| Michael Rennie | ... | Lord John Roxton | |
| Jill St. John | ... | Jennifer Holmes (as Jill St.John) | |
| David Hedison | ... | Ed Malone | |
| Claude Rains | ... | Professor George Edward Challenger | |
| Fernando Lamas | ... | Manuel Gomez | |
| Richard Haydn | ... | Professor Summerlee | |
| Ray Stricklyn | ... | David Holmes | |
| Jay Novello | ... | Costa | |
| Vitina Marcus | ... | Native Girl | |
| Ian Wolfe | ... | Burton White | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Ross Brown | ... | Airport Attendant (uncredited) | |
| Colin Campbell | ... | Prof. Waldron (uncredited) | |
| Fred Cavens | ... | French Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Larry Chance | ... | Indian chief (uncredited) | |
| Phyllis Coghlan | ... | British member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Alex Denaszody | ... | German Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Anne Dore | ... | Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Alex Finlayson | ... | Reporter (uncredited) | |
| Bess Flowers | ... | Guest at Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Peter Fontaine | ... | Airport Attendant (uncredited) | |
| Don Forbes | ... | TV announcer (uncredited) | |
| John Graham | ... | Stuart Holmes (uncredited) | |
| Sam Harris | ... | Man at Airport / Guest at Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Ivo Henderson | ... | British Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Stuart Holmes | ... | Zoological Institute Professor on Stage (uncredited) | |
| Kenner G. Kemp | ... | Guest at Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Harold Miller | ... | Guest at Zoological Forum (uncredited) | |
| George Pelling | ... | Reporter (uncredited) | |
| Ruggero Romor | ... | Italian Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Brian Roper | ... | British Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Jacqueline Squire | ... | British Member of Zoological Institute Forum (uncredited) | |
| Bert Stevens | ... | Reporter at Airport (uncredited) | |
| Gilchrist Stuart | ... | Reporter (uncredited) | |
| Ben Wright | ... | BBC field reporter Ted Bottomley (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Irwin Allen | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Irwin Allen | screenplay | |
| Charles Bennett | screenplay | |
| Arthur Conan Doyle | novel (uncredited) | |
Produced by | |||
| Irwin Allen | .... | producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Paul Sawtell | |||
| Bert Shefter | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Winton C. Hoch | (as Winton Hoch) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Hugh S. Fowler | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Duncan Cramer | |||
| Walter M. Simonds | |||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Joseph Kish | |||
| Walter M. Scott | |||
| John Sturtevant | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Paul Zastupnevich | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Ben Nye | .... | makeup artist | |
| Helen Turpin | .... | hair stylist | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Ad Schaumer | .... | assistant director | |
Art Department | |||
| Maurice Zuberano | .... | production illustrator | |
Sound Department | |||
| Harry M. Leonard | .... | sound | |
| E. Clayton Ward | .... | sound | |
Visual Effects by | |||
| L.B. Abbott | .... | special photographic effects | |
| James B. Gordon | .... | special photographic effects | |
| Emil Kosa Jr. | .... | special photographic effects | |
| Willis H. O'Brien | .... | effects technician (as Willis O'Brien) | |
Music Department | |||
| Sidney Cutner | .... | composer: additional music (uncredited) | |
| Sidney Cutner | .... | orchestrator (uncredited) | |
| Howard Jackson | .... | composer: additional music (uncredited) | |
| Max Reese | .... | orchestrator (uncredited) | |
Other crew | |||
| Henry E. Lester | .... | technical advisor | |
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| The Lost World | King Kong | King Kong | Journey to the Center of the Earth | GoldenEye |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Adventure section | IMDb USA section | Add this title to MyMovies |
Okay, this version is everything most of the viewers have mentioned: decidedly trite and shallow script devoid of any real substance, wooden performances from a group of talented actors notwithstanding(for the most part), legions of clichés, some of the weakest, poorest, limited special effects seen for a movie of this caliber(what should have been shot that is), and the list could go on and on. I have no problem with almost any of that. So much could have been done with this film and the talents involved, but so little was done in terms of execution. The ho-nus of the blame must therefore go to Mr. Allen who I would never describe as a great filmmaker but who is certainly capable of better than this. Lets start with the script. It follows the pattern of all the Lost World films as a party leaves England for a hidden plateau in the Amazon region. Each person is to be a character in and of himself/herself. Claude Rains plays the fiery Professor Challenger with some conviction at times and is at the very least always a pleasant thick slice of ham. But Michael Rennie as the big game hunter Roxton, another good actor, doesn't fare nearly as well as he just looks too haggard for the role. What about David Hedison as the newspaperman along because his editor footed the bill - bland, boring, and unconvincing. Fernando Lamas - need I say more? That brings us to 2 actors - one whose performance adds immeasurably to the film because of wit and fine character acting skills and another who knows how to fill out a snug pink form-fitting pair of stretch pants and wear a low-cut blouse throughout the prehistoric jungle but has all the concern and fear of someone riding a subway. Richard Haydn gives the film's best performance playing a stereotype of a snooty professor constantly challenging Challenger with vigor and intelligence. I have always felt he was a fine character actor that just did not get the press and consideration he should have. Jill St. John plays the walking pink stretch pants and as an actress is just not convincing at all - but boy, can those pants move gracefully and with the utmost conviction! Irwin Allen's Lost World is not a horrible film or, for me, even a boring one. It is popcorn entertainment at best and will be sheer disappointment to those looking for prehistoric fun and something truly fantastical. It just doesn't have it. Just what do you get: maybe 3 lizards with horns applied to their heads somehow, a few natives that look un-native, and some big pink flower-like venus flytraps that shoot up and down like crepe paper. That is really about it. There is very little action for a film that should have been loaded with it. I am partial to the film for the actors involved(pink pants and all), the hokey, campy quality of the film, and the nostalgic sense it creates, but that will and should mean very little to most others. Bottom line, it is okay but you would do far better seeing the newer mini-series with Bob Hoskins as Challenger or, better yet, the silent version with the awesome, ground-breaking effects of Willis O'Brien.