The Incredible Melting Man

The Incredible Melting Man is a cheeseball 1977 American sci/fi horror film about an astronaut who is exposed to outer-space radiation and then comes back transformed into a hideous monster. And unlike the last time this happened, there really IS a monster here!

You see, Doctor Steve West's time over on Saturn has left him slowly melting into glop while simultaneously giving him superhuman strength and an insatiable appetite that only human flesh can sate (and a little aside for any monsters reading this: How do you guys know that only human flesh will satisfy your unholy urges if you'll never try something different? Geez). Don't bother asking about how he can easily pull victims apart with a rapidly deteriorating musculoskeletal structure; that'll just get in the way of all the ooey-gooey makeup effects! To its credit, this is one of the few things the movie does do well; Rick Baker's nastily convincing special effects really do look every bit like a man slowly liquifying before our eyes, and the movie is packed with Nausea Fuel and graphic violence that really stood out at the time.

Okay, now for the bad stuff: The movie is also poorly written, dimly lit, loaded with uninteresting characters, and contains an extremely bad and unsatisfying ending in which everyone with a speaking part dies and the Incredible Melting Man melts. Incredibly. The director wanted to do the movie as a parody, which could have indeed worked —several things left in the final film even hint at this original plan— but sadly, the studio forced him to turn it into a straight horror flick, resulting in the ludicrous mess moviegoers wound up seeing.

Not to be confused with The Molten Man, a Spider-Man supervillain.

For the Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode see here .

This film provides examples of:

 * Artistic License Astronomy: Saturn, being a gas giant, doesn't have a surface on which a spaceship can land or from which it can take off.
 * Also those aren't the rings of Saturn. They don't even remotely look like the rings of Saturn.
 * It's the sun, complete with Coronal Mass Ejections.
 * Artistic License Biology: The fisherman's head seems to be made of papier mache, filled with a liter's worth of red temper paint.
 * Body Horror: Good God, yes.
 * Cat Scare: A particularly nonsensical one.
 * Downer Ending. And a bizarre one.
 * Dull Surprise: Ted Nelson, when he isn't experiencing severe Wangst.
 * Exactly What It Says On the Tin: No, seriously, there is no story.
 * Gorn: See Nausea Fuel below.
 * Hey Its That Guy: Jonathan Demme has a bit role.
 * Fan Service courtesy of Exploitation Film favorite Cheryl Smith.
 * I'm Melting: Well, obviously.
 * Leaning On the Fourth Wall: One bizarre moment, when Ted speaks directly to the camera when consoling Judy, blaming himself for his emotional distance.
 * Neutral Female: Judy.
 * Ted is a good example of a Neutral Male since he
 * Screw This I'm Outta Here: Judy's mother when guard dogs start attacking them when they're trespassing on a lemon grove.
 * Shoot the Shaggy Dog: The eponymous character is an astronaut who has been irradiated on his way back from Saturn and who is slowly melting to death. There is no cure whatsoever. Only killing and consuming people stops his pain, even briefly.
 * Soundtrack Dissonance: The sheriff's radio is playing a spritely Country-Western song when he finds the corpses of Judy's parents.
 * Super Strength: Apparently a side effect of the melting.
 * Unusual Euphemism: HOTCHGKA!
 * What Could Have Been: Originally was going to be a spoof of horror films, until the executives told the director to play it straight. He wasn't amused.
 * Your Head Falls Onto a Rock and Bursts Like a Watermelon
 * Your Head Falls Onto a Rock and Bursts Like a Watermelon