Solemplex
To me, this movie is perfection.
Livestonth
I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible
SanEat
A film with more than the usual spoiler issues. Talking about it in any detail feels akin to handing you a gift-wrapped present and saying, "I hope you like it -- It's a thriller about a diabolical secret experiment."
Usamah Harvey
The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
JohnHowardReid
Harry Houdini starred in 5 movies. The best was probably the third, "Terror Island". It's difficult to be certain, because the 8/10 Kino DVD is missing reels 3 and 4, and Houdini's second, "The Grim Game", survives only in a 5-minute fragment. However, despite the missing reels, the main narrative line of "Terror Island", is reasonably intact. Despite its Boy's Own Paper characters and story, the movie does surround Harry with an able support cast including Wilton Taylor and Eugene Palette as the chief villains, and the lovely Lila Lee as the heroine Harry rescues. While the story more than strains credibility, it's full of action. In fact, the picture could well be described as a feature-length serial. No doubt some patrons were actually fooled, because the movie's posters highlight the fact that "Terror Island" is most definitely "not a serial!" Producer Jesse L. Lasky even spent a fair bit of money on the production. And it was competently directed by James Cruze who had made a bit of a name for himself with Valley of the Giants (1919) starring Wallace Reid. His break-through film, of course, was The Covered Wagon (1923).
MartinHafer
Sadly, one of the reels for TERROR ISLAND is missing, though on this Kino release, they use explanatory intertitle cards to tell what was missing. This isn't a perfect solution, but considering how amazingly cool this film is, it's well worth seeing in spite of this loss.The film is about a group of jerks led by a younger and much skinnier Eugene Palette. They are trying to trick a young lady out of a treasure map. She, on the other hand, wants to follow the map not just to riches but to her father who is being held by insane savages in the South Seas. To the rescue comes Harry Houdini, who has a really cool submarine they can use to rescue the man AND get the treasure. Unfortunately, by the time Harry arrives at the island, the lady (who has been kidnapped) is there with Palette and his evil wife and friends. Well, after a whole lot of fighting and lots of neat underwater stunts, the day is saved and Harry gets the girl.I loved this film considering how early it was. Seeing Houdini performing these underwater stunts was exciting and they were well filmed and really brought me into the film. I've seen most of Houdini's movies that exist today, and I think this is by far the best. It's like a movie serial with all the episodes crammed into less than one hour. Cool stuff.
disdressed12
after having just watched this movie starring harry Houdini,i gotta say,i have mixed feelings about it.on the one hand, the pace is very frantic,so the movie is not boring,in that regard.however,the movie is very repetitive,with Houdini and his co-stars doing a lot of the same things over and over again.unfortunately,2 reels out of 7 are lost,so instead of reels 3 and 4,there is a brief explanatory text to bridge the gap.if you're not a silent film buff,you probably would not enjoy this particular movie.but if you are,i think it's worth having for the novelty alone.if you haven't been exposed to silent movies,this is probably not the one you should watch first.i would recommend Nosferatu(1922)as a starting point.
boblipton
When they say "melodrama" in the early titles, they aren't kidding. The plot, such as it is, involves a ship of sunken pearls, a submarine, a South Seas trader held hostage for the return of the idol's eye, human sacrifice, television and a most peculiar tribe of Polynesians, in which the men are all African Americans and the women are fat blondes. Or perhaps they're Melanesians. I don't think there were that many serious anthropologists at work on this movie.Of course, that's not why people came to see this movie. They wanted to see Harry Houdini in some of his death-defying escapes. Well, you have Harry Houdini and the assurance of the titles that he performed his own stunts. This despite the fact that Bob Rose was his stunt double for all his pictures: can't risk holding up production after all.This was originally a seven-reeler. Two of the reels are missing. Still, you get to look at Houdini, Lila Lee -- she keeps falling into the water and having to be retrieved -- and a villainous Eugene Palette, just when he was beginning to put on weight and look like Eugene Palette. Enjoy.