Showing posts with label Twilight Zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twilight Zone. Show all posts

Friday, 24 June 2022

The Eve Of Destruction pt.2; Death From Above


"And I saw, and beheld a white horse: and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went forth conquering, and to conquer. And there went out another horse that was red: and power was given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and that they should kill one another: and there was given unto him a great sword. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him." (John The Revelator; Revelations 6:8)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Last month I wrote about a number of post-nuclear apocalypse films of the Cold War era so this month I thought I'd continue the theme looking at some other post-apocalypse films, however this time the end is not man-made but comes from space. By this I mean natural occurring disasters like a meteor or comet of the type that wiped out the dinosaurs or some sort of similar nature based strike. Thus these films purport to keep just this side of reality and more-or-less scientific facts rather than the sort of fantastic alien invasion (such as HG Wells "War Of The Worlds") or religious themed films like any number of Noah's Ark films or somewhat related natural disaster films like the various versions of "Last Days Of Pompeii". However it is worth taking a quick look at a couple of these early Ark and Pompeii films to see how they handled the visuals of mass destruction even if the theme of the Ark myth is not more-or-less science based.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
OqN

The first real film epics came from Italy in a series of films based on classical themes; Dante's "Inferno", "Cabria", "Ben Hur", "Quo Vadis" and "Last Days Of Pompeii". These films with their then extended running times of an hour or more, large casts of extras and impressive sets caused a sensation when shown in Europe and America where they played not in the usual movie houses but in large theatres with high priced tickets to well-heeled, cultured audiences who were impressed with their pretentious scale and mythical themes. They would inspire later large scale epic films from the likes of DW Griffith, DeMille, Eisenstein, Fritz Lang and Abel Gance. That does not mean these were actually good films though. Influenced as much by opera than films or even plays they were slow, ponderous, pompous, with cliche writing, pedestrian editing, completely static camera work that consisted of simply shooting full length shots with few closeups, stage-bound sets and acting that consisted of standing around posing, making faces and gesticulating wildly, these films were in not really advanced from "The Great Train Robbery" except in size and artistic pretense. Of these films only "L'Inferno" is still watchable and that's strictly for it's still spectacular sets and effects. The Italian film industry's brief time as a film heavyweight would only last a few years as they would soon be overtaken by more imginative filmmakers from America, France, Russia, Scandinavia and later Germany.

"LAST DAYS OF POMPEII" (1908);


One of the first of the Italian Classical Proto-Epics was "Last Days Of Pompeii" directed by Ambrosio in 1908 and based on a 1834  British novel. The story has little to do with the actual eruption of the volcano and instead is a complicated soap opera about a lovers' triangle, competing religions with plenty of togas, parties, swordplay until Mt Vesuvius erupts and some of the characters manage to flee. The movie is full of the usual dramatic posing and over-acting and with the climactic eruption consisting of lots of smoke and extras running back and forth while paper mache columns fall on them. Given the techniques of the day it's about what one would expect and does tell a coherent story albeit done on a slightly larger scale and sense of importance than an American film of the time would have done but it would soon be surpassed. The film is actually only a one reel short and thus not really an epic but it was successful enough to encourage the slew of full length Italian epics to follow soon after. This was actually the second film adaptation with the first being a now lost 1900 British version which is no doubt even shorter and more stage-bound and crude but it would be interesting to see how they handled the explosion. Director Ambrosio would make several movies including "Quo Vadis" (1924) one of the last of the massive Italian epics, the failure of which was a disaster for the Italian film industry and ended his career. "Last Days Of Pompeii" would be remade four more times during the silent era, all in Italy and several more times in the sound era. The slow moving full length version which survives actually spends even less time on the eruption scene in spite of being three times as long and is of no interest to us.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++  

"THE DELUGE" (1911);


This was an American film dealing with Noah's Ark and it thankfully limits itself to the flood and eliminates all the long run-up plot about the burning bush and building the thing so we get to the action fairly quickly. This is actually quite well done for 1911, an era known for static camera work, stodgy editing and cheap stage sets. Here we get a few more camera angles then the usual full-length group shots and even some good closeups. Unlike other films of the era that feature a crowd of panicky extras running around wildly waving their arms about and making faces, these ones are actually well filmed and directed and look realistic trudging through the downpour. These are effectively intercut with closeup shots of some sort of clan leader's face as sits on his throne like King Canute and realizes the flood waters are not going to stop and another character, clearly the local bully, who at first tries to laugh away the rain then we see his smirk turn to fear as the waters rise. We get some good shots of hapless peasants clinging to rocks and trees as torrents of water wash over them. The Ark itself is convincingly massive and looks realistic enough. Oddly we see more of the flood's victims than we get of Noah who doesn't really show up until three quarters of the way in and we barely see his family at all. Noah looks suitably haggard but he's just not as interesting as the Clan Chief or Bully.

This film is something of a mystery and there are few details about this film other than it being made by Vitagraph Studios with the cast and director being unknown. Vitagraph made a disaster film "The Juggernaut", a 1915 serial directed by Ralph Ince (brother of respected western director Thomas Ince), which was noted for its spectacular scene of a train crashing over a bridge and into a river so it's possible he directed this film. It's also possible this surviving film was edited down from a longer version which would explain why we get so little of Noah and no real introduction. The opening credits list not Vitagraph but an obscure Exclusive Movie Studios who probably bought the rights to distribute a version which they then edited down and added the intertitles which take pains to claim the factual truth of the Biblical account. The opening credits have an art deco look which looks more like something from the 1930's rather than 1911 and must have been added several years later when Exclusive bought the distribution rights. There would still have been a market for such a film to show for church groups well into the sound era.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

  "THE END OF THE WORLD" (1916);

Directed by Otto Rung
Cast;
Frank Stoll  ~  Olaf Fonns
Manager West  ~  Carl Lauritzen
Dina West  ~  Ebba Thomsen
Edith West  ~  Johanne Fritz-Peterson
First Mate Reymers  ~  Alf Blutecher
Worker Flint  ~  Thorleif Lund
The Preacher  ~  Fredrick Jacobsen
Professor Wiseman  ~  K Zimmerman
Plot Synopsis (spoiler alert);
Dina & Edith West are sisters living in a mining town. Their father is the mine manager and the owner is Frank Stoll who is in town inspecting the mine. Also visiting town is a Preacher. Dina is engaged to Flint, a worker at the mine. The sisters and Flint go to a dance where Frank Stoll sees them and asks Dina to dance with him and she agrees to the annoyance of Flint. Meanwhile Edith meets her boyfriend Reymers, a ship's officer. Frank asks Dina to return to the capital with him and she says she will consider it. When she returns home Flint and her father are waiting and they confront her with her father denouncing her as a "harlot". Angry, she decides to leave with Frank. Flint, who has been following her, sees this and confronts them leading to a fight where Frank strikes him and they leave. Fast forward a few years later Frank and Dina are married and living in the capital where he has become wealthy by playing the stock market. Dina has become bored and spoiled. Frank's cousin, Professor Wiseman, an astronomer discovers a new comet which he calculates will enter the Earth's atmosphere. He explains his fears to the Astronomical Society who inform the press. The news causes a run on the stock market which Frank exploits buying up cheap stocks dismissing the fears about the comet. Frank returns to the town where he says he has some more business, he will take Dina although she fears being confronted by her father. Meanwhile Reymers has passed his First Mate exam. News of the comet, which can now be seen distantly in the sky, reaches the town. The Preacher declares it is God's punishment. Edith and Reymers discuss marriage. As the Astronomical Society debates, Frank asks Wisemen to send him inside information on the discussions. The Society figures that the comet will cause catastrophic damage, particularly to Northern Europe but decides to avoid a panic and not to inform the press. Wiseman is opposed to the news blackout and privately informs Frank of this. Frank plots with a newspaper editor to keep the public in the dark in order to prevent another run on the market. The paper puts out a story reassuring the public which calms the market allowing Frank to sell his shares at a profit. Wiseman becomes aware of Frank's plotting and confronts him but Frank is dismissive. With the comet now more visible in the sky Frank decides to return to the town before his scheming is discovered. Back in the town he is telling people to repent while Reymers head off to sea. Frank and Dina arrive in town. Flint has become a leader of the miners and rouses them to attack Frank outside her father's home. As they do Edith urges her Father and the Preacher to intervene but instead he denounces her for disgracing the family name. The police arrive and arrest Flint and Frank and Dina manage to escape and drive off to his mansion. The comet has become larger in the sky and Frank begins to worry. Hidden under his mansion is a secret passage leading to an old mine shaft where he believes they can take shelter. The Father dies of a heart attack. As Wiseman is tracking the comet, Frank throws a party for his wealthy friends and the Preacher delivers a sermon urging all to prepare for the end. Frank is dismissive and the party becomes more rowdy and decadent with dancing girls performing as comet particles begin to rain down. Flint is in jail and sees the comet's damage start and he breaks out of jail. Returning to town he riles up the workers to take revenge on the wealthy and attack Frank's mansion where the party is going on. The rioters break into the police station and arm themselves before storming Frank's mansion where the party guests barricade themselves in the ballroom and also arm themselves and a gun battle erupts. In the resulting chaos many die and Frank takes Dina and escapes into the hidden mine tunnels. Flint discovers the secret door and follows them as the mansion catches fire. Meanwhile Reymers aboard his ship sees the meteorite shower and returns to port. Wiseman is still at the observatory monitoring the comet when it is struck and destroyed. In the town there is panic as buildings catch fire and buildings collapse. Down in the mine poisonous gas is released killing Dina, Flint and Frank. Edith hides in her house while Reymers struggles to guide his ship home through the storms. As the town burns a tidal wave sweeps in and Edith is trapped. At sea Reymers ship is sunk and he escapes in a lifeboat. The Preacher has also somehow survived and rows out to Edith's home which is now flooded out and rescues her, taking her to a cave along the shore where she passes out and the Preacher leaves her to sleep. The next morning she ventures out to find the town abandoned and in ruins. Reymers, alone at sea, makes it to shore and heads home. The one building left intact is a church where Edith breaks in and begins ringing the church bell. Reymers hears the bell and goes to the church where they are reunited. Finis.

