Film Review
George A. Romero is credited with starting the zombie craze of recent
times with his
Night of the Living Dead
(1968), but one film that got there before him was
The Earth Dies Screaming (1965), a
lesser known British sci-fi movie that has much the same plot but less
of the blood-curdling horror. The title was presumably dreamed up
by the distributor as it has virtually nothing to do with the sparse
plot, which involves an odd mix of humans being menaced by marauding
zombies and a couple of prototype Cybermen. It's basically
Doctor Who for grown-ups, with
thrills that score pretty low on the Romero scale of horror, save a few
fantastically eerie moments that send a galvanic tingle down the
spine. The opening sequence showing the Home Counties succumbing
to the effects of a gas attack is spookily effective and when the
zombies first appear, looking like a contingent of geography teachers
after an all-night drinking binge, they are genuinely
frightening. The ending, by contrast, is pretty dismal.
Taking a break from his run of Hammer horrors, Terence Fisher was
drafted in by independent producer Robert L. Lippert to direct this
pedestrian little chiller, and to be fair he makes a decent job of it,
in spite of the lack of imagination on the writing front and even more
obvious lack of money. A slow-burner, Fisher ekes as much tension
as the routine, over-talky narrative will permit, and there is a
generous frisson of fear to the scenes where the women are menaced by
the tin-men and their zombie slaves. Why it is only the women who
are menaced and why they manage to evade capture so easily are just two
of the million or so questions you are left to ponder as you
contemplate the hole-riddled plot.
Willard Parker is the token American (essential for distribution in the
US) in a cast that includes some much loved British character actors,
Dennis Price and Thorley Walters. The characterisation is,
predictably, next to non-existent - the screenwriter couldn't even be
bothered to explain Price's character, so he's just left as the
enigmatic Mr Unknown thrown in to distract us from the risible lack of
plot. Parker, being the American lead, gets to be the butch hero
and does exactly what butch heroes do, which is to bore us to death as
he sets about resolving matters in the traditional American B-movie way
(i.e. by blowing things up and flying nonchalantly off into the sunset)
whilst the more interesting, down-to-Earth characters are left having
babies, getting drunk or merely ranting on and on about the sudden
depreciation of the British pound in the aftermath of the
Apocalypse.
The Earth Dies
Screaming is anodyne and parochial to a fault but it still
manages to be entertaining, and if only it had been titled
Zombie Invasion of an English Village
it might have held onto its credibility a bit better than it does.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Terence Fisher film:
Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966)
Film Synopsis
When his aircraft lands in the south of England, American test pilot
Jeff Nolan finds the entire population dead, apparently the victims of
a mass gas attack. Arriving at a small village, he encounters a
handful of survivors who cheated death by the happenstance of being in
a place of safety at the time of the gas attack. They are
debating what to do when they notice two apparently space-suited
figures walking around the streets. These turn out to be deadly
robots who kill just by touching their victims. Things take a
turn for the worse when the apparently dead humans suddenly come to
life like zombies and start menacing the party of
survivors...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.