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World of Giants the Complete Series

by Glenn Erickson Nov 04, 2023

Sci-fi completists and diehard fans of ‘fifties TV fun will want to know about this remastered disc containing all 13 episodes of the short-lived 1959 TV series, starring Marshall Thompson as America’s ‘tom thumb in a suitcase’ superspy, and Arthur Franz as his full-sized secret agent partner. Vintage special effects see them battle oversized animals and giant telephones, to keep us safe from enemy agents. The guest actors are a fun bunch and the directors include Byron Haskin, Nathan Juran, Jack Arnold and Eugène Lourié.


World of Giants the Complete Series

Blu-ray
13 30-minute episodes
ClassicFlix Rare Television
1959 / B&W / 1:33 Television / 338 min. / Street Date November 7, 2023 / Available from ClassicFlix / 39.99
Starring: Marshall Thompson, Arthur Franz, Marcia Henderson, John Gallaudet, Peggie Castle, Gavin MacLeod, Allison Hayes, Tom Brown, Berry Kroeger, Bill Walker, Pamela Duncan, Narda Onyx, Edgar Barrier, Gregg Palmer, Ziva Rodann, Nestor Paiva, Harry Lauter, Alex Montoya, Brett Halsey, Byron Morrow.
Cinematography: Monroe P. Askins, Curt Fetters, David S. Horsley
Set Designers / Art Directors: Robert Kinoshita, Jack T. Collis
Film Editors: Thomas Scott, Charles Craft, George E. Luckenbacher, Harvey Manger
Audio Supervisor: Al Lincoln
Writers include Meyer Dolinsky, Irwin Winehouse, A. Sanford Wolfe, Donald Duncan, Fred Freiberger
Produced by William Alland, Otto Lang
Directed by
Nathan Juran, Jack Arnold, Byron Haskin, Harry Horner, Otto Lang, Monroe P. Askins, Eugène Lourié

It’s interesting that this review should follow so closely after the drive-in monster movies made by Texas radio magnate  Gordon McLendon, because ZIV TV, the producers of scores of syndicated TV shows, began in syndicated radio as well. Independent producers that pitched ideas to the big three networks often had to make a number of episodes, sometimes on their own dime. ZIV partnered with some independents, and some shows not picked up by CBS, NBC and ABC were retained by ZIV for syndicated playoff. Network affiliates had non- prime time hours to fill as well, and also booked shows from ZIV or one of its competitors. It was a complicated set-up, likely very insular and politics-minded.

ZIV was behind three science fiction shows of the 1950s. Producer Ivan Tors’ Science Fiction Theater ran for two years starting in 1955. Much more elaborate was Tors’ Men into Space (1959), which featured extensive special effects. It ran only one season (38 episodes). A third ZIV sci-fi show was derived from the ‘shrinking-giant’ subgenre of matinee thrillers, most notably Jack Arnold’s  The Incredible Shrinking Man. The producer of World of Giants was former Universal-International Sci-fi mainstay William Alland, who had recently done some additional fantastic film producing over at Paramount.

World of Giants did not attain full syndication status. According to the ClassicFlix disc notes, momentum for the project fell off after the networks passed, even though CBS was involved in the show’s development. ZIV backed away as well — did they decide to roll the dice on the more expensive but also more topical Men into Space?  ZIV itself would soon cease operations.

 

The thirteen World of Giants episodes premiered in early September 1959, finished up at Thanksgiving time and rattled about in spotty syndication for years thereafter. ZIV was sold to United Artists Television in 1960, reportedly because the 3 networks were now producing more of their non- prime time programming. UA TV (now MGM Television) owns many but not all of the shows, and World of Giants is not among their holdings. ClassicFlix has been presenting former ZIV programming on disc, seemingly through a relationship with the  Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research.

What ClassicFlix Rare Television presents here is an entire short-run Sci-fi series, an amusing Cold War spy show featuring a six-inch secret agent. That’s his overall height. We like it for the personnel involved, and the chance to see its makers improve their product greatly over a very few episodes.

Every episode is introduced on screen with the booming voiceover “WOG – World of Giants.” The early shows feel underproduced, with a lot of dialogue. The special effects are also limited in the first two half-hours, but later shows become much more adventurous.