MV5-BZDlj-MGU5-NGMt-YTYy-NS00-OWI4-LWJk-OTMt-MDYw-OWI0-Mzc4-ZDli-Xk-Ey-Xk-Fqc-Gde-QXVy-NDEz-MTI3-MTU-V1
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

This 1916 Danish film reached an international audience at the time but has been forgotten about which is kind of a shame as it's probably the first film to deal with the concept of the Apocalypse apart from a few Christian films. The threat here comes from space in the form of a comet which is essentially what wiped out the dinosaurs although that was not a commonly known theory at the time. The choice of a comet as the agent of destruction likely came instead from a more recent astrological event. In 1910 Halley's Comet made its highly visible pass by the Earth, an event that happens roughly every 75 years. Halley's Comet had inspired a whole set of myths and superstitions for centuries. Halley's Comet made an appearance before William The Conqueror invaded Britain in 1066 and was seen as an omen by the Saxons but by the Normans as proof God was with them (omens seem to be rather random in how they are interpreted), it even turns up in the Bayeux Tapestry. Another appearance in 1301 was seen as an inspiration by Genghis Kahn and an omen by the Christians while yet another in 1456 was yet another omen for Christians as the Ottoman Turks invaded Hungary. By 1910 omens were a bit old fashioned but Mark Twain, who had been born during the Comet's passing in 1835 had predicted in 1909 that the next time the Comet passed by he would die and famously he in fact died the day after the Comet's appearance. In fact 1910 actually saw not one but two comets as a different comet known as the Daylight Comet also zoomed past some months earlier, both being highly visible. While most people no longer placed much faith in omens some Christian sects did with the Millennialist sects like the Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses seeing the Comet as a sign of the End Times, a belief soon bolstered by the start of World War One.

images

It's easy to forget now, after two world wars and the constant threat of nuclear winter, how traumatic the Great war was to those who lived through it. There had been a generation of relative peace (aside from various colonial wars of course) and it was assumed that advances in modern technology and attitudes would make future wars short if not obsolete so the mass slaughter of the trenches, mechanized warfare, poison gas, organized genocide, a global pandemic, lagre scale famines in Russian and China and revolutions that toppled ancient monarchies in Tsarist Russia, Imperial Germany, Hapsburg Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Turkey plus Manchu China deeply affected and shook the beliefs of a generation seeming to some to prestage the end of the world itself. In 1916 some of these events had not quite happened yet and Denmark was a neutral country and not directly affected but they could hardly be unaffected by events next door nor could the other Europeans who saw the film as an import and would have understood the films quasi-religious and (less quasi) anti-capitalist themes.  

MV5-BYTIy-Y2-Vm-YTIt-NDg2-My00-OGZi-LWE2-Zm-Mt-Mm-Y4-NTQ5-Mz-Fj-MDdj-Xk-Ey-Xk-Fqc-Gde-QXVy-NDEz-MTI3-MTU-V1
END OF THE WORLD BALL

Like many post apocalypse films it's only somewhat about the end of the world with the bulk of it's plot being morality plays focussing on the sisters with the good (blonde haired of course) sister staying home with her apparently chaste boyfriend while the bad (dark haired) sister defies their strict father and runs off to the big city to live a life of luxury and decadence with the greedy Frank Stoll. No prizes for guessing which one survives. The film oddly seems to undermine it's premise by having Dina's jilted fiancee, Flint, be such a jealous, possessive, vengeful and violent rabble-rouser however. Frank by contrast, while he is greedy, arrogant, unscrupulous and reckless, is also loyal and devoted to Dina as the film takes pains to point out and the viewer would have to grudgingly have to admit that she would made the right call in leaving behind her thuggish boyfriend and judgemental martinet of a father to run off to the big city with the wealthy and doting Frank. If it were not for the whole comet thing of course. The character of Frank does not really serve as a lecherous rake however but instead represents capitalism at it's most predatory and careless as he takes advantage of the panic to manipulate the stock market then attempts to save himself and Dina by holing up in his hidden tunnels placing him the world of movie villains somewhere between the Mayor in "Jaws" and Paul Rieser's character in "Aliens". His plot also seems a little short sighted in that even if he is successful in riding out the rain of fire in his caverns it's hard to see how his ill-gotten gains will be worth much in the resulting scorched Hellscape even assuming there are survivors. His throwing of a last party makes even less sense and seems instead to give the angry mob something to attack and also serves as a reference to Edgar Allan Poe's "Masque Of The Red Death"  in which the decadent wealthy throw a lavish party while a plague rampages through the countryside. We actually spend far less time getting to know the heroes of the film, Edith and Reymers who are by comparison blandly virtuous and who end up as Adam and Eve figures albeit with no Garden Of Eden. To further stress the religious theme is the Preacher who is more of a Casandra figure from Homer's "Odyssey" who is right about the coming end but whose warnings are largely ignored although he does rescue Edith at the end before conveniently disappearing so Edith and Reymers can be lone survivors. Presumably he'll come back at some point to marry them so they won't be living in sin in this scorched earth Eden.

end-of-the-world

In the film the comet appears to breakup in the atmosphere and comes down in the form of smaller flaming fragments and I frankly don't know enough about science type stuff to know who realistic that is but the film does a pretty good job within the constraints of what was probably not a huge budget of showing the destruction of the mining town. Aside from some scenes set in the capital city the film spends its time in the mining town along with a couple scenes on board Reymer's ship which is probably also a product of a somewhat limited wartime budget and allows the filmmakers to avoid having to arrange for the destruction of an entire city full of hundreds of extras. This makes the film seem more insular than a film about the literal end of the world should be but as we shall see this will not be uncommon in post apocalypse films. As it is, the final rain of death from above is rather effective and the final scenes of Edith staggering through the smoking ruins of the town are effective. Having the destructive force come in the form of a comet leads to several scenes where the comet can clearly be seen in the night sky. The far away comet looks like one of George Melies creations but it does gain a certain menace as it appears to be getting slowly larger. For all its limitations this film does have a more effective portrayal of mass destruction than the closest comparisons namely the various versions of Noah's Ark of the "Last Days Of Pompeii" and it's easy to see how contemporary audiences would have been impressed.

The film's director August Blom was a well known figure in Danish film and had also made another important disaster film with "Atlantis" in 1913 which was inspired by the sinking of the Titanic and which has recently been rediscovered and noted for its realism and epic scale. He made several dozen films in Denmark (including a lost 1910 version of "Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde") to considerable acclaim but after the Great War unlike some other figures of Scandinavian film like Asta Neilsen, Greta Garbo, Urban Gad and Viking Eggeling he did not leave to seek opportunities in Germany as the domestic industry slumped and instead retired from film after 1924 to manage a theatre company until his death in 1947 aged 77. Of the cast Olaf Fonns (Frank Stoll) had also appeared in Bolm's "Atlantis" but he did move to Germany where he made dozens of films including an influential early horror film "Homunculus" (1916) of which a portion remains. The opposite of Frank Stoll he was an active supporter of the Social Democratic Party and fled Germany after the Nazis siezed power and returned to Denmark where he served as the President of the Actors Union and on the national Film Censor Boad until his death in 1947. Ebba Thomsen (Dina), Carl Lauritsen (Father West) and Fredrick Jacobsen (The Preacher) had also appeared in Atlantis and like the rest of the cast had extensive careers in Denmark, some into the sound era.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"FIN LA MONDE" (1931);

In the aftermath of the Great War and pandemic the theme of mass extinction seems to have lost its allure as a film topic. This may have helped by the spectacular failure of another round of big budget versions of Noah's Ark and Pompeii films in America and Italy in the 1920's followed by one more big budget appocalypse movie in the early sound era, this time from Abel Gance, the French director of the 1927 epic "Napoleon". 1931's "Fin Le Monde" ("End Of The World") would use much the same plot as the 1916 Danish film although this version would have an even more complicated plot;

images_(2)

