Gefahr aus dem Weltall (1953)

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Gefahr aus dem Weltall: Directed by Jack Arnold. With Richard Carlson, Barbara Rush, Charles Drake, Joe Sawyer. A spaceship from another world crashes in the Arizona desert and only an amateur stargazer and a schoolteacher suspect alien influence when the local townsfolk begin to act strangely.

“Aliens in a small town.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBetween about 1975 and 1986, three 1950s sci-fi films were held in very high regard by me – It Came From Outer Space, Forbidden Planet and The Incredible Shrinking Man. All three were liked so much I constantly listened to them on audio tape. They were regarded as solid sci-fi movies to be taken very seriously. Then in the late 1980s I made the mistake of seeing these films in Sydney theatres with people who were not really in tune with 1950s movies. These films became comedy to them.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eICFOS begins with the male and female lead getting all romantic with each other. This cinema crowd almost laughed this scene off the screen. Too corny for them. Later, one character describes Richard Carlson as u0026quot;a man who thinks for himselfu0026quot;, the laughing was louder this time. And again, Carlson looks into space and starts talking to himself, out loud, about aliens. The laughing was getting stronger. And so it went on. What was once great mystery and suspense, such as Russell Johnson looking into the sun, was now comedy. They had good reason to laugh as it was funny. But this crowd destroyed a childhood favourite of mine. I didu0026#39;nt like this film being laughed at. I didu0026#39;nt want to know the funny side. Other cinema screenings of Forbidden Planet and The Incredible Shrinking Man were given the same reaction. For a while I wondered if all of my 1950s/1960s sci-fi favourites were just … bad in the eyes of the public. Or was it just the Australian sense of humour?u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI will rate this film by my 1970s reactions. It is a classic. The music score is dated but everything else is fine. The desert creates such mystery. Great sci-fi.”

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