Film Review
After
Four Sided Triangle (1953),
Hammer's second flirtation with science-fiction is another lumbering,
half-hearted affair, although its attempts to compete with bigger
budget fare across the pond - doomed as they inevitably were - make it
a worthier entry in the sci-fi genre.
Spaceways was apparently based on a
play written for radio, a medium for which it was far better suited
given the primitive nature of visual effects at the time. The
film has been resoundingly lampooned for its unconvincing effects, but
a far greater failing is its utterly preposterous plot, which stretches
credulity to somewhere in the vicinity of the outer limits of the Milky
Way.
Spaceways is
essentially just a far-fetched crime drama with sci-fi elements
casually thrown in, by someone who clearly has a very ropy
understanding of the science involved, to say nothing of a poor grasp
on human nature.
The ludicrous B-movie plot might have been pardonable if the characters
had ben convincingly drawn and believably played. Instead of this
we get the usual dull white-coated archetypes consisting of a
square-jawed American (Howard Duff) and a devoted assistant who is
willing to travel to the ends of the galaxy with him (Eva
Bartok). There's an evil-looking investigator (Alan Wheatley),
the petty bureaucratic sort who likes jumping to the obvious conclusion
and generally making a mess of things; a bumbling, cost conscious
minister; and some very stupid military men. Things are far worse
on the plot front, however. Having established that a manned
rocket is a hugely ambitious undertaking that could take years to pull
off, the film's hero manages to fix it up within a few days, so that he
can go up into space, recover another rocket (with magnets), bring it
back to earth and clear himself of the charge of murder. Even in
a child's comicbook this would all come across as idiotic hokum.
After this fiasco (not director Terence Fisher's greatest hour), Hammer
could have been forgiven for giving up sci-fi for good, and it might
well have done just that if Nigel Kneale hadn't come along a few years
later and gave the company its first massive hit with
The Quatermass Xperiment (1955).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Terence Fisher film:
Blackout (1954)
Film Synopsis
In England, Professor Koepler leads a space programme which has within
its sights the objective of placing a satellite in a stationary orbit
around the earth. His leading engineer, Dr Stephen Mitchell, is
confident that the mission will succeed, but his dedication to his work
is putting an intolerable strain on his marriage. His wife
Vanessa is tired of being confined to the secure rocket base and
resents Michell's refusal to accept better paid work elsewhere.
One evening, Mitchell glimpses his wife with Dr Crenshaw, one of his
colleagues, and guesses that the two have been carrying on a
clandestine affair. When the rocket is launched to put a
satellite into orbit, it fails to reach the necessary height and
Mitchell is charged with negligence. Coincidentally, his wife and
Crenshaw have gone missing at the same time and Dr Smith, a military
intelligence investigator, suspects that they may have been murdered by
Mitchell and placed in the rocket before lift-off. To clear his
name, Mitchell volunteers to go up in a second rocket and recover the
first rocket. It is a mission fraught with danger, but Dr Lisa
Frank, who is in love with Mitchell, is determined to accompany him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.