The Leech Woman

The Leech Woman(1960)

NR
05/01/1960 (US)Horror, Science Fiction1h 17m
4.6

"She drained men of their loves and lives!"

Overview

An endocrinologist in a dysfunctional marriage with an aging, alcoholic wife journeys to Africa seeking a drug that will restore youth.

Edward Dein

Director

Ben Pivar

Story

Francis Rosenwald

Story

David Duncan

Screenplay

Where to Watch

Stream

FlixFling

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home
FlixFling

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home
FlixFling

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

The Leech Woman Official Trailer #1 - Murray Alper Movie (1960) HD

The Leech Woman Official Trailer #1 - Murray Alper Movie (1960) HD

Trailer

Social

J
A review by John Chard
5.0

Written on May 23, 2014

Old women always give me the creeps!

What do you expect from a film called The Leech Woman? It is by definition one of those sci-fi "B" movies strung together as a support feature that played whilst theatre patrons were still necking, chatting and eating etc.

Plot follows in the tradition of something like The Wasp Woman (1959), that plays on the theme of a woman striving to stay young as the advent of time catches up with her. Cue bonkers science, where here it involves a trek to the jungles of Africa to unearth the secret of eternal youth. Naturally things get very bent out of shape and pain and misery are sure to follow.

Thematically it has mixed messages, on one hand it dares to say, unappealingly so, that a woman is only viable for love and happiness by being young and beautiful. On the other hand it is possibly having caustic observations on the dangers of vanity? The makers intentions are not clear so really the viewers are left to their own devices on that one.

It's never scary and some of the latex effects work is poor and befitting the minuscule budget. While the first half hour feels awfully padded out. But all things considered it's not a bottom feeder of the genre, and actually would make a nice companion piece with The Wasp Woman. 5/10