Every show begins with a stock shot (from the 1940’s!) of a Government building housing an intelligence agency that fights foreign spies from behind the Iron Curtain. On assignment somewhere in Eastern Europe, Federal Counter-Espionage Agent Mel Hunter (Marshall Thompson) was caught in a rocket fuel explosion. He survived but then started to shrink; the experts stopped the process at six inches. This back story happens off screen, and is recounted several times in dialogue in later episodes. At least one episode has Mel learning that, yes, the medical experts still haven’t found a way to reverse the process: ‘Breaking News! — You’re still a shrimp.”

Mel continues to work with his former partner Agent Bill Winters (Arthur Franz). Bill carts Mel around in a special valise rigged with a pilot’s chair and a round window so he can see out. In one episode Mel is transported about in a hollow box camera. Mel is able to sneak into places to find special information, overhear villainous plans, etc.. He and Bill are considered American’s most secret secret weapon. Mel must take risks related to his tiny stature, while Bill is wounded a couple of times in standard action confrontations. Episodes often end with Mel giving Bill critical information to pass on, and we only hear about the bad guys being rounded up off-screen. But one of the last episodes ends with Bill fast-draw shooting three men in a Jazz nightclub.

 

At first we’re given situations from Shrinking Man and  Attack of the Puppet People: ‘look out for that giant pencil, Mel!’  ZIV’s resources are less than Universal but greater than Bert I. Gordon’s. Very good oversized sets and props are used; art designer Robert Kinoshita (Forbidden Planet) is credited with these. Much use is also made of rear projection. It clearly becomes evident that the footage with the ‘tiny’ Marshall Thompson was filmed separately, when the other actors didn’t have to be around. Most of the series directors blend the normal and the ‘miniaturized’ well enough. It’s obvious that a modern CGI extravaganza like  Ant-Man shows more fantastic content in any given minute, than all of this series combined. If that negates earlier achievements, the discussion can quit right now.

The first four or five shows use somewhat dry Mel Hunter voiceovers, narrating his own exploits. He also addresses the camera at the finale, as would a series host. The fifth episode drops that format and introduces a new character. Miss Brown (Marcia Henderson of The Hypnotic Eye) is a secretary / nurse / dietician. She argues with Mel and warms up to Bill. She’s a welcome addition, as someone with a personality for the two spy partners to interact with.

By the time Miss Brown arrives Mel is living in a miniature house in Bill’s living room. Some of the special effect composites to marry the different-scaled sets together are excellent. In the last couple of shows, the doll house automatically disappears into a wall, like something from a  Thunderbirds episode.

The later episodes also show more variety. Two have foreign settings and manage the requisite number of ‘exotic’ stereotypes and clichés. But one of the last shows features a respectable, nicely integrated role for black actor Bill Walker. His character ‘Daddy Dean’ is the only ‘civilian’ allowed to discover Mel Hunter’s amazing itty bitty status. He and Mel play music together . . . perhaps the plan was for Daddy Dean to become a recurring character.

The show doesn’t dwell on Mel Hunter’s psychological situation. He never brings up his past status as a full-sized man, and his mental state is mentioned only a bit in the first episodes. We’re assured that ‘keeping busy’ with spy work is the best medicine. Mel also doesn’t seem to miss having a sex life. When Bill and Miss Brown get semi-romantic in the last few episodes, dancing the mambo and even necking in a car (as part of an undercover operation), Mel doesn’t feel cheated. Back in his original novel The Shrinking Man, Richard Matheson made Robert Scott Carey’s sexual anxiety into a major story element.

The early shows confect to have Mel menaced by a cat, an opossum, and a dog. A show with a KS (killer squirrel) features an imaginative scene in a burrow rigged with a nasty vermin trap. Later on, Mel must repeatedly improvise when hiding in an enemy lair or ejected into some unexpected environment. He’s locked in a freezer and must hide next to a slot machine. He has to dive into a fancy swimming pool and even ‘zip-lines’ his way into a bad guy hideout. When Mel climbs inside a grand piano, the special effects are excellent.

 

Fans that watch old TV series to catch favorite actors will meet up with at least one familiar face per episode. Were some shows cast with people known from sci-fi movies?  Note the links . . . Peggie Castle seduces Gavin MacLeod in one show    , and  Allison Hayes wears two swimsuits and clocks a KOUD (kiss of unusual duration) in another.  Pamela Duncan is busy in an episode involving domestic treachery, while Palestinian-American actress  Ziva Rodann plays Chinese in another. There’s also  Berry Kroeger and  Nestor Paiva as nasty enemies of freedom, and  Harry Lauter and  Gregg Palmer as good guys, with a walk-on by  Brett Halsey.

