When one thinks of
Hammer Films, images of Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing stalking gothic hallways leaps to mind.
Hammer Films first dabble in horror was actually way back in 1955 with
The Quatermass Xperiment; a fantastic horror/science fiction hybrid that captured and terrified audiences of the time.
If one thing we can take away from early science fiction movies, it’s
that space is a very dangerous place and going out into space will
either kill you or that something from space will come down here and
kill us. In the case of
The Quatermass Xperiment it’s a little bit of both, as man’s first foray into space brings back a horrible entity that could doom all of mankind.
How many alien invasions start in some farmer’s field?
Professor Bernard Quatermass (
Brian Donlevy)
is the head of the British Rocket Group. The movie begins with him
rushing to the scene of a crash. It seems that a rocket they launched
and since lost contact with has finally returned, crashing in a local
farmer’s field. When the ship is eventually opened only one survivor
staggers out alive as the other two occupants are missing, with just
their two empty sealed pressures being the only evidence that they were
on board. Thus the mystery begins and Quatermass is going to get to the
bottom of it, and god help anyone who gets in his way.
“Back off man, I’m a scientist!”
The sole survivor, Victor Caroon (
Richard Wordsworth), is whisked away to Quatermass’s lab instead of a hospital where Judith, Carron’s worried wife (
Margia Dean), Doctor Gordon Briscoe (
David King-Wood),
and Quatermass endeavor to find out what happened on that ill-fated
flight. Unfortunately, Caroon is in some kind of catatonic state and is
unable to talk or communicate in anyway. It’s clear that something
strange had happened aboard the craft, as Carron’s body has undergone
some horrifying changes.
Space Madness?
Due to the three men going into space and only one returning,
Scotland Yard is put on the case to find out if Victor Caroon possibly
murdered his shipmates. Leading the investigation is Inspector Lomax (
Jack Warner)
who at first butts heads with Quatermass, but who quickly comes to
realize that this case may be stranger than even he can imagine. The two
become quite the team. The one person who is not a team player is
Judith, who hires a private investigator to sneak her husband out of the
hospital. This leads to the poor man’s death, as Caroon absorbs his
life force leaving his husked out body for a nurse to find.
P.I. found D.O.A.
With Caroon on the loose it becomes a manhunt to find him, as
whatever happened to him in space has altered his physiology to the
point where he absorbs organic matter while further mutating. After
crushing a cactus with his hand he absorbs its properties, as his hand
becomes all bulbous and thorned like a cactus. A hapless drugstore clerk
tries to help Caroon and is killed for his troubles.
“Sir, I don’t think a simple allergenic cream is going to help you.”
There is a nice moment where Caroon encounters a little girl who is
playing with her doll by the river. She wants him to join her for tea,
but lucky for the girl he is able to resist the urge to absorb her and
settles for smashing her doll and running away.
Note:
Though Brian Donlevy get’s the showier part as Quatermass, the mute and
tragic figure of Caroon is beautifully portrayed by Richard Wordsworth
and reminds one of Boris Karloff’s pathos driven monster in the original
Frankenstein.
“Would you like to toss dandelions into the water with me?”
After discovering that that the local zoo is now full of dessicated
animals a city wide manhunt is begun, and bit by bit our heroes start to
realize the true extent of the danger mankind is in. Finally, the
authorities track Caroon to Westminster Abbey where it is discovered
that Caroon is far from being a man anymore but is now some horrible
creature. If allowed to spore, it could spell the end of mankind. Lucky
for us, Quatermass is on the job.
“Feed me Seymour, feed me all night long!”
What makes this a great movie to me is the portrayal of Quatermass by Brian Donlevy. In the BBC serial written by
Nigel Kneale,
that this movie was adapted from, Bernard Quatermass was originally
depicted as your typical effete British professor seen in countless
science fiction movies. Brian Donlevy gives us a brash, arrogant, take
no prisoners type scientist that I’d never seen before. He bullies his
subordinates, steamrolls over authorities to get the job done and to
hell with anyone that disagrees with him. Whether he is in the right or
wrong is totally beside the point as there is just “his way or the
highway.” At one point he berates the distraught wife who is rightfully
concerned with the condition of her husband, “
There’s no room for personal feelings in science, Judith!”
And that kind of sums up Quatermass, it’s all about the science. The
movie ends brilliantly with Quatermass leaving the Abbey stating, “
I will start again.”
“Lomax, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful franchise.”
Shows like
Doctor Who and
The X-Files owe a lot to director
Val Guest
as his cinéma vérité shooting style used in this movie made the
fantastic more believable. Treating an invading alien being as a police
procedural was genius and opened the flood gates for more serious minded
films. This is a must see for any fans of good British filmmaking,
great science fiction, and terrifying monsters. Basically
The Quatermass Xperiment is just damn awesome and led to making
Hammer Films one of the premier horror studios of all time.
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