Film Review
The first, and arguably one of the best, of Universal's science-fiction
thrillers was a groundbreaking film for its time, if only because it
was the first of Universal's films to exploit the new stereoscopic 3D
process.
It Came from Outer
Space introduces many of the archetypes that would define
American sci-fi movies of the 1950s - the handsome young professor,
his screaming female sidekick, the
revolting alien monster, the bleak desert location, etc. It would
also tap into prevailing fears, particularly cold war paranoia, fear of
a Soviet invasion, and the threat posed by science in the nuclear
age. The film's phenomenal success at the box office firmly
established the sci-fi thriller as a major genre in American cinema,
although it received a mix reaction from the critics at the time.
Unlike many subsequent films of its kind,
It Came from Outer Space presents
us with benign aliens, not the more familiar marauding killers.
It has some obvious similarities with Don Siegel's
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1955), although it differs in that the aliens have no evil intent
(apart from breaking into people's house to raid their wardrobes).
The film has a strong underlying message, which is essentially that
mankind's worst enemy is his inherent xenophobia, a notion that was
very much in the zeitgeist of the time. The fear of Soviet Russia
that was felt by most ordinary Americans in the early 1950s was way in
excess of the actual power and intent of the USSR. This idea,
that man's fear of The Other invariably exceeds the real threat he is
presented with, is the essence of
It
Came from Outer Space.
The thoughtful storyline was provided by Ray Bradbury, an established
writer in the science-fiction and fantasy genres, best known for his
stories
The Martian Chronicles
and
Fahrenheit 451.
Bradbury actually provided Universal with two very different script
treatments, the sophisticated one which was ultimately developed, and
another more sensational version which is what he felt the studio
wanted. Bradbury was surprised when Universal selected the
version that he preferred but he was wholly unimpressed with their
representation of the alien.
In the original script, developed by Harry Essex from Bradbury's
detailed treatment, the alien was never seen on the screen. All
that the audience was meant to see were its distinctive point-of-view
(an innovation which has since been emulated many times) and a shadowy
presence in the background. However, once the film had been shot,
Universal executives decided that the alien creature
had to appear in the film, if only
to bolster their publicity campaign. Two aliens were designed,
the one that was seen in the film, the so-called Xenomorph (a
monstrosity with a single eye set in a bulging near-spherical cranium) and another
which provided the basis for the slave mutants in Universal's
subsequent
This Island Earth
(1955). Additional scenes were then shot with the monster exposed
in all its revolting glory, five weeks after the film's original
wrap. Bradbury's annoyance at this vulgarisation of his concept
was justified as the monster that appears on screen is singularly
lacking in menace; the effect would have been far greater if the
creature not been seen, but instead left to the audience's imagination.
If the film's alien monster was unimpressive, the same could not be
said for its 3D effects, which are among the best that were created for
a movie of this era. Particularly memorable are the landing of
the spaceship at the start of the film and an avalanche sequence which
was so realistic that, on its initial showing, audience members
screamed in terror as boulders apparently spewed out of the screen into
the auditorium. Most of the positive criticism the film
received was on the quality of the 3D effects, which managed to avoid
the gimmicks and contrivances of later films (where objects were
thrown at the camera for no apparent reason). Another strength of
the film is its rich and evocative score, which includes an eerie
electronic theme created by an instrument known as theremin, a theme
would become widely used on sci-fi B movies in the fifties.
It is surprising that the task of directing such a technically
challenging film should have gone to a relatively inexperienced
director, Jack Arnold. Arnold had worked on just two films prior
to this but here he shows that not only did he have the hand of a very
capable technician but also the eye of an artist and the heart of a
poet. The desert scenes are particularly effective at conveying a
sense of lurking menace, something that Arnold would build upon and
exploit to the full in his subsequent
Tarantula
(1955). In addition to the stunning 3D effects, the film is
memorable for the aliens' point-of-view shots, which provide some of
the most frightening moments (and are far more effective than the
over-long shots of the unconvincing one-eyed monster).
Arnold would go on to helm some of the most successful sci-fi films of
the 1950s, including
Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
and
The Incredible Shrinking Man
(1957). Steven Spielberg was a great admirer of Jack Arnold's
work and would pay homage to
It Came
from Outer Space in his 1977 film
Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Despite the negative criticism it received in some quarters on its initial
release,
It Came from Outer Space was
a very popular film and is very well regarded today. It is generally
considered to be one of the
finest examples of the 1950s American sci-fi movie, marred only
by some niggling plot flaws and the disappointing realisation of the alien.
The film's central theme about supposedly intelligent cultures
failing to live together in peace remains relevant to this day.
There's one thing you can guarantee to happen if an alien does decide to
pay us a visit. The American military will come down and blast it to
atoms before it even gets a chance to flash us a friendly tentacle or two.
Here's a world where aliens are most definitely not welcome.
© James Travers 2010
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