The film opens on an extended scene of Jesus being crucified. As the camera pans out we learn that this is actually a play and Jesus is being played by actor Jean Novalic (played by director Abel Gance). Isabelle Bolin attends with her boyfriend, stock promoter Schomburg (Samson Fainsilber) who is in turn attracted by the blonde actress playing Mary Magdalene, Genevieve de Murcie (Colette Darfeuil). Genevieve is in turn in love with Novalic who she wishes to marry but her scientist father Monsieur de Murcie (Jean D'Yd) prohibits any marriage. He is jealous of Novalic's father, and rival astronomer Martial Novalic (Victor Francen) and accepts money from Schomburg to build an observatory better than Novalic's. Schomburg then announces his intention to court de Murcie's daughter.
Walking home Jean aids a young woman being beaten by her father, who accuses Jean of rape rousing a mob who stone him critically wounding him with a blow to the head leaving him hospitalized. Schomburg accompanies Genevieve to a fancy party, but takes her back to her apartment and rapes her. In his observatory, Martial determines that Lexell's Comet is on a collision course with Earth. Jean predicts a coming apocalypse and claims that the cataclysm has arrived to "save the hearts of man". Martial confides to his colleagues that the comet will strike in 114 days. After Jean is taken to an asylum, Martial and Genevieve listen to his phonographs, where he has left a message which instruct Genevieve to abandon her worldly life and help Martial inaugurate a new world government. Jean's voice tells them they must marry and become the shepherd and shepherdess of humanity. Genevieve has visions Jean as Christ.

download_(2)
ABEL GANCE

With 92 days left, Schomburg has been playing the stockmarket and invests heavily in armaments, while Martial goes to the rich Werster and tells him that the world will end. Werster deals with Schomburg and gives Martial money to buy a newspaper and a broadcast station which they use to surpress information about the comet. Genevieve has remained single, but helps to organize Radio Martial Novalic's broadcasts of peace bulletins. Martial's confederates jam official radio news, blocking warnings that war mobilization is imminent and issue warnings about the Comet and coming end of the world. Stock markets plunge around the globe, but Schomburg continues to buy. De Murcie and Schomburg accuse Novalic of kidnapping Genevieve and using the comet as a hoax to destroy the economy. A government minister orders the exchanges closed and the arrest of Martial and Werster. But Martial's agents learn of the arrest warrant with a hidden microphone. The newspaper is confiscated and the radio station destroyed, but Martial and Werster escape.
The government hides the truth, which allows the stock markets to recover. Schomberg holds a party the very night Martial claims that the comet will become visible. Schomberg tells gangsters he will pay a million francs if Martial and Werster are found dead before morning. Genevieve returns to her father and joins Schomburg in the garden; the jealous Isabelle runs to warn Martial Novalic. At the party, the comet comes into sight. Isabelle helps Martial escape and learns that war mobilization will soon be announced. He and Werster rush to destroy the government's radio antenna in the Eiffel Tower tracked by agents of Schomberg who also races to the tower. Genevieve tips off Martial by telephone that Schomburg and his killers are ascending in an elevator. Werster warns Genevieve to stay on the ground and uses a cutting torch to sever the elevator cable, but Genevieve had taken the elevator as well seeking to disuade Schomburg and is killed with the rest.

img-23-small580

The entire world can now see Lexell's Comet, and Radio Novalic resumes broadcasting. Martial calls for the first convention of the "General States of the Universe" on 5 August, the night before the collision. People around the world begin to pray as the Comet looms larger in the sky and extreme weather ensues, including blizzards, storms, earthquakes and tidal waves. Riots break out and a thousand revelers bring musicians into a great hall for a feast and orgy. Monks carrying candles interrupt the orgy and lead the group in prayer. As the orbits of the comet and the Earth converge, Martial Novalic addresses the One World Congress, which unanimously agrees to unite all governments into a single harmonious entity. The comet narrowly misses the Earth causing much destruction but leaving it intact. As the film ends we are assured that the survivors will rebuild and live in peace under a one world government. Finis.

THE COMET STRIKES IN "FIN LE MONDE" (1931);


The plot of this film was based on a 1894 French novel "Omega; The Last Days Of The World" by Camille Flammarion, and it has so many similarities with the 1916 Danish film that Danish director Blom must have read it as well. It's unclear how influenced Gance may have been by the Danish film but it was apparently successful enough that he must have seen it but on-the-other-hand he had reportedly been considering the project since 1913, a full three years before Blom's film. At any rate both films feature a comet strike, both comets are discovered by a bold astronomer who largely disappears from the story, both feature ruthless capitalists who seek to profit off the stock market chaos, both have attempts by those in power to conceal the truth, both feature the decadent wealthy throwing wild parties as the comet closes in, both have lovers triangle subplots, both have strident Christian religious symbolism, both have the capitalists getting their just deserts while some good Christians survive to rebuild a new world.

comet-space

The main difference is one of scale. The Danish film, while not exactly low-budget, was certainly no epic either, keeping most of its action to the mining town, using a lot of indoor sets and having a cast of dozens (including extras) rather than hundreds. Director Abel Gance was of course notorious for his mammoth "Napoleon" extravaganza of 1927 and this film does have some trademark Gance touches notably the hallucinationatory religious visions and the mobile camera during the Eiffel Tower scenes. These are effective and the ending chapter as the comet closes in is a well constructed montage with a mix of short scenes of stock storm footage, buildings in ruin, fleeing animals, reaction shots, people of various faiths in prayer, a spinning globe, the comet streaking across the sky, panicking people and crowds, the parties of the rich contrasting with the piety of the poor, all in turn mixed with scenes of Jean addressing the League Of Nations and convincing them to vote for a one-world government. This montage is very well done and during the scenes of the wild party makes effective use of the wildly swinging camera Gance had used so spectacularly in "Napoleon" to convey a sense of drunken nausea until the somber monks show up to shame them into repentance. Gance does overdo it though as in the scene where the League votes in favour of Jean's plan and the camera goes to blurry shots of the enthusiastic members. This is supposed to be the whole point of the film as they vote for a future of global peace but Gance's unwillingness to stop using camera tricks makes it as disorientating and uneasy as the destruction scenes. Speaking of camera tricks we should note his treatment during these scenes of panicky African tribespeople who are shown sped-up with their voices also sped-up to sound like cartoon characters. They are the only ones given this treatment and they are clearly meant to be seen as silly comic buffoonish characters not only robbing them of their dignity (they are intercut with white tribesmen in Lapland who are shown in regular time and not in a panic) it also distracts from the serious scenes of destruction and the solemn tone to toss in some random comic relief. To be fair Gance does not actually have the Africans behave any differently, and certainly no worse, than the white ones, some of whom are shown as drunken reprobates, he just chooses to and edit them in a dismissive way for a quick laugh. Oddly he does not treat all non-white characters this way as there are also scenes of devout Muslims at prayer.      

HALLUCINATION SCENE FROM "FIN LA MONDE";


But while Gance does make good use of innovative techniques he can not totally escape the limitations of early talkies as the sound is muffled and some of the actors seem hesitant and have awkward line readings in the still fairly new medium of sound. The bigger problem with the film however is it's incredible sense of self-importance. It is not too much of a stretch to call the film "Messianic" when it starts with the main character (who is also the director) in an extended scene of his character being Christ crucified on the cross to become the world's saviour. Gance's Jean character is almost absurdly virtuous as he rejects the advances of the beautiful Genevieve to remain pure to his work, rescues a young girl and is falsely punished for it and is seen in visions as an explictally Christ figure. Gance manages to make Kevin Costner's laughably Messianic characters in the (now) camp classics "Waterworld" and "The Postman" seem modest and relatable by comparison. Gance is also just not a good enough actor to carry a film, and certainly not this role. With his weepy eyes, sobbing voice and hangdog expression he is just not an inspiring figure while by the end in his climactic speech he seems more like a ranting cult leader which he basically is, albeit a sincerely well-meaning one. Like the 1916 Danish film this one combines an angry view of the amorality of predatory capitalism with Christian sinfullness but unlike the earlier film it has a clear view of redemption for mankind, albeit by following a cult leader. Since the Danish film leaves unknown the fate of the larger film we do not know if there are other survivors or the surviving Edith & Reymers are truly alone (along with that Preacher) like Adam & Eve while in the French film it is made clear that there are indeed survivors who will rebuild. The Danish film also differs in the treatment of its religious figures. The Preacher in the 1916 film does rescue Edith but then leaves and doesn't play any larger role while in the 1931 film Gance's Christlike Jean becomes a literal saviour of a united world. Besides showing Gances ego this also shows the difference between the very Catholic French film and the Lutheran Denmark where the very idea of a Messiah figure rising to world power to save mankind after the Apocalypse could be seen as rather blasphemous.

download_(1)

Two trivial notes; Lexell's Comet, while not as famous as Halley's Comet was in fact a real comet that also buzzed passed the Earth several times over the centuries and was seen as an omen. Howevere it mysteriously disappeared in 1770 and hasn't been seen since. Scientists are think it was either thrown out of orbit by Jupiter and either sent out of the Solar System or sucked into the giant planet's orbit. As an additional trivia note the wealthy ball at the end has one of the very few onscreen uses of a now obscure and obsolete musical instrument called an Ondes Martenot, a more complex French version of the iconic Theremin that electronic music nerds will enjoy seeing however briefly.


