Film Review
When
The Quatermass Xperiment (1956)
proved to be a runaway hit, Hammer Films could hardly wait to unleash a
sequel.
X the Unknown was to have been
the next Quatermass film but had to be released Quatermass-free when
writer Nigel Kneale refused to give permission for his character to be
used. Undeterred, Hammer secured the rights to the BBC's next
Quatermass serial, the
imaginatively titled
Quatermass II,
even before it was transmitted. This time round, Kneale insisted
on writing the screenplay, since he had been massively disappointed
with the previous Hammer rewrite of his story.
With Kneale's input,
Quatermass 2
is certainly much closer to the original television series than its
predecessor, and therein lies its fault. With a significantly
greater budget (achieved mainly by the advance sale of the distribution
rights to United Artists), the film would have benefited from a more
ambitious scope, rather than ending up as a slightly more polished
version of a cheap TV show. It doesn't help that the story is too
obviously a reworking of Kneale's previous offering (in fact, all four
Quatermass stories are variations on the same theme). Yet,
despite its modest ambition and familiar plot (which owes a lot to the
previous year's
Invasion of the Body Snatchers),
the film also has some great strengths. Val Guest's direction and
some moody photography transform a humdrum sci-fi drama into a taut,
fast moving thriller, which is let down only but two things - the
obvious miscasting of Brian Donlevy as Quatermass and a slightly
embarrassing rampaging monster climax.
The decision to cast Brian Donlevy as Britain's premier rocket
scientist and part-time defender against alien invasion was foist on
the Hammer production team by their American backers. Donlevy has
the unique distinction of being the only actor to have played
Quatermass twice (he also starred in
The
Quatermass Xperiment), even though he is clearly unsuited for
the role. Far from being a contemplative man of science,
Donlevy's Quatermass is a gruff bullyboy who looks as if he would be
far more at home beating up hoodlums in 1950s American gangster
films. We should at least be grateful that this unusual
characterisation takes us away from the nauseating clichés - at
the time, most films depicted scientists either as eccentric old men in
a white coats or as impossibly handsome young men with at least three
scantily dressed girls draped on each arm.
Brian Donlevy may be unconvincing as a man of science, but he turns in
a solid performance that is complemented by a respectable supporting
cast. The latter includes Bryan Forbes (who would turn director a
few years later), Hammer stalwart Michael Ripper and future Carry On
star Sid James (here playing a comedy version of the character played
by Roger Delgado in the TV series). As in the original TV
version, the Shell oil refinery at Stanford-le-Hope provided an
appropriate location for the ultra-secret research base, something that
adds greatly to the film's bleak realism and contributes some gripping
action sequences.
Although
Quatermass 2 was far
from being a commercial failure, its performance at the box office was
completely overshadowed by that of another Hammer offering,
The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957). Realising that Gothic horror was a far more lucrative
line than contemporary science-fiction, Hammer passed up the
opportunity to adapt Nigel Kneale's third Quatermass story, and indeed
only got round to doing this when their Gothic goldmine had been pretty
well exhausted.
Quatermass and the Pit (1967)
would be a faithful adaptation of Kneale's third (and best) TV serial,
although only the most undiscerning of viewers will fail to realise
this is a virtual remake of the author's previous two stories.
Quatermass 2 is arguably the best
cinematic treatment of Nigel Kneale's concept to date, a film that can
be enjoyed both as a slick horror-thriller and as a chilling
allegory of Cold War paranoia. It may also make you think twice
the next time you come to fill up your supermarket trolley with processed food,
and it will certainly cause you to take a closer look at politicians' necks
when they come round asking for your vote. After all, V is for victory,
but not necessarily the kind that is good for us...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Val Guest film:
The Abominable Snowman (1957)
Film Synopsis
Professor Bernard Quatermass's ambition to build a colony on the Moon
appears to be thwarted as government funds are diverted to other
projects. Meanwhile, his team are busy investigating
reports of meteorite landings in an area of English countryside known
as Winnerden Flats. Visiting the site of the landings,
Quatermass and his colleague Marsh are surprised to find a vast
research installation which closely resembles the blueprint for their
lunar base. Marsh finds one of the meteorites but it fractures on
contact, releasing a gas that leaves a strange V-shaped mark on the
scientist's neck. A party of armed guards appear from the
installation and take Marsh away. Driven away at gunpoint,
Quatermass returns to London to confront parliamentarian Vincent
Broadhead with his findings. Broadhead reveals that he too has
concerns about the secret research base, which has received colossal
sums of government money to finance a programme to create synthetic
food. Broadhead arranges for Quatermass to attend an
official tour of the installation, but the tour is not what it
seems. At the last moment, Quatermass escapes and realises the
horrifying truth. The base has been constructed not for the
benefit of mankind, but to provide a suitable environment for creatures
from another world...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.