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  1. 11. Sept. 2023 · Uploaded by ekminer on September 11, 2023. An insurance investigator finds there’s more to electronic dream therapy than meets the eye, in this superior UK Sci-Fi.

    • 72 Min.
    • 394
    • ekminer
  2. All topics. The Electronic Monster. Original title: Escapement. 1958. Approved. 1h 16m. IMDb RATING. 4.6 /10. 219. YOUR RATING. Rate. Crime Horror Mystery. An insurance investigator finds there's more to electronic dream therapy than meets the eye. Directors. Montgomery Tully. David Paltenghi. Writers. Charles Eric Maine. J. McLaren Ross. Stars.

    • (212)
    • Crime, Horror, Mystery
    • Montgomery Tully, David Paltenghi
    • 1960-05
  3. Inquiring into the mysterious death of a Hollywood star, insurance investigator Jeff Keenan uncovers an exclusive psychiatric clinic on the French Riviera. Here, patients who want to escape the stresses of life are hypnotized, then laid out in morgue-like drawers and left to dream for several weeks.

  4. Escapement (aka The Electronic Monster ) is a 1958 British horror science fiction film directed by Montgomery Tully and David Paltenghi (dream sequences) . Rod Cameron as Jeff Keenan Mary...

    • 74 Min.
    • 441
    • VTV Classics
  5. 21. Okt. 2023 · 78 views 4 months ago. Escapement (aka The Electronic Monster ) is a 1958 British horror science fiction film directed by Montgomery Tully and David Paltenghi (dream sequences). ...more.

    • 72 Min.
    • 138
    • Slashers Horror Cult - Movies and B Films
  6. Rod Cameron discovers that patients at a clinic are being given electronically induced hallucinations by unscrupulous doctors. An interesting, neglected feature based on the novel Escapement by Charles Eric Maine. The dream sequences involve dancing girls and torture. With Mary Murphy. By the director of Battle Beneath the Earth. Electronic ...

  7. Charles Eric Maine. Screenplay. An insurance investigator tumbles onto a series of similar deaths, by brain hemorrhage, of patients of a psychiatric clinic in France where therapy involves a device which can implant visual imagery in the minds of patients, ostensibly to help them relax.