ONDES MARTENOT PLAYER AT THE BALL

The making of this film was fraught with troubles similar to those of the notorious Erich von Stroheim as Gance ran over budget and over schedule eventually leading to the studio taking the film off his hands and editing it down from over three hours to 105 minutes with the excised footage now lost. A bitter Gance blamed the studio for the film's subsequent failure claiming that they had butchered the movie and the lost footage would have made the film more coherent. While his bitterness is understandable it is unlikely his full version would have solved the film's problems and even less likely it would have been successful. While the film does have enough Gance flourishes to be interesting it was fundamentally too bloated and infused with religious mania to really hold together and only parts of it work. Considered a failure both critically and financially this film was a blow to Gance's career while he would continue to make films into the 1960's rarely would he be trusted with the sort of huge budgets and creative independence he had in the 1920's.

The failure of "Fin Le Monde" and the big budget epic remakes of "Noah's Ark" (in America) and "The Last Days Of Pompeii" (in Italy) marked the end of big budget apocalypse epics with would-be religious or classical themes although it did not mean that the topic itself would not occasionally pop up however it would be treated more like a thriller and would be smaller in scale.  

images_(1)

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"DELUGE" (1933);
 

Directed by Felix Fiest
Peggy Shannon as Claire
Sidney Blackmer as Martin
Lois Wilson as Helen
Matt Moore as Tom
Fred Kohler as Jepson
Ralf Harolde as Norwood
Edward Van Sloan as Prof. Carlysle

PLOT SUMMARY (SPOILER ALERT);
Scientists in New York led by Prof Carlysle (Edward Van Sloan) are tracking a series of violent storms across the world with one coming their way. Worldwide low natural barometric pressure readings and a sudden eclipse of the sun suggests there is a problem with the world's orbit and it seems that global destruction is near. First Europe and then the Pacific Coast, New Orleans and the Mississippi delta are destroyed by a combination of hurricanes, earthquakes and tidal waves killing millions, and it is reported that a massive wave is heading their way.

ny_city_destruction_by_flood_predicted_in_1933_film_the_deluge

Claire (Peggy Shannon) a distance swimmer has a marathon swim planned but has to cancell it due to the storm and decides to take a trip to the coast, which frankly seems like an odd choice under the circumstances but we'll go with it. Martin Webster (Sidney Blackmer) and his wife Helen (Lois Wilson) are a wealthy couple who live on the shore. They prepare for the oncoming disaster by gathering their children and some essentials and head for a high rock formation to escape the floods. Martin leaves Helen and goes back to the house to get more food and clothes as the wave hits. New York is destroyed as buildings crumble from earthquakes and tsunami waters envelop the city. Martin wakes up on the beach to find his house gone and his wife and daughters are nowhere to be found. In the aftermath, grief-stricken Martin builds a cabin near an unsused mining tunnell and tries to survive on his own.

tumblr_52748a3dbc8e97366fe6f2a57956b1fe_15bd29c4_400

Surviving in a cabin in another part of the New York City outskirts, two bickering men, the hulking Jepson (Fred Kohler) and weasely Norwood (Ralf Harolde), find Claire unconscious and washed up on the shore. As she recovers, the men start feuding over her and become very possessive. Jepson kills Norwood and When Claire realizes the situation, she becomes uncomfortable and flees across the water for safety as she is a world-class swimmer, leaving the men angry and vengeful. Jepson kills Norwood and begins to search for Claire, vowing to bring her back. Claire washes up on another shore, where Martin finds her this time and takes care of her while she recovers. Jepson arrives spotted by Martin who trails him as Jepson runs into a gang of outlaws who having been ejected from a larger group of survivors for being too violent have been roaming the area having raped and killed an other woman. Jepson joins the band while Martin runs back to warn Claire who decides to stay with Martin.
Martin and Claire become good friends and eventually fall in love. Meanwhile the other survivors have gathered together to start a new town. Among these survivors is Martin's wife, Helen, and their children. Tom (Matt Moore), one of the townsmen, found Helen in the aftermath, and has been taking care of her ever since. He has also fallen in love with her, but Helen is convinced that Martin is still alive. However Martin and Claire are unaware of the group's existance.
Jepson is still searching for Claire and has taken over the gang of thugs who join him in laying siege to the old mine where Martin and Calire are holed up leading to a gun battle. The townspeople are alerted by the gunfire and rush to save Martin and Claire resulting in a gun battle in which Jepson and most of the gang are killed while the rest flee into the night. Martin and Claire are and brought back to the town. Once they arrive, Martin finds his children and discovers his wife is alive and well and goes to her. Tom is disappointed but he backs Martin as the town's new leader while Claire remains jealous. After the reunion, Martin explains to Claire how he is in love with both his wife children and with her and that he will not choose. Helen visits Claire and they have a painful discussion in which Claire says she will not give up Martin. However, when Claire sees Martin with his wife at the town meeting her heart breaks and she runs to the ocean. She swims away as Martin is left watching her go. Finis.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Most apocalypse films spend a lot of their time setting the scene and introducing the main characters but this film basically begins with the world's ending and goes from there. The scenes of destruction for this modestly budgeted film use obvious miniatures and some of the clumsiest rear screen projections ever seen yet while they are not realistic they are oddly effective due to some quick edits, dramatic music and their ambitious scale. Some of the effects crew would later work on the 1936 version of the futuristic HG Wells novel "Things To Come". The film also makes good use of stock footage and as a trivia note included as part of the footage of ships and planes returning to base under storm warnings are shots of the actual US Airship Macon which would be lost at sea in 1935 ending the US Navy's Zeppelin program. The remaining two thirds of the film are about the survivors and could easily be a castaways movie. Like most such films of the era the good guys are notably freshly scrubbed and well groomed in the wasteland while the bad guys are scruffy and unshaven. One notable subplot sets aside this Pre-Code film from those that follow is the outlaw gang who are not just the usual thugs and bandits but also engaged in kidnapping, rape and murder and they've already raped and killed one woman whose body is partially shown, albeit not graphically. This sort of depraved sexual violence was probably shocking for the time and would never have been even alluded to once the Motion Picture Code came into effect the next year. Even in modern post-appocalpse sci-fi this sort of violent sexual subplot has only really shown up a few times notably in "A Boy And His Dog" (1975), the first two Road Warrior films and "Waterworld" but even these films have less implied sexual violence. Ironically while this film is ultimatley less less cynical than the modern films it's probably a more realistic result of societal breakdown then the law-abiding democratic frontier village the Good Guys founded here.

tumblr_pw0evbURkt1s01qkyo1_500

"Deluge" was shot on a modest budget and was a minor hit for RKO and disaster footage from this film would be lifted almost entirely and reused (with some added scenes of panicky crowds) in a lower budget 1939 film for Republic Pictures, "SOS Tidal Wave" which is sometimes confused with it. The latter is a very silly crime film with a convoluted plot in which a reporter discovers a scheme by a corrupt politician who tries to keep people from voting with a fake news TV broadcast using disaster footage from an old movie, which it carefully does not actually name as the two films came from different studios. The reporter is played by Ralph Byrd (from the Dick Tracy serials) along with a comic relief sidekick (an era cliche character "Deluge" notably does not have) and for some reason a ventriloquist. The addition of extra footage of panicking extras probably improves the disaster footage slightly but "Deluge" is clearly the smarter and better film. Of the cast of "Deluge" it's worth noting Edward Van Sloan (Dr Van Helsing from "Dracula") as the head scientist, and the film's willingness to abruptly kill off such a recognizable authority figure adds to the effectiveness of the destruction scenes. Fred Kohler as Jepson bears a striking resemblance to Gibson Gowland of Von Stroheim's "Greed" and is a menacing villain. Peggy Shannon (as the spunky Claire) was a brassy strawberry blonde with long legs, piercing eyes and bee-stung lips who was promoted as a successor to Clara Bow but would have an even more tragic fate. Starting with a successful Broadway career she was a Ziegfeld Girl then cast to replace Bow in "The Secret Call" (1931) after Bow had a nervous breakdown and pulled out of what would have been one of her attempts to comeback in sound films so Shannon received much studio publicity. However her hard drinking and reputation for being difficult soon caught up with her and she was limited to lower budget films like this. A full blown alcoholic and heavy smoker, she was found dead of a sudden heart attack and liver failure aged 34 by her husband in 1941. He shot himself weeks later.

5342t
PEGGY SHANNON

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The aftermath of World War Two and the dawn of the Atomic Age and the soon thereafter start of the Space Race meant that future most Apocalypse films would either be based on Nuclear War themes or the more escapist invaders from space films although there were still a few films that explored a "natural" disaster theme.

