own, a woman who had a heart attack. Benson pretends he brought this woman back from the dead and is heralded by the jungle natives who grant him all the amenities he so desires, living it up as a king, his own hut, and the ability to command the other passengers out of the village until he wishes to experiment on them in regards to suspended animation. Benson was a fugitive on the lam(his experiment led to the death of a human guinea pig), having boarded a cruise for another country. Benson causes a fire on the liner, resulting in everyone on board having to leave the ship. He boards a canoe with Aunt Margaret(Una Merkel), who expected to marry a wealthy man in Australia, her niece, Patricia(Claire Dodd), a boxer preparing for a big fight(Nat Pendleton, playing his character as if he had been hit in the head a few too many times in the ring), and two members of the cruise's crew, Jim(Richard Davies)and Dwight(John Eldridge). They must determine how to get off the island as Benson has become power mad, with designs on marriage with Patricia and experimenting on the men of the group. Atwill was always adept at portraying crazy-eyed scientists who besmirched anyone that attempted to defy him, taking advantage of the weak and vulnerable, as was the case in this film as he promised to pay his subject 1000 dollars to the man's family in exchange for his willingness to volunteer for his suspended animation experiment. The title is a bit misleading as I imagine many, like I was, will enter the film expecting a mad scientist performing his experiments on innocents in and around his laboratory on Market Street. Then the movie's plot moves to the luxury liner where we are led to believe that Benson may prey on passengers while on the cruise. And finally the film shifts to the island paradise where Benson uses the backwards customs and beliefs of natives to his advantage, later paying the price when Jim finds a dead primitive, orchestrating a revolt if the mad doctor can not revive him. It's a shame that Atwill's career, like so many other treasures icons of Universal horror, would end so badly, but we can always return to his films time and again, relishing his colorful madmen, scientists, and village policemen. His presence, no matter how small the part, always caught my attentiom, as I imagine it did to many of his other fans as well.
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5/10
Watch this for Lionel Atwill only.
Lionel Atwill lifted a few average horror films to the status of being tolerable. Luckily, he was able to achieve this by being a theatre- trained actor who was a genuine talent. "The Mad Doctor of Market Street" is a typical example. He plays another mad scientist who is forced to leave the United States after causing the death of a patient whilst conducting some bizarre experiments. Lionel Atwill finishes up by being shipwrecked on a desert island along with other people and then attempts to conquer the island's inhabitants. Strictly speaking, this is routine stuff but worth seeing...just.
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6/10
Atwill is the "god of life"
utgard143 March 2014
Mad scientist Lionel Atwill is at it again. This time he's run out of San Francisco for performing experiments that involve killing people so he can bring them back to life. He eventually makes his way to a tropical island where he uses his scientific abilities to fool the natives into thinking he has the power of resurrection. Minor Universal horror film is still enjoyable. Lionel Atwill is great as always. He's got some nice support from the likes of Noble Johnson, Claire Dodd, and John Eldredge. Nat Pendleton and cutie Una Merkel provide the comic relief. It's not a classic but any movie where Atwill plays a villain, especially a mad scientist, is worth checking out.
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