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Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959) - Video On Demand

  Attack of the Giant Leeches - Attack of the Giant Leeches  

ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES WATCH NOW

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Attack of the Giant Leeches - Movie Review

Crawling horror unleashed by the depths of hell to kill and conquer. Attack of the Giant Leeches is a low budget 1959 science fiction film from American International Pictures. In the Florida Everglades, a colony of larger than human size, intelligent leeches is living in an underwater cave. They begin dragging local people down to their cave where they hold them prisoner and slowly drain them of blood.

One of the first people to be so taken is the local vixen, Liz Walker, played by Yvette Vickers . After a couple of gratuitous displays of flesh (Yvette appeared as the centerfold in the July, 1959 issue of Playboy.), and some running around on her husband (Bruno VeSota), Liz finds herself a prisoner of the leeches along with her current paramour. Game warden Steve Benton (Ken Clark) sets out to investigate their disappearance. Aided by his girlfriend Nan Grayson (Jan Sheppard) and her father, Doc Grayson, he discovers the cavern.

The giant leeches are unrealistically portrayed by men in rubber suits, but they do provide suitably disgusting scenes when attacking their victims. The monsters are finally destroyed when Steve, Doc, and some state troopers blow up the cavern with dynamite.

This film was also called Attack of the Blood Leeches, Demons of the Swamp, She Demons of the Swamp, and The Giant Leeches. In July 1992, Attack of the Giant Leeches was featured as an episode of movie-mocking television show Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Attack of the Giant Leeches Trivia - Did You Know?

This film was one of a spate of monster movies produced during the 1950s in response to cold war fears. In the film a character speculates that the leeches have been mutated to giant size by atomic radiation from nearby Cape Canaveral. The leeches themselves can also be interpreted as a sort of allegory on the supposed dangers of covert communists lurking undetected in even unlikely parts of America. As with many of these films, the analysis can be more entertaining than the film itself.

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