"When Worlds Collide" (1951);


Directed by Rudolph Mate
Cast;
Richard Derr as David Randall
Barbara Rush as Joyce Hendron
Peter Hansen as Dr. Tony Drake
John Hoyt as Sydney Stanton
Larry Keating as Dr. Cole Hendron
Rachel Ames as Julie Cummings (as Judith Ames)

PLOT SUMMARY (Spoiler Alert!);
Pilot David Randall flies top-secret photographs from South African astronomer Dr. Emery Bronson to Dr. Cole Hendron in the United States. Hendron, with the assistance of his daughter Joyce, confirms their worst fears: Bronson has discovered that a rogue star named Bellus, accompanied by an Earth-sized planet named Zyra, is on a collision course with Earth. Hendron warns the United Nations that the end of the world is little more than eight months away. He pleads for the construction of "arks" to transport a lucky few to Zyra in the faint hope that humanity can be saved from extinction. With other scientists scoffing at his claims, his proposal is rejected. Wealthy humanitarians arrange for a lease on a former proving ground to build an ark. To finance the construction, Hendron meets arrogant wheelchair-bound business magnate Sidney Stanton. Stanton demands a seat on the space ark and the right to select the passengers in exchange for financing, but Hendron refuses his demands except for allowing him a seat. Stanton capitulates. Joyce, attracted to Randall, persuades her father to keep him around, much to the annoyance of her boyfriend, medical doctor Tony Drake. As Bellus nears, martial law is declared, and residents in coastal regions are evacuated to inland cities. Groups in other nations begin to build their own spaceships. Zyra makes a close approach first, causing massive earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and tsunamis that wreak havoc around the world. Several people are killed at the camp, including Dr. Bronson. Afterward, Drake and Randall travel by helicopter to drop off supplies to people in distress in the surrounding area. When Randall gets off to rescue a little boy stranded on a rooftop in a flooded area. As the day of doom approaches, the passengers are selected by lottery, though Hendron reserves seats for himself, Stanton, Joyce, Drake, pilot Dr. George Frey, and Randall, for his daughter's sake. He also includes the young boy who was rescued, raising the number of passengers to 45. Randall, feeling he lacks any necessary skills, rejects his reserved spot; he pretends to draw a lottery number, but Hendron knows better. For Joyce's sake, Drake tells Randall that Frey has a "heart condition" that may kill him during liftoff, convincing Randall he is needed as the co-pilot. The cynical Stanton fears what the desperate lottery losers will do, so he has stockpiles weapons. When a young man turns in his winning number because his sweetheart was not selected, Ferris, Stanton's much-abused assistant, claims it at gunpoint, only to be shot dead by Stanton. Hendron agrees to the precaution of having the selected women board the ship, while the chosen men wait just outside. Shortly before blastoff, many of the lottery losers riot, seizing Stanton's weapons to try to force their way aboard. Hendron triggers the launch prematurely while he and Stanton are still outside, so the ship will consume less fuel on the journey. Meaning he and Stanton will be left behind. The desperate Stanton (who had been forced to give up his gun) stands up tries to walk in a futile attempt to board the departing spaceship which leaves without them. The crew are rendered unconscious by the g-force of acceleration, and the Earth collides with Bellus. When Randall comes to and sees Dr. Frey already awake and piloting the ship, he realizes he has been deceived. As the spaceship enters Zyra's atmosphere, the fuel runs out; Randall takes control and glides it to a safe landing. The crew find Zyra to be habitable. David Randall and Joyce Hendron walk hand-in-hand down the ramp with their fellow survivors into Eden as a new day dawns.
4475489422-2d3c5c9b06-b

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
This is the first colour view of the apocalypse and it was done with a decent budget by science fiction producer George Pal (originally none other than Cecille B DeMille had wanted to make it) that he intended as part of a series of unrelated sci-fi films. Like those films this makes full use of miniatures and gorgeous matte paintings for a lush technicolour look that still has a retro beauty. The actual rocketship looks more Flash Gordon fantasy than Stanley Kubrick sci-fi realism but to be fair the basic shape as well as having it launch via a roller-coaster rail line is a reasonable version of the WW2 German V1 and V2 rockets that people were already familiar with and it does look cool. The actual space travel however doesn't apparently require any actual space suits, breathing apparatus or anti-gravity suits (instead they wear matching hoodies as if on a fishing trip) which while common in sci-fi of the era was already known to be scientifically wrong. The scenes of destruction via massive earthquakes, volcanos, landslides, collapsing icebergs and floods are mostly done with miniatures in the style of the time and are suitably dramatic topped with an evocative matte painting of water-logged skyscrapers and beached ocean liners littering the submerged sidewalks of New York.
download

The story is more somber and thoughtful than many of the more escapist or exploitative sci-films of the era with questions about who deserves to survive and who should be left behind although not quite as thoughtful as it thinks as naturally all the survivors are white and English speaking and nobody questions this. However as was typical of the genre the romantic subplot is tacked on and uninteresting and the main characters are two-dimensional and dull. Leading man hero goes from a cocky womanizing cynic to a self-sacrificing leader with no explanation as to his change of heart or why he would be instantly trusted and given authority and top secret access in spite of being little more than a mercenary pilot. He is also unaccountably instantly attractive to any woman for reasons that are not obvious. Barbara Rush's character falls for him immediately and deserts her doctor fiancee for no apparent reason while said doctor first swears revenge then quickly changes his mind and gallantly steps aside minutes later. The arrogant billionaire Stanton is at least a suitably hateable villain however, at least his motives are clear, consistent and believable and he has a real personality. He's a cold, callous, megalomaniacal, bastard but at least he's watchable.
One oddity is that the film doesn't actually show the world's end. Instead we get the ship blasting off one step ahead of the angry mob while Stanton and Dr Dr Hendon look on and we never look back. So perhaps the destruction will not be total and there may be survivors. Maybe producer George Pal left open that question to be addressed in a possible sequel to be called "The Last Man In The World" but it was left unmade even though this film was successful enough. Pal had already made "Destination Moon" and would later go on to make versions of the HG Wells novels "The War Of The Worlds" (1953) and "The Time Machine" (1960) with similar use of effects.This film lacks the dramatic power or spectacle of those two classic films and is less remembered but it's one of the better sci-fi films of the era.
images-1

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"The Night The World Exploded" (1957), "The Day The Sky Exploded" (1958) were two movies in this genre of Earth destroying disasters that don't completely qualify as Post Apocalypse as (SPOILER ALERT HERE!) in spite of their clickbait titles the Earth is saved in the nick of time. However both films do have the Earth getting enough of a close shave to have some serious damage.
"The Night The World Exploded" was produced by Sam Katzman, prolific maker of such b-movie fare as sci-fi and horror camp classics "Earth vs The Flying Saucers", "It Came From Beneath The Sea", "Creature With The Atom Brain" "The Giant Claw", "Zombies Of Mora Tau", teen exploitation flick "Rock Around The Clock" (w/Bill Haley) and various westerns. By the usual Katzman standards this film is rather sedate and low key.
  MV5-BY2-E0-Zm-Ew-Zj-Ut-Zm-Vl-OS00-Yjc0-LTlh-ODEt-NGJk-NDcz-Nz-Y0-Mj-Y4-Xk-Ey-Xk-Fqc-Gde-QXVy-Mj-Ex-Mzc2-MTY-V1
This time destruction comes not from space but from a newly discovered compound deep in the earth which becomes combustible when brought into contact with the air causing the Earth's axis to change by three degrees leading to massive earthquakes, floods and volcanoes which will eventually break apart the Earth. The destruction is shown using some brief newsreel and stock footage of earthquakes, train derailments and fires. Much of the film is spent with our heros heading into Carlsbad Caverns which is full of cool looking Plaster-Of-Paris stalactites. Eventually they will discover the new element and it's explosive qualities which can only be minimized if submerged in water leading to a plan to use bombs to dig a massive trench and divert a river into the cavern, dousing it and saving the planet. And you know what this means; Stock footage of WW2 bombers! The cast is not very large having only a handful of scientists working on this literally world shaking problem including the stolidly handsome, square-jawed, cigarette smoking lead scientist and his pretty, efficient female assistant who he of course does not realize he is in love with. Of course at some point she will become hysterical and need to be comforted although she is otherwise perfectly capable. As befits it's limited budget the scale of this film is modest with no shots of world-wide destruction. The direction is basic B-movie competent but no more as is the acting. Kathryn Grant, who plays the female scientist would later marry Bing Crosby who was thirty years older and basically retire from the screen although she would appear in the fantasy cult classic "the Seventh Voyage Of Sinbad". As of this writing she is still alive.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE DAY THE SKY EXPLODED" (1958);


Directed by Paulo Huesch
Cast;
Paul Hubschmid as John MacLaren
Fiorella Mari as Mary MacLaren
Ivo Garrani as Herbert Weisser
Madeleine Fischer as Katie Dandridge

