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THE WAR OF THE WORLDS
Rating:   
USA. 1953.
Director Byron Haskin, Screenplay Barre Lyndon, Based on the Novel by H.G. Wells, Producer George Pal, Photography George Barnes, Music Leslie Stevens, Photographic Effects Ivyl Burke, Jan Domela, Gordon Jennings, Wallace Kelly & Irwin Roberts, Special Effects Paul Lerpae, Bob Springfield & A. Edward Sutherland, Makeup Effects Wally Westmore, Production Design Albert Nozaki & Hal Pereira. Production Company Paramount.
Cast:
Gene Barry (Dr Clayton Forrester), Ann Robinson (Sylvia Van Buren), Les Tremayne (General Mann), Lewis Martin (Pastor Collins)
Plot: The inhabitants of a dying Mars arrive on Earth in projectiles, which are initially taken to be meteorites by astronomers. While on a fishing trip in California, scientist Dr Clayton Forrester is asked to investigate one of the meteorites that comes down in the area. A trio of locals go to greet the meteorite with a white flag but are incinerated by a heat ray. The military promptly move in. The meteorite, and all the others worldwide, then opens up, producing Martian flying machines, which move across the countryside, destroying all in their path with the heat rays. The military throw everything in their arsenal against the Martians, including the atomic bomb, to no avail.
The War of the Worlds is the granddaddy of all alien invader films. There had been a couple of high-profile alien invader films before The War of the Worlds The Thing from Another World (1951) and The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) but they didnt quite ignite the formula The Thing featured only one alien and kept it confined to an Arctic base, while The Day the Earth Stood Still featured a threat to humanity, but the alien visitor turned out to be benevolent and the real threat to be humanity itself. No the alien invader genre, which in no time became the most prevalent theme in 1950s science-fiction, really began here with The War of the Worlds.
The War of the Worlds was produced by George Pal, who became the most popular name in 1950s science-fiction. George Pal had previously produced Destination Moon (1950) and When Worlds Collide (1951), big-budget science-fiction films whose virtues were colour and spectacular special effects, even if they were rather wooden in terms of dramatics. Pal would go onto make a number of other genre classics as producer and sometimes director. (See below for Pals other titles).
The work that George Pal turned to was the H.G. Wells novel War of the Worlds (1898), which in itself was the common ancestor of all alien invader stories. Indeed H.G. Wellss War of the Worlds was the work that produced the central image of malevolent, tentacled little green men that became a cliche throughout 1930s pulp. There had been plans to film the H.G. Wells novel for three decades, with names like Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein, director of the silent classic Battleship Potemkin (1925), attached in the 1920s, Cecil B. De Mille of The Ten Commandments (1956) fame during the 1930s, and later Alfred Hitchcock, as well as producer Alexander Korda who collaborated with H.G. Wells himself on the visionary science-fiction film Things to Come (1936). Of course on October 30, 1938 Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre had produced his famous radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds, which caused panic due to Welless relaying it as a faked news broadcast that many thought to be the real thing.
In a move that has brought an outcry from many H.G. Wells purists, George Pal gave the novel a facelift. Firstly the Martian war machines were changed from walking tripods to sleek flying manta rays. No doubt this was for ease of special effects. Even though Pal was a stop motion animator (gaining fame with his Puppetoon shorts during the 1940s), he clearly realized that stop motion animating tripedial war machines for the film would have been expensive and time-consuming. And so he economically eliminated the legs on the machines, allowing them to be brought to life using models on wires.
The most important of the changes made to the story was in transporting the setting from that of Wellss contemporary Victorian England to Pals contemporary 1950s California. Again this upset many purists (although it should also be noted that Orson Welles gave the story exactly the same contemporary updating in his radio broadcast). The updating at least keeps intact the metaphor of hubris and shock that underlies the story. Wellss War of the Worlds has always been seen as a parable about the might of Victorian Imperialism being brought to its knees by an overwhelmingly technologically superior force; the update becomes a like parable about US post-War nationalism it can at once seen to be both beating its chest about national pride while also fearful of its own vulnerability in the new Atomic Age.
