|
|
The Earth Dies Screaming
1964
A bunch of people sit around a pub talking about the end of the world,
whilst outside, the rest of the Earth's population appear to have dropped
down dead. And talk they do
on and on and on
If you don't think this sounds much like a horror film, you're absolutely
right. In fact The Earth Dies Screaming has very few plus points,
apart from its rather terrific (and misleading) title.
No-one in the film dies screaming, I'm afraid. Anyone who is seen to be
killed is usually a zombie, and their reaction to a bullet hole is a kind
of stiff upper lipped "Oh, I appear to have been shot. Cripes, what
bad luck. Oh well
" than a blood curdling "Aaaiiiieeeee!"
Still, you can't have everything, and this is a black and white British
horror movie, after all. Anyway, back to the plus points. The first five
minutes are awesome, as people all over the Home Counties succumb to the
evil death plague from space.
Oily mechanics collapse at the helm of steam trains, cars career off the
road, bowler hatted types fall over on train station platforms
it's
great.
Then our hero arrives in his Land Rover, and it all rather goes downhill
from there. Turns out the population have been wiped out by a gas attack
from a bunch of slow moving alien robots, who proceed to move slowly around
the village our hero and a group of other survivors find themselves in.
For reasons best know to their slow witted selves, the robots only attack
occasionally, completely letting off the hook an annoying pregnant girl
who spends at least three hours standing at a window in full view of them.
These robots are impervious to bullets, but sadly not to Land Rovers.
They also look like they're made out of odds and ends found around the
kitchens of Shepperton Studios. This film was obviously a big influence
on Doctor Who - the alien robots pre date the Cybermen (although
they're not as realistic) and the deserted village scenario pre dates
about a hundred other episodes of the long-running programme.
Don't ever let a Who fan tell you their beloved series is original again!
But possibly the best thing about the whole farrago is its length - just
60 minutes short. The zombified villagers are a bit spooky as well, I
suppose.
The Earth Dies Screaming (1964)
Director: Terence Fisher Writer(s): Harry Spalding
Cast: Willard Parker - Jeff Nolan, Virginia Field - Peggy Taggett, Dennis
Price - Quinn Taggett, Vanda Godsell - Violet Courtland, Thorley Walters - Edgar
Otis, David Spenser - Mel, Anna Palk - Lorna
|

|
|