"The Day The Sky Exploded" (AKA "Death Comes From Outer Space") is an Italian film in which a rocket jettisoning its atomic retro rocket setting off a chain reaction leading to an explosion which causes asteroids to move from their orbit and merge into a giant asteroid that then hurtles towards the Earth. Got that? OK. This leads to a series of increasingly serious natural disasters including earthquakes, volcanos, landslides, forest fires, tidal waves, floods and a drastic increase in the world's temperature. This in turn leads to mass migrations, rioting and panic. Scientists come up with a plan to combine the world's supply of nuclear missiles and fire them at the giant comet to destroy it. Because nuclear missiles; Both the cause and solution to our problems am I right? At any rate as the launch begins one of the scientists goes crazy deciding the comet is god's judgement and attempts at gunpoint to sabotage the launch by shutting off the base's air conditioning which will short out the base's computers. There is a shootout before the rogue scientist is killed, the missiles hit their target and the comet is destroyed just in time.
download-1
The destruction scenes mostly make use of a little stock footage (some of WW2 vintage), a few miniatures in slo-mo, stage sets of ruined buildings and shots of milling and panicky crowds which are notably less effective than in the other films although the shots of the comet hanging in the sky like a dying sun do have a certain eerie quality. This film is slow moving and talky, not getting to any real action until an hour in with far too much attention given to pseudo scientific explanations and debates and the cliche personal lives of various characters who are just not interesting; the astronaut is focused on his job than his family and his wife resents it. One male scientist wants to seduce the woman scientist who is chilly and aloof but will of course dissolve into not-to-convincing tears at some point and need to be comforted etc. The direction is rote and the acting is flat and stiff except for the scientist who goes crazy and gets to overact with some bug-eyed yelling. In the scenes of the main astronaut in his capsule he is so slow moving and talking I assumed the character was supposed to be suffering from oxygen depletion but it turns out he's just really boring. Most of the action, such as it is, consists of scientists arguing although at least the various banks of computers, consoles, screens, knobs and banks of twinkling lights look fairly realistic. Although this is an Italian made film with a cast that included Swiss and French actors it was either shot in English or seperate scenes were shot for the English market and it doesn't have the often awkward dubbing of the Spaghetti Westerns.  

download-2
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE LAST WOMAN ON EARTH" (1960);


Directed by Roger Corman
Cast;
Betsy Jones-Moreland as Evelyn Gem
Anthony Carbone as Harold Gem
Robert Towne as Martin Joyce

As with "The Night The World Exploded" this was also produced by a notoriously prolific producer of B-Movies, in this case Roger Corman, with a script by Robert Towne on a limited budget. This time world destruction is caused not by a planetary source however vague. In the story a couple which include Harold, a shady businessman, his bored wife Evelyn, and nervous lawyer Martin take a scuba diving trip to Puerto Rico and when they surface they discover the oxygen has mysteriously been sucked out of the atmosphere and everybody has suffocated leaving them the only survivors. What may have caused this disaster is never explained but the nature of this world ending scourge means that this film isn't required to spend any time (or more importantly money) on showing images of destroyed buildings, landslides, piles of bodies etc. Instead our heroes can simply move to a luxury estate and fight over the affections over the Last Woman On Earth which is what the bulk of the film is really about. Eventually Harold and Martin have a falling out leading to the latter fleeing with Evelyn and Harold giving chase. Harold catches up to them and a fight breaks out in which Martin is killed, Harold and Evelyn make up and go off together alone.
last-woman-on-earth-md-web
Robert Towne's script is fairly wordy but the characters are inconsistent. Harold ranges from being an arrogant, corrupt businessman who is under indictment to being a responsible take-charge leader to violently jealous. Evelyn goes from being a bored, resentful, drunk who flirts with Martin to being a loyal wife to running off with Martin and back to loyal wife again for no good reason. Martin goes from being a nervous and uptight killjoy to becoming bachelor on the prowl at random. None of the characters are particularly likable or interesting. Other than a brief moment where the trio travels into town and come across a few bodies (including a child) little thought is given to what happened to everybody else or what caused the disaster. Are there other survivors? Based on the evidence shown here there must be other survivors who also spent the day in closed oxygen environments such as submarines, jet planes or mountain climbers but this film doesn't consider that possibility. Most of these type films are fairly shallow about the implications of world destruction and being the last survivors but this one basically uses it's premise to engage in a castaways lover's triangle which is not interesting because neither are the characters.
images-2
BETSY JONES-MOORELAND

The story and direction are at least typically efficient and don't waste too much time and the settings are attractive. The film was released in both B&W and colour prints. The male characters are unlikable but Betsy Jones-Moorland as Evelyn shows some charm, especially as the bored, tipsy wife and could have been more interesting with a better role. The role of Martin is actually played by scriptwriter Robert Towne under a fake name and as an actor he makes a better writer. Towne would go on to become the Oscar winning writer of Roman Polanski's "Chinatown" (1974) along with scripts for "Shampoo" (1975), "The Last Detail" (1973), "The Two Jakes" (1990) and the first two "Mission Impossible" films. He would also direct "Personal Best" (1982), "Without Limits" (1988) and "Tequila Sunrise". As of this writing he is still alive. Betsy Jones-Moorland would star in another Corman film "Creature From The Haunted Sea" but after that she acted mostly in small roles on film and TV before retiring in the 1970's dying in 2006.
download-3

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"The Twilight Zone" (1961);
86263

Rod Serling's classic TV Sci-Fi/Mystery/Fantasy/Horror anthology did have a few episodes dealing with post-apocalypse stories but most of these were based on nuclear war themes. One exception was "The Midnight Sun" in the third season. In this story the Earth has somehow gone off its orbit and is heading closer to the Sun to it's ultimate destruction. Two women, an elderly landlady (Betty Garde) and her younger tenant (Lois Nettleton) try to cope with the growing heatwave. At the end it's revealed the story is actually a dream in the mind of the younger woman who is suffering from a high fever and as she wakes up we learn that in fact the Earth is actually moving away from the Sun and into a deep freeze ice age. Given it's typically short length and simplicity there's not much else to say about it. As is usual there are only a few characters and all the action takes place in their apartment with a detailed, thoughtful script (by Serling himself) and a twist ending with some dramatic speeches and fine performances (Nettleton would become an Emmy Award winner) and is one of the stronger episodes of a one TV's greatest anthology series. BTW I've already written about "Twilight Zone" here and about the specifically Post Nuclear episodes here.
   Rod-Serling-Twilight-Zone

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE (1961);


Peter Stenning (Edward Judd) is journalist with the Daily Express in London, formally a successful writer he has been drinking and has been divorced and has been sidlined at his job and become cynical. Stenning's only real friend, Bill Maguire (Leo McKern), is a veteran Fleet Street reporter who offers him encouragement and occasionally covers for him by writing his copy. Meanwhile, after the Soviet Union and the United States detonate simultaneous nuclear bomb tests, strange meteorological events begin to affect the globe. Stenning is sent to the British Met Office to obtain temperature data, and while there he meets Jeanie (Janet Munro), a young typist. They "meet cute", trading insults; later, they fall in love. Stenning then discovers that the weapons tests have had a massive effect on Earth. He asks Jeannie to help him get any relevant information. It becomes apparent that Earth's nutation has been altered by 11 degrees, affecting the climatic zones and changing the pole and the equator. The increasing heat has caused water to evaporate and mists to cover Britain, and a solar eclipse occurs days ahead of schedule. Later, characters realise that the orbit of the Earth has been disrupted and the planet is spiralling in towards the Sun. Jeannie gets caught leaking information to Peter and is arrested and fired for which she blames him. She is later released and given a job at the paper by Maguire. The UK government imposes a state of emergency and starts rationing water and supplies. People start evacuating the cities. Scientists conclude that the only way to bring Earth back into a safe orbit is to detonate a series of nuclear bombs in western Siberia. A riot breaksout in Jeannie's neighbourhood and Peter rescues her during which one of the rioters is killed. Stenning, Jeannie and Maguire then gather at a bar to listen to the radio broadcast of the event. The bombs are detonated, causing shockwaves. Peter heads out to survey the damage and finds the streets deserted, and the river Thames dried up. He goes to the newspaper office, two versions of the front page have been prepared: one reads "World Saved", the other "World Doomed". The film ends without revealing which one will be published or what the results of the detonations was, but Stenning says in voiceover "humanity will recover after all this horror."

images-3

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
images-4
This British production marks a departure from previous efforts. Setting aside the pretentious 1931 Abel Gance film "Fin La Monde", the others were straightforward sci-fi genre pictures, usually done on fairly limited scale and budgets suitable for placing on a double bill or a drive-in. "Deluge" has some darker, violent sub-plots and "When Worlds Collide" had a bigger budget to spend on effects but otherwise both are still genre films. This film however is more adult in it's presentation. The rapid fire dialogue between the main characters is more authentic and less stagebound. The characters are more real with plausible back stories and less like stock figures and plot devices. The basic premise of nuclear bomb tests setting the Earth off it's orbit is not any more realistic than those of the previous films but it's presented in an earnest fashion and  does give the film a moral about nuclear war that the other films did not have although the afore mentioned "Fin Le Monde" and "When World's Collide" did have their own morals. The look of the film is both realistic and (in it's later scenes) gritty and has a believable atmosphere with sets that seem lived-in. The newsroom looks like a legit newsroom crowded, cluttered and bustling and the busy streets also look real. Director Val guest had previously worked for Hammer Films, notorious for its lush colours and low-cut gowns on equally lush women but he also made the two classic "Quatermass" sci-fi series about an alien invasion which were done in a gritty quasi-documentary style closer to the style here. Some of the scenes of characters at a protest look as if they were inserted into an actual protest in the way that would be done in the 1968 film "Medium Cool". Similarly other streets scenes and at an amusement park have a cinema verite feel. Adding to the sense of realism is the dialogue with characters often interrupting and talking over each other in rapid fire back and forth wisecracks. Unlike most of the previous films the main characters here are not scientists but hard drinking cynical reporters which justifies the banter which plays like a screwball comedy only serious.
day-the-earth-caught-fire-19
Special effects are done with the usual combination of miniatures, matte paintings, stock footage, newsreels and in-camera effects but they look more authentic than in previous films and are integrated well into the staged footage of floods, fires, windstorms and blizzards. The shots of a parched and barren London look appropriately stifling and shots of fog shrouded streets include some shots that may be actual footage of one of the serious smog storms that smothered London in the 1950's and 60's when coal fires and leaded gasoline were normal. As the world moves closer to the sun we get some striking matte paintings of the dried up River Thames and sweltering streets. Unlike in films from the 40's and 50's where characters are invariably perfectly groomed (at least the good ones) these characters are often drenched in sweat and grime and look uncomfortable as they become increasingly irritable although we do get a scene of partial nudity from Janet Munro as the love interest.
tumblr-bcddeb03ca9dea4f36f1787a957b7dcd-ea6b2fff-1280
JANET MUNRO