Both of the show’s stars are of course steeped in fantastic film credits, even if that path wasn’t part of their career plan. Marshall Thompson opposed  a snake monster,  anti-matter brains,  a Martian stowaway and  a mutated spaceman. Hard-working Arthur Franz got sucked into fantastic fare early,  flying to Mars,  battling Martians back here,  searching for a lost satellite,  fighting an evolutionary throwback, and  fighting yet more aliens under the polar ice cap.

One of the series producers hired himself to direct the first two episodes, but later shows employed directors noted for juggling assignments loaded with special effects. Oscar-winning art director-turned director Nathan Juran did four highly creative episodes.  Harry Horner (2 episodes) was a celebrated art director as well. The hiring of producer William Alland’s ex-collaborator Jack Arnold is a natural; he did 2 episodes. But the one episode each by celebrated fantastic-film directors Byron Haskin and Eugène Lourié are possibly the best — they manage to get more interesting angles during the action scenes.

 


 

ClassicFlix Rare Television’s   Blu-ray disc set of World of Giants: the Complete Series is a welcome bit of fantasy TV revivalism — we weren’t sure these would ever show up in decent condition. The company is quick to add disclaimers about the quality, which really aren’t necessary, at least not in up-front title cards. The shows were remastered in HD from 16mm prints held at the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research. Yes, it would be nice if they were from 35mm negatives that yielded revelatory levels of detail, like the often jaw-dropping remasters of  The Twilight Zone and  The Outer Limits. What we have here is quite good. Another ClassicFlix disclaimer scares us with mentions of scenes that were found to be beyond repair, but we only notice an occasional minor scratch. The blackout pauses for TV commercials are clean, and the openings and closing credits are intact. No complaints here.

No subtitles are included, an important issue for many viewers.

With the exception of a nice behind-the scenes photo gallery and a preview of another ZIV TV show offering, the disc is low on extras — no essays or commentaries. An episode log on the inside cover carries only a few credits per show. But that only leaves us more to discover for ourselves.

I think but am not certain that MGM Television still has full rights to Science Fiction Theater’s 78 episodes and the 38 episodes of Men into Space. That show might really be something to see organized on disc. I kept one episode for laughs, “First Woman on the Moon” because it co-stars the wonderful Nancy Gates and makes a hilariously misguided attempt at a feminist statement. But Men into Space employed  Rabin, DeWitt and Block for opticals, was designed by Robert Kinoshita and  Chesley Bonestell, and its writers included  Jerome Bixby,  Ted Sherdeman and  Ib Melchoir.

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


World of Giants the Complete Series
Blu-ray rates:
TV Show: Good
Video: Very Good
Sound: Very Good
Supplements: Still gallery featuring rare production, promo and scene photos.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? N0;
Subtitles: None
Packaging: One Blu-ray in Keep case
Reviewed:
November 2, 2023
(7021giant)
CINESAVANT

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About Glenn Erickson

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Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

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Fred Blosser

God bless these boutique DVD/BRD companies! I like Marshall Thompson and Arthur Franz, but holy Toledo, talk about two actors who define the term soporific. Irwin Allen’s LAND OF THE GIANTS from 1968-70 also had Tom Thumb-size people but a different premise. I’ve never seen either series; the ’50s show must not have aired in my area, and I was living in a college dorm when the Allen series ran, with little or no access to a TV.

Chas Speed

I wish they would release a complete set of “Way Out”, but I’m not holding my breath.

Dan Oliver

The creature that Marshall Thompson battled was from Mars, not Venus. At least, if we’re both thinking of It! The Terror from Beyond Space.

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[…] whine, “I told you so.”  As covered in the recent review of the TV show  World of Giants, former MGM contractee Thompson had become heavily associated with fantasy and science fiction in […]

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[…] This was Harry Horner’s first job directing. He’s better known as a production designer for prestigious films by William Wyler,  George Cukor,  Sydney Pollack and even  Walter Hill. As a director his biggest picture is likely 1956’s The Wild Party with Anthony Quinn and Carol Ohmart. Most of Horner’s directing credits are on television, as with episodes of World of Giants. […]

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