Also Known As: - | |
Year of first release: 1956 | |
Director: Don Siegel | |
Actors: Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter | |
Country: USA | |
Genre: SF | |
Conditions of visioning: 16.02.2017, Zeughauskino, Berlinale2017, English | |
Synopsis: Dr. Miles Bennell (McCarthy) returns to his small town practice to find several of his patients suffering the paranoid delusion that their friends or relatives are impostors. He is initially skeptical, especially when the alleged dopplegängers are able to answer detailed questions about their victim's lives, but he is eventually persuaded that something odd has happened and determines to find out what is causing this phenomenon. | |
Review: I remember this film from what the character Bill Peltzer in Gremlins is watching late in the night. As I saw the opportunity to wtch it, I could not resist. This film can be seen as a paranoid 1950s warning against the communists or as a metaphor for the tyranny of McCarthyism. It is basically a model for the genre of North American SF movies in the 50s to 70s that inspired generations of cinephiles. How to react in front of the encounter with aliens, even worse in case of an alien invasion? From then on, indeed the interpretation of the movie can be ambivalent. And for that time, it is not so bad. Some historical epic movies are rather pro-Church. Therefore as a model, this movie settles some common tools such as the opening scene with view on contrasted clouds and radio announcements; the fact that aliens look like humans but "without feelings"; aliens moving on in mass as if all attracted by one point; aliens do not eat like humans; etc. For this I liked the movie. The acting is kept simple and even sometimes some scenes seem to be repeated as the pursuit in the corridors look the same in any corridor. But instead of making the movie boring, it makes it even funnier to me. |
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Rating: 6 /10
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Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Invasion of the body snatchers (1956)
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