Previous such films were seen as basic genre films and not taken very seriously by film critics with the obvious exception of the 1931 Abel Gance film, whose artistic and political/religious themes invited more scrutiny but was seen as a failure. However this film, while only modestly successful, was critically acclaimed as a serious and thoughtful effort which won writer/director Val Guest a Best Screenplay Award at the 1962 BAFTA Awards. Guest would go on to a long career in film and TV into the 1980's before retiring and dying in 2006. As for the cast; Leo McKern, who plays Stennings' reporter friend, was later best known in the title role in the long-running UK TV series "Rumpole Of The Bailey". To further increase the realism the Editor is played by Arthur Christensen who was actually the editor of the "Daily Express" in real life and no doubt consulted on the authenticity of the newsroom scenes. Other cast members would meet more unhappy fates. Edward Judd as the lead role as the cynical, hard drinking reporter Peter Stennis, got good reviews and plenty of film offers but it would seem his real life personality was too similar to the abrasive Stennis and his career never really took off. He continued on in supporting roles and voiceover work before giving up acting and dying in 2009. His wife Gene Anderson, who has a small role here, died suddenly in 1965 aged only 34 of natural causes which probably contributed to his drinking. Love interest Jeannie was played by Janet Munro would appear in several Disney films but would meet her own tragic fate, dying of a sudden heart attack in 1972 aged only 38. Note the presence in a bit role as a traffic cop of a young Michael Caine (who was actually a friend of Judd's) and he is instantly recognizable by his distinctive voice.

Previous films had ended on a somewhat hopeful note; the world may have suffered tremendous damage but there would be at least some survivors to rebuild, albeit in the case of George Pal's "When Worlds Collide" on a different planet. However by the sixties and our last two entries attitudes after fifteen years of Cold War were more cynical, or fatalistic depending on your point of view. In the "Twilight Zone" episode the world and everybody on it is condemned to an icy death while in this film the ending is ambiguous. We are shown two newspaper headlines ready to go to print; one announcing the world is saved and the other it's doom with no clue as to which will be sent out. Whichever ending you prefer also depends on your point of view.

tumblr_p7d7pb32qD1vd8jsjo1_500


JOHNNY PAYCHECK ~ "THE CAVE"

Friday, 22 April 2022

The Eve Of Destruction pt1; Atomic Cocktail


"I am become Death, The Destroyer Of Worlds" - J Robert Oppenheimer


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

I decided to postpone the article I was planning for this month to look at some Cold War films about dropping the atomic bomb because...oh no reason. It's not like a possible World War Three is something that might suddenly be relevant or anything. Sigh.

BILL HALEY & THE COMETS ~ "13 WOMEN";


Post nuclear apocalypse docudrama films were a genre that basically peaked in the 1980's with the high profile made-for-TV movies "Testament" (1983), "The Day After" (1983), "Threads" (1984) and the classic animated film "When The Wind Blows" (1986). Ironically within a few years of the end of the decade the Cold War was declared over and such doom-scrolling movies were considered relics of an already bygone era. Note; I am speaking here purely of movies which purported to be fact based (or reasonably so) docudramas about nuclear war, not post-apocalypse fantasies like "The Road Warrior", "The Road", "The Postman" or the "Book Of Ella".

For this survey we shall look at some films of the early 1950's & 60's Cold War era (thus B&W), setting aside the rash of made-for TV movies of the 70's and 80's such as those listed above. We will also limit ourselves to those presented as docudramas or reasonably realistic thrillers rather than Sci-Fi films or Fantasy such as "The Last Man Alive" (with Vincent Price, later remade as "I Am Legend"), political thrillers like "Failsafe" (w/Henry Fonda), B-Movie Creature Features like "The Day The World Ended" (directed by Roger Corman) or parodies like "Dr Strangelove" nor will we bother with the sort of dry informational or how-to-survive-the-bomb shorts put out by various governments such as the classic "Duck & Cover".

Oh, What the Hell. I know what you want;

"DUCK & COVER" (1951);


This is without question the most famous government made ad of all time. Directed by Anthony Rizzo, an otherwise obscure TV producer with only one other similar short to his name. Rizzo (1918-2004) was an Italian immigrant who had trained as an opera singer and actor before enlisting in the US Army during WW2 where he served as a radio operator. After the war he made his way to the fledgling television industry where in 1949-50 he worked as a producer on "Majority Rules", a game show hosted by future newsman Mike Wallace before joining Archer productions, a major advertising firm making TV commercials. Besides an unknown number of TV ads and corporate promo films he would make two films for the Department Of Defence. "Duck & Cover" is not notably different from other public instructional films of the era in terms of its information, but it does move briskly and has some catchy Madison Ave ad copy writing. The most notable features of the film which makes it stand out from other government films are its catchy slogan/musical theme which it repeats several times and the animated character Bert The Turtle. The animation was done by Emery Hawkins who had a long career working on Looney Tunes and Tom & Jerry cartoons and it has the instantly recognizable style of the classic cartoons of the era. Rizzo also made another A Bomb film "Our Cities Must Fight" in 1951.      

"OUR CITIES MUST FIGHT" (1951);


This film lacks entirely the charm and light touch of "Duck & Cover" instead being a pedestrian corporate promo type short with a couple of drab talking heads reading simplistic lines in a would-be casual manner. It doesn't help that the main character is a smug know-it-all but what's worse is the cold-bloodedly delusional message of the film which is that civilians in bombed out cities should stay in the radioactive rubble and get back to work. At least "Duck & Cover" gave people advice on how to protect themselves, however inadequate, this film openly tells the general public they are in effect little more than disposable cannon-fodder. Little wonder this film is not as fondly remembered. As for Anthony Rizzo, he made no other notable films returning to faceless and forgotten TV ads and corporate promos while moonlighting at his first love of acting in amateur theatre. He retired from advertising in the seventies to try his hand in real estate dying in 2004, the same year his iconic short was listed in the National Film Registry as being "Culturally and Historically Important", high praise for a quickie informational short he probably assumed was just another advertising gig that would be quickly forgotten like the rest of his canon.

MV5-BMTc2-MDM0-NDgx-NV5-BMl5-Ban-Bn-Xk-Ft-ZTcw-Mj-M5-NDcy-MQ-V1-UY317-CR10-0-214-317-AL
ANTHONY RIZZO

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE FIVE" trailer (1951);


The first post atomic bomb film is generally believed to be "Five" (1951) written by Arch Oboler. The plot has a group of five survivors living in an abandoned resort house in the hills outside an unknown city (presumably in California) in which all life has been wiped out after a nuclear war. The survivors include a man from the city (Michael), a pregnant woman (Roseanne) whose husband is missing, a bank manager and his black bank guard (Charles) and a German former military officer (Eric). There are no other known survivors on the planet. They arrive one by one and do not know each other but must cooporate to survive. The man, woman and bank guard manage to find ways to work together, repairing the house, building more cabins and furniture, finding a generator and starting a garden. However the elderly bank manager dies from radiation sickness. The German officer turns out to be a racist martinet who expects the others to follow his orders. He refuses to do any chores and wants to find the nearest city to raid it for supplies and search for survivors but Michael and Charles refuse saying there is too much radiation. Roseanne gives birth to a boy which she refuses to name, she still wants to find her missing husband in the city who she believes is still alive. After a fight when Eric destroys the garden he decides to steal the jeep they have been using and go to the city, he talks Roseanne into going with him. While preparing to leave he is spotted by Charles who he kills. Not knowing this Roseanne leaves with him taking her baby. Michael wakes but finds Roseanne missing and Charles dead, She left him a note explaining she and Eric are going to the city so he sets out on foot after them. Reaching the city Eric and Roseanne find it full of skeletons and empty buildings and cars. She leaves Eric and finds her husband's body in his office. Meanwhile Eric has been robbing a jewelry store. When she returns and asks to return to their new home the jeep won't start and he announces he will never return or let her go. She attempts to flee but he grabs her as they struggle his shirt is torn revealing the same radiation burns the old man had before he died. Eric fless into the city in a panic and Roseanne walks away. On the hike home her baby dies and she buries it. Michael finds her and they return to the home where they will try to start over.  

