

The Lost City
- Science Fiction
An evil scientist invents a earthquake machine and plots to take over the world from his base in Africa.
Cast & Crew
No editorial yet
Guides and articles for this movie will appear here after content sync.


An evil scientist invents a earthquake machine and plots to take over the world from his base in Africa.
No editorial yet
Guides and articles for this movie will appear here after content sync.
These theatres support recommended formats for this movie. This does not mean the movie is currently showing.
Find theatres near you
Enter your city or let us detect your location
No awards linked
No Wikidata award or festival records were found for this title yet.
talisencrw
Written on 4/12/2016
It must have been so gloriously invigorating, making films during the first decade since the inception of sound. It seemed both in the pre-Code era and in serials (which I unabashedly adore) that writers and filmmakers threw everything but the kitchen sink at unsuspecting viewers. Though the cynical among contemporary cinephiles could just as well toss it off as creaky filmmaking, since Lord Almighty, it's in black-and-white with no CGI, it's a load of fun (although it does carry the racial stereotypes that were prevalent in cinema at that time, unfortunately). The mid-30's weren't too different from 2016, four full generations later, in that current successes=tons of spinoffs (just like the plethora of ultraviolent comedies after 'Pulp Fiction', and gazillions of comic book films in the wake of 'Iron Man'). Since then-recent smash hits like 'King Kong', Johnny Weissmuller's 'Tarzan' films and mad-scientist of James Whale's outstanding 'Frankenstein' movies made those aspects hugely popular, they all get tossed together here in a cinematic ratatouille, with a crazed scientist in an desolate African jungle, of all places, threatening the world with global domination, by destroying hundreds of cities worldwide through electrical storms. An electrical engineering genius, Bruce Gordon, discovers this, and plots an expedition there to find the root cause and destroy it. Along the way, he and his party are continually double-crossed by everyone and their half-brother, as each person with any sense of duplicity whatsoever puts the two-and-two together that kidnapped elderly scientist Dr. Manyus' ability to make zombie-like giant slaves from the African natives could mean a fortune in dubious hands. One of my favourite character actors of the era, George 'Gabby' Hayes, plays one of those dubious people, the explorer Butterfield, and Claudia Dell is downright deliciously captivating as Dr. Manyus' daughter, the picture's damsel in distress. Yes, there are excruciating plot holes galore, but that's never the point with these delightful films. Just turn your brain off for the 3+ hours, that the 2 parts of the film (edited from the 4-hour, 12-part serial) have to offer. Not everything has to be Hamlet.
This title has already released. Showing historical dates and streaming availability.
Theatrical · confirmed
Theatrical
The Lost City

CinemaView Score
Best Format
IMAX LASERWorth Premium Ticket
✓Worth It
The Artificial Man
18 August 1916

Drums of Fu Manchu
15 March 1940

Flash Gordon
6 April 1936

The Black Widow
1 November 1947

Mysterious Doctor Satan
13 December 1940

Mysterious Island
13 September 1951

Radar Men from the Moon
9 January 1952

Captain Video, Master of the Stratosphere
27 December 1951