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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn Britain, a group of survivors fights off a deadly alien invasion that uses robots and a poisonous gas to take over the Earth.In Britain, a group of survivors fights off a deadly alien invasion that uses robots and a poisonous gas to take over the Earth.In Britain, a group of survivors fights off a deadly alien invasion that uses robots and a poisonous gas to take over the Earth.
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A warm-up by director Fisher for his "Island of Terror"(66) and "Night of the Big Heat"(67), this is a template for alien invasion pictures: there's a small group of survivors (in rural England) and marauding invaders, here in the form of slow-moving robots. Since the invaders never do move beyond a slow walk, they never seem to pose a serious threat unless you happen to run right up to them (which one of the characters does indeed do). Then they zap you with a touch of their cold hand and you eventually turn into a controlled zombie. It sounds a bit silly, but the film manages to convey an eeriness to the whole setting. Maybe because it's in black & white, it also reminded me a bit of "Night of the Living Dead"(68). The sense of isolation and the threat are very similar.
What sets this above other sci-fi films of the fifties & sixties is the lack of clunky, melodramatic dialog. The intent by the filmmakers and actors is that this is really happening. The survivors are an average group of citizens, caught in a traumatic situation. None of them are prepared or trained for something like this. There's always that one troublemaker in the group, of course, brandishing a revolver and behaving like an ass. But the story needs that extra tension to make it more interesting. It's low budget, but they didn't really need a lot of money to show empty streets or just several bodies littering the landscape. This one, though, really begs to be remade with a decent budget, as a full throttle invasion story. A similar Americanized version was the earlier "Target Earth"(1954).
What sets this above other sci-fi films of the fifties & sixties is the lack of clunky, melodramatic dialog. The intent by the filmmakers and actors is that this is really happening. The survivors are an average group of citizens, caught in a traumatic situation. None of them are prepared or trained for something like this. There's always that one troublemaker in the group, of course, brandishing a revolver and behaving like an ass. But the story needs that extra tension to make it more interesting. It's low budget, but they didn't really need a lot of money to show empty streets or just several bodies littering the landscape. This one, though, really begs to be remade with a decent budget, as a full throttle invasion story. A similar Americanized version was the earlier "Target Earth"(1954).
The lurid title is misleading, since a sleepy little village simply gets sleepier in this quickie retread of 'Village of the Damned' and 'The Day of the Triffids' which strikingly anticipates 'The Night of the Living Dead' with added robots.
Like Romero's later classic a small group of people take cover in a quiet rural area (here played by the village of Shere in Surrey) which provides an incongruously picturesque backdrop to an infestation of zombies; and like the later film is cleanly shot in black & white and with an atmospher scored by the celebrated composer Elizabeth Lutyens.
Like Romero's later classic a small group of people take cover in a quiet rural area (here played by the village of Shere in Surrey) which provides an incongruously picturesque backdrop to an infestation of zombies; and like the later film is cleanly shot in black & white and with an atmospher scored by the celebrated composer Elizabeth Lutyens.
I taped The Earth Dies Screaming when Channel 4 screened it some years ago, but, unfortunately I never saw the last five or 10 minutes as the tape ran out. It hasn't been on again since nor has it been released on VHS or DVD.
Aliens have invaded the UK and killer robots are reviving dead humans as zombies and the few survivors have to try and stop them.
The thing I remember most about this movie are the scenes of the robots slowly walking through the rural village. Very eerie.
The cast includes Willard Parker, Dennis Price, Virginia Field and Hammer and sci-fi regular Thorley Walters (Frankenstein Created Woman, The People That Time Forgot).
It would be nice to see The Earth Dies Screraming again, especially the ending. Come on Channel 4 or any other channel, let's have it on again.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
Aliens have invaded the UK and killer robots are reviving dead humans as zombies and the few survivors have to try and stop them.
The thing I remember most about this movie are the scenes of the robots slowly walking through the rural village. Very eerie.
The cast includes Willard Parker, Dennis Price, Virginia Field and Hammer and sci-fi regular Thorley Walters (Frankenstein Created Woman, The People That Time Forgot).
It would be nice to see The Earth Dies Screraming again, especially the ending. Come on Channel 4 or any other channel, let's have it on again.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
I watched this movie late on cable and enjoyed every minute. It had all the ingredients of a classic B Movie. Aliens,Zombies,Quaint english village,Survivors of an environmental disaster,Hapless females,and dodgy acting. You have to love the old B Movies to really enjoy this film.
I would call "the earth dies screaming" rural sci-fi since everything happens in an English village or in the country.And short weight too,cause the running time barely exceeds one hour.It's a low budget effort but so was "invasion of the body snatchers" .Terence Fisher's work is not in its league,by a long shot ,but its ET robots (icily impersonal)are all the more impressive since we know absolutely nothing about them.Add a good cast ,with Dennis Price as the stand out. Combining robots with living dead in ordinary places in daylight was perhaps not a very good idea on the paper,but it relatively works.Not the kind of movie you feel like watching again,but you can have a look.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe village featured is Shere, Surrey.
- GaffesWhen Jeff Nolan first arrives at the village he takes out what appears to be a bolt action Enfield P14 / M17 rifle, later in the film this turns into a semi automatic 30-06 Garand rifle.
- Citations
Peggy Hatton: Do you know what's happened?
Jeff Nolan: No I don't. I took a plane up this morning for a shakedown flight and when I went up everything was normal. When I came down, everyone was dead. I drove all day. You're the first folks I've seen alive.
- ConnexionsEdited from Seven Sinners (1936)
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- How long is The Earth Dies Screaming?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 2 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was The Earth Dies Screaming (1964) officially released in India in English?
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