Halfway decent pulp science fiction. The decent first half, give or take a few minutes, is straightforward and unpretentious storytelling in the mode of H.P. Lovecraft (on whose story it is more or less based), about an invention called the Resonator, intended to stimulate the pineal gland and awaken our dormant Sixth Sense so that we may see the luminescent eels and jellyfish and other such squigglies floating all about us in another dimension: "I want to see more!" cries the demented inventor. "More than any man's ever seen!" The indecent second half is given over to blatant sexual symbolism and slimy special effects. And the average age to which the movie appeals thus seems to diminish at a rate of about one year per minute. Barbara Crampton, Jeffrey Combs, Ken Foree; directed by Stuart Gordon. (1986) — Duncan Shepherd
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