The Trollenberg Terror (1958) - also known as The Crawling Eye - is a sci-fi movie featuring the British actress Janet Munro, who plays a psychic called Ann Pilgrim. The question I have is: What is Ann Pilgrim's defining physical characteristic in the movie - asides from her being psychic and a bit of a hottie?This thread is for people who haven't seen this movie in the last 3 or 4 years; so obviously, I am asking you to answer from memory.
>>215996705The last time I watched it according to my movie log was 3 years and 2 months ago, so I guess I qualify. She's blind, right? And her parents wanted her to get some fresh air in the mountains. Maybe I'm thinking of another movie. I mostly remember the big eyeballs attacking the bunker at the end with their tentacles.
>>215997256Yes! Exactly. That's how I remember it. She was blind. I don't know about the parents bit, but that was the whole weird point of the movie, I thought. Anyway, this is the thing. I watched it last not and she's not blind anymore! Unless it is a different movie, like you say, and we're just getting mixed up: This is the biggest Mandella Effect I am personally aware of, because it is not just a line with the words mixed up, it is an entire major plot point.
>>215996705>Janet MunroShe's exceptionally hot in The Day the Earth Caught Fire (1961).
>>215997385They all were.
>>215997412Ba-dum-tssss
>>215997256I guess I could reduce the constraint to one or two years, because who knows when this aspect of the movie changed or how these things work.But, here's another interesting fact I learned about Janet Munro on imdb:>While filming the Adam Smith (1972) series in Scotland, Janet mentioned to local doctor that she was having severe stomach pains. He thought it might be an ulcer and suggested that she see her own doctor in London. Her own doctor booked her for a scan which involved the usual 10-hour fast followed by a barium meal. After the scan she was driving home and blacked out, crashing into the back of a parked car. Seat-belt use and laminated screens weren't compulsory in those days, and the impact sent her straight through the windscreen. The resulting injuries left her blind for 4 days with 130 stitches. Her surgeon was confident the facial injuries would heal eventually, leaving no scars. She had only recovered sight in one eye and she was to spend the next 6 months having treatment on her eyes. Her daughter Sally, who had been in the backseat, suffered only minor injuries.Based on this, it appears Munro was never blind in the Trollenberg movie, but was blind in real life instead. This is the only reference I can find to Munro ever being blind, whether in a movie or not. Too weird.
>>215997528If correct, then whatever force is behind the Mandella Effect might be able to remove entire plot lines from movies and make them real. The future could get weird, bros.