The massive scenes of destruction are well orchestrated, despite frequently visible wires on the models. The manta ray-like war machines have a sinister elegance and come accompanied by a particularly memorable series of sound effects. The Martians come across as the most ruthless and thorough invaders of the whole period coldly crisping the self-appointed diplomatic corps who come waving a white flag, and bringing the whole of humanity to its knees quite literally in a potent series of images that show the blasted remains of world landmarks. The War of the Worlds was really the most wide-ranging of all alien invasions of the era the others that followed didnt have lavish budget to show such widespread scenes of devastation, let alone in most cases to even film in colour.
Byron Haskin is a rather staid director. He takes relish in all sorts of gaudy and vivid colour schemes, with the whole film seemingly lit in mauves, greens and oranges. Haskin certainly rises to the occasion during the scenes in the farmhouse where he takes the film over into horror territory the aliens brief appearance and its spooking of Ann Robinson is something eerily effective. The human side of things was never given much attention in George Pals films. And The War of the Worlds is certainly encumbered by the woodenness of both Gene Barry and Ann Robinson. But then this is not really a film where one is paying much attention to the romance. And for that matter there were few in the way of characters or much development in the H.G. Wells novel the narrator, for example, was an anonymous figure who wasnt even given a name. The film is really a show being run by the effects people and as such it achieves rather well.
What is also now present in the story is a religious subtext that quite defies belief. (Although it does produce the memorable image of the priest walking out to confront the war machines while quoting the 23rd Psalm). When H.G. Wells ended the book with the statement that the Martians were defeated by the smallest thing in Gods creation (bacteria) he was making an expression of irony, not one of religious belief. (Wells was a renowned atheist). The sense of irony is a small matter that seems to slip by Pal and scriptwriter Barre Lyndon. Instead they take the statement with a deadening literalness and allow the religious subtext to take over the entire film to quite an appalling extent. At one point Ann Robinson states I always knew if I hid in a church and prayed, my true love would find me there and of course Gene Barry later does exactly that. And at the end the Martian ships are finally brought symbolically crashing down outside the door of the church and afterwards humanity is shown singing hymns in thanks for their delivery. George Pals films always seem caught between extraordinary leaps of imagination and a tremulous religious fear Pal himself was a Catholic. See his Conquest of Space (1955) for a perfect example of this lunatic religious fear overrunning a potentially good film. Nevertheless The War of the Worlds puts its finger exactly on the pulse of 1950s anxiety, of the imminent sense of the whole world about to collapse and of America as a nation clinging to its belief that is blessed by the Lord in hope for its delivery.
George Pals other genre films are The Great Rupert (1949), Destination Moon (1950), When Worlds Collide (1951), The Naked Jungle (1954), Conquest of Space (1955), tom thumb (1958), The Time Machine (1960), Atlantis, the Lost Continent (1961), The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm (1962), Seven Faces of Dr Lao (1964), The Power (1967) and Doc Savage The Man of Bronze (1975).
Byron Haskin worked with George Pal again on several other occasions including The Naked Jungle, Conquest of Space and The Power. Haskin also directed a number of other genre films including Tarzans Peril (1951), From the Earth to the Moon (1958), Captain Sindbad (1963) and Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964), as well as episodes of the classic science-fiction anthology series The Outer Limits (1963-5).
The film was later sequelized as a routine tv series War of the Worlds (1988-90), which only really had the name in common with the film. Here the invaders had now abandoned their war machines and were standardized alien body snatchers being fought by a human resistance a la V (1983). Although the idea was mentioned several times particularly during the immediate post-Star Wars (1977) boom, there had never been any cinematic remake of War of the Worlds up until 2005. However 2005 suddenly saw no less than three different adaptations of the story with Steven Spielbergs blockbuster War of the Worlds (2005), the independently produced The War of the Worlds (2005) and the low-budget modernized War of the Worlds (2005). All versions return to H.G. Wellss image of tripedial war machines. Spielberg, like Pal, updates his version to the present, while the second version shot the story in Victorian period and is extremely faithful to the book, and the third was another modernized version seeking to capitalize on the success of Spielbergs film. Other related films include the Polish War of the Worlds Next Century (1981), which is not really related to the Wells novel but is in fact a story about Martian invaders imposing media censorship, and The Night that Panicked America (1975), a tv movie depicting the hysteria surrounding the Orson Welles radio broadcast.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
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