
A group of lonely Viking women build a ship and set off across the sea to locate their missing menfolk, only to fall into the clutches of the barbarians that also hold their men captive. There is a cameo appearance by the sea serpent.... (Full plot summary below)
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A group of lonely Viking women build a ship and set off across the sea to locate their missing menfolk, only to fall into the clutches of the barbarians that also hold their men captive. There is a cameo appearance by the sea serpent.
Leave your thoughts about The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent.
| User ReviewWes SThis one comes from the Samuel Z Arkoff Cult Classic Collection. Is it a Sci-Fi Classic, I don't know I guess it might have been on late Friday night back in the 1960 time frame. What we have is some Viking women who are tired of waiting for there men to return from s sea adventure, so they set out to find them. So they sail to a land with a vortex and a sea serpent and they just so happen to come across there men who are held captive to some evil fella's who have there eye and other parts of there bodies on the girls. Of course the women save the day and the men. A old drive in classic worth 3 stars |
| User ReviewAj VWhen I saw this movie, it was just called "The Viking Women Versus the Sea Serpent"? o_o Funny they should call it that. The sea serpent was barely in this film. Most of it was viking women kicking ass. Although I appreciate the sentiment, it can only carry so much of a film, and they should really put some pants on at some point... Again, a good "bad" movie to watch just for fun. MST3K style, of course. |
| User ReviewSylvester KQuite enjoyable despite being ridiculously campy. With a title like this, you can't help but wonder how the film would turn out. If you ignore the acting and the story, the production got its money worth. |
| User ReviewRichard LGolden-haired, 50's-era women with short leather skirts posing as viking adventuresses build a drakkar and try to find their lost husbands. Directed by Roger CORMAN, this movie is entertaining, sometimes intentionally, sometimes unintentionally, but it succeeds on both accounts. |
| User ReviewJon CRoger Corman has directed over fifty films (and at age ninety is still active as of this writing as a producer,) some of them, recognized classics of the B-movie genre, such as The Little Shop of Horrors, Bloody Mama, The St. Valentine's Day Massacre, and the series of Poe-inspired horror movies featuring Vincent Price, but many others so quickly and cheaply made that they are esteemed as classics of the "so-bad-it's good" genre. Viking Women has to do with a group of Viking women, of course, who set out on a voyage to discover why their husbands haven't returned from their latest expedition: battling sea monsters and a wicked king ensue. Production values are minimal -- I've seen worse, but not often -- the cast members look more like they belong in a 1950s TV ad for vacuum cleaners than in medieval Scandinavia, and the acting, if it is no worse than you would expect in a high school play, is not any better. In short, this will appeal to bad movie fans and not to many others. |
| User ReviewMorris NTotally gay, which is about all that it has going for it. |
| User ReviewRicci BScantily-clad Viking women set out to rescue their scantily-clad men from bondage; an attempt at titillation, or a wardrobe budget deficit? You decide. |
| User ReviewJames BIf the women in this film were representative of Vikings, then surely I missed out on the best time in human history, for these warrior women are all bold and beautiful. It is for that reason alone that this movie is worth watching, otherwise one is left with subtly bizarre costumes, cardboard characters, cliché plot devices, and a monster whose lower jaw obvious is broken the way it flops open the second it is out of the water. |
| User ReviewEvan KYeah, I like the sea monster and the fact that the actors didn't have to try. Not one of Corman's best. |
| User ReviewAnthony WCampy low budget fare that comes as no surprise from Corman. This one lacks even the subtext that some of Corman's later pictures could contain. Only a couple of the buxom actresses show any subtlety or range when in more intimate scenes. All the actors and actresses, the blonds and the brunettes, are at turns bland or histrionic. Nothing makes you feel like you are really there in that barbaric world of fantasy. |
The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent