Village of the Damned (1960) & Children of the Damned (1963)
Nov 18, 2019 18:40:09 GMT
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Post by wmcclain on Nov 18, 2019 18:40:09 GMT
Village of the Damned (1960), directed by Wolf Rilla.
First review
A sturdy, effective Quatermass-genre plot only 71 minutes long. Everyone in an English village drops unconscious for several hours and no one can get in without also fainting. Afterwards their recovery seems without incident until they find that all women of childbearing age are now pregnant. This obviously causes much consternation, even more so when the implications become clear. Alien force? Mutation? It turns out the same thing has happened elsewhere.
The children, creepy blonde Aryans, are all healthy but grow abnormally quickly, are emotionless and intelligent and reveal dangerous psychic powers. What to do about them, given they can read and control minds and have a lively survival response?
We're still in the classic science fiction era: the heroes are stalwart and the alien menace must be eliminated. The military is smart and efficient. That the menace are children...it gives one pause, but not a lot.
The film largely avoids the complication that parents will naturally feel affection towards the children, no matter how strangely born. With one exception: George Sanders is an older man with a younger wife, and his joy at having a son is mixed with the understanding that he is not the biological father, as well as the fear that the boy is entirely alien and perhaps dangerous.
Many familiar faces from later British film and TV; look for Peter Vaughn as the policeman on a bicycle.
Adapted from John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos. He was a prolific SF author whose work could be mined for more screenplays. And his Day of the Triffids (1962) exists only in a dismal cropped DVD version and needs a good upgrade.
The DVD has commentary track with production details. He points out that it is easy to think of the children as little Nazi supermen infiltrators.
Second review
Some additional notes and new thumbnails from the Blu-ray.
Available on Blu-ray from Warner Archive. The detailed commentary track by Steve Haberman is brought forward from the DVD.
First review
A sturdy, effective Quatermass-genre plot only 71 minutes long. Everyone in an English village drops unconscious for several hours and no one can get in without also fainting. Afterwards their recovery seems without incident until they find that all women of childbearing age are now pregnant. This obviously causes much consternation, even more so when the implications become clear. Alien force? Mutation? It turns out the same thing has happened elsewhere.
The children, creepy blonde Aryans, are all healthy but grow abnormally quickly, are emotionless and intelligent and reveal dangerous psychic powers. What to do about them, given they can read and control minds and have a lively survival response?
We're still in the classic science fiction era: the heroes are stalwart and the alien menace must be eliminated. The military is smart and efficient. That the menace are children...it gives one pause, but not a lot.
The film largely avoids the complication that parents will naturally feel affection towards the children, no matter how strangely born. With one exception: George Sanders is an older man with a younger wife, and his joy at having a son is mixed with the understanding that he is not the biological father, as well as the fear that the boy is entirely alien and perhaps dangerous.
Many familiar faces from later British film and TV; look for Peter Vaughn as the policeman on a bicycle.
Adapted from John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos. He was a prolific SF author whose work could be mined for more screenplays. And his Day of the Triffids (1962) exists only in a dismal cropped DVD version and needs a good upgrade.
The DVD has commentary track with production details. He points out that it is easy to think of the children as little Nazi supermen infiltrators.
Second review
Some additional notes and new thumbnails from the Blu-ray.
- I read John Wyndham's The Midwich Cuckoos recently and the film is a reasonably faithful adaptation. "Midwich" is the name of the village, and the old-world cuckoo lays its eggs in other birds' nests. The parents raise the alien chicks and their own children are displaced.
- Wyndham is fun to read; he has an easy-going intelligence, using the formula of putting one element of the fantastic into normal surroundings. His The Day of the Triffids (1962) is still waiting a quality restoration. The Kraken Wakes (undersea invaders come onto land) and The Chrysalids (aka "Re-Birth", post-apocalyptic recovery) are still waiting to be made.
- The effect of the glowing eyes: this time it seemed to me that this is visible only to the movie audience, not to the people in the story. In the book all the children have strange "golden eyes".
- The effect was a simple one: they made a negative of each iris and overlaid it onto a still photo.
- Martin Stephens, who plays the leader of the children, gave another notably unsettling performance in The Innocents (1961) the next year.
- His own voice was dubbed in for his lines, giving his dialogue a slightly unreal quality.
- Barbara Shelley, playing his mother, was a noted scream queen for Hammer.
- Although George Sanders had a trademark caddish personality, he is also good at playing decent characters, as here and in The Seventh Sin (1957).
- The studio disliked the film and was sure it would flop. Audiences disagreed.
- Remade by John Carpenter in 1995.
Available on Blu-ray from Warner Archive. The detailed commentary track by Steve Haberman is brought forward from the DVD.