download

The story is more about a group surviving under stress rather than specifically about nuclear war with film critic Bosley Crowther noting that it could easily be about any group of castaways, however this neglects that the issue of world wide destruction and radiation poisoning adds an additional layer of hopelessness, castaways can at least hope for and perhaps work towards rescue while these characters can not. The plot has obvious similarities to William Golding's "Lord Of The Flies" with it's theme of an isolated society breaking down under stress however that novel was not written until 1954. Making the story post nuclear allows for some disturbing issues and they notice that there don't seem to be any animals left alive aside from some circling vultures. While the two main characters survive and resolve to struggle on and the possibility of other survivors somewhere is raised the future looks grim. Unlike some other films and TV show we will see there is no mention of a surviving government or other groups that can rebuild society at large. The film's limited budget means that we see little actual damage. The film starts by portraying the war by simply showing some stills and stock footage of various cities with smoke superimposed over them. When we get to the city all the streets and buildings have been abandoned but there is no actual damage, Instead we see several skeletons lying about (they clearly decayed very quickly) which actually looks pretty creepy.While we are told that the radiation has killed off all the other people and animals the numerous trees and vegetation are somehow unaffected and they even grow a garden.

download-1
ARCH OBOLER

Arch Oboler who wrote, directed and produced, was a well known figure in radio dramas in radio's Golden Age of the 1930's and 40's as a writer and producer of radio plays dealing with science fiction, mystery and the supernatural with the successful series "Lights Out" which he also brought to TV in the very early era of the late 1940's early 1950's being the first such anthology series. He was a strong influence on Rod Serling and "Twilight Zone" and later Stephen King. He made this film independently on a small budget (the abandoned resort where much of the story is set and which looks like a Frank Lloyd Wright design was in fact Oboler's own vacation cottage and was indeed built by Wright) then selling it to a distributor where it was fairly successful. Although he did not have another TV series again after "Lights Out" he would continue writing and producing episodes for radio and TV as well as writing novels and short stories and even branching into Broadway through the sixties. He died in 1987 aged 77. The Frank Lloyd Wright home used as a set was destroyed by fire in 2016.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Most of the early A-Bomb docudramas would be made for television with all the limitations of the first generation live TV and unlike "Five" would be made with in conjuction with the Civil Defense Dept and would include a government approved theme of preparedness to survive a nuclear attack and the message that it was possible to do so.

"ATOMIC ATTACK" (1954);


CAST;
Phyllis Thaxter  ~  Gladys Maxwell
Patsy Bruder  ~  Barbara Maxwell
Robert Keith  ~  Dr Garson Lee
Walter Mathau  ~  Dr Spinelli
Patty McCormack  ~  Ginny Maxwell

PLOT (Spoiler Alert); The Maxwells are a normal family with two young daughters living in an unnamed town in upstate New York about fifty miles from New York City. One morning when as the husband commutes to work in the big city war begins with atomic bombs being dropped on the big cities including New York. The rest of the story shows the family dealing with the aftermath as the father never returns, the family shelter from nuclear fallout and other survivors are quartered in their house by Civil Defence. Outside there are occasional looters who are scared off by the family's shotgun. Worried about fallout Barbara (Patty McCormack), the teenage daughter's science teacher, Mr Garson (Robert Lee) visits to do radiation checks. He had previously worked on the Manhattan Project and has been avoiding the public worried he will be blamed for the bomb and destruction. The family agrees to let him hide out in their basement. The family is informed the father was in New York when the bombs fell and was killed. The missing husband of one of the borders also is reported as a survivor. Radiation begins to affect people as one of the female boarders is taken away with radiation sickness and the younger daughter Ginny gets sick as well as does Dr Garson. The story ends on a somewhat hopeful note as we are assured that Ginny's radiation sickness can be cured and the war is about to be won.

download-2
PATTY McCORMACK & WALTER MATHAU

This one hour drama was from "Motorola Presents" one of many anthology series common to TV in the first era of the late forties and early fifties. Like similar shows of the time, of every genre, it's highly stage-bound showing it's small budget and very short shooting schedule (it was probably largely shot live in a couple of takes) as well as the writer's likely roots in radio. This means having all action happening off stage with the nuclear blast being shown with air-raid sirens, an explosion sound and some shaking camera and a little falling ceiling debris. To be fair the show does state that the blast targeted big cities far away. This also leads to a strange quality where the family's comfortably furnished suburban home remains completely unchanged without so much as a broken window as do the mother and daughter's outfits of nice summer dresses, polished saddle shoes and perfectly coiffed hair. Everybody is also freshly scrubbed so clearly the water has not been cut off or been contaminated somehow. They did manage to resist the urge to have the Mother (Phyllis Thaxter) wear the typical TV Mom's pearl necklace although she and the teenage daughter do wear earrings throughout. Their refugee borders do wear pearls though and the elderly male boarder wears a suit and tie the whole time. The entire war takes place as radio bulletins from afar. Although various characters are affected by radiation and others die, all unpleasant action takes place off screen and since the show basically has one set the characters leave their home only once (a trip to the hospital near the end), indeed they rarely leave the living room or kitchen. This is the most antiseptic nuclear apocalypse show ever. Again to be fair all of this was quite common with TV dramas of the time being shot that way and it's also worth remembering that at the time this made in 1950 the threat was still the A-Bomb dropped by planes as at Hiroshima, not the H-Bomb delivered by ICBM's which would have made any such war at the time still essentially conventional for those not actually bombed. Thus the attitude of stiff-upper-lip everybody knuckle-down and do their part as if this would be just like the London Blitz while still wildly unrealistic was not quite as blithely delusional as it seems now. Still the basic message of the film (endorsed by every government of the time) that an atomic exchange would be survivable without undergoing a mass death, a complete breakdown of society and permanant enviromental collapse has dated as well as the Suzi Homemaker fashions.

It's those fashions that really reveals the show's other larger agenda; The reinforcement of the traditional woman's role of homemaker. Notably the center of the story are the women. The husband leaves for work in the beginning and never returns. Thereafter the mother takes charge and holds the family together, when two other refugee women, one with two children in tow, are quartered with the family she takes care of them too without complaint. She does so not by adopting traditional male duties but by doggedly returning to her homemaking duties. While she is temporarily struck by the news of her husband's death she quickly rallies with the words "Well; Back to the kitchen". When the teenage daughter, who  starts the story weeping and hysterical, steadies herself and becomes more mature she does so in the context of helping her mother "From now on I'll see to the children ''. The one time it becomes necessary to fire a gun at looters it is done (reluctantly) by a man, the visiting teacher Dr Garson Lee. There are men in the story but they are either authority figures (the two doctors and the block warden) or elderly (the retired border) and the offscreen radio announcers and neighborhood watch patrols, except for the faceless looters. The women do not challenge or even question the authority of the male authority figures but by maintaining traditional roles they are the ones who maintain the homefront while the men stroll in and out tending to administration, security etc. This theme would later be updated (if not subverted) in a more gloomy and fatalistic fashion in the 1983 movie "Testament" (with Jane Alexander). The story comes from a novel with the revealing title "Shadow On The Hearth" by American writer Judith Merril with its title showing its focus on the home and family rather than any larger societal impact. The book was her first and was an immediate success as one of the first to deal with a post atomic bomb in a way that was not sensational although Merril complained that the publisher had forced her to change the ending to be more upbeat. One change in the novel to the screen was in its location. While the show doesn't actually give the town a name other than saying it's within fifty miles of New York City in the novel it is named as Westchester, a wealthy suburb. Merril, then married to Sci-Fi writer Fredrick Pohl, would go on to a respected career as a Sci-Fi writer dying in 1997.

AA-1
PHYLLIS THAXTER

As a trivia note Phyllis Thaxter, who plays the mother had appeared in the WW2 war film "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" about the Doolittle bombing raid (as one of the crew's wives natch), she died in 2012 aged 92. Dr Carson Lee was played by Robert Keith, the father of actor Brian Keith and who also starred in "Guys & Dolls". Teen daughter Barabra was played by Patricia Bruder who would become a soap opera regular for forty years while Patty McCormack as younger daughter Ginny, would be nominated for an Oscar in 1957 for "The Bad Seed" and continues to act as of this writing. The show also stars a young Walter Mathau (as a doctor), to the extent that Walter Mathau was ever young.            

The limited home based focus of the Merril novel had the bonus of being easy to stage given the limitations of the early TV era but another early TV series portrayed the aftermath of an A-Bomb however in more grimly realistic terms.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"THE MEDIC; A FLASH OF DARKNESS" (1955);


"The Medic" was in fact a regular series starring Richard Boone as an ER doctor at a hospital in Los Angeles, this was a special episode actually done with input from the Defence Department to give a more realistic version of of the aftermath of an Atomic Bomb drop on a major city and it's impact on emergency services. The show opens with the man character Dr Styner (Boone) being told to repare for an emergency drill which quickly turns out to be the real thing as an actual A-Bomb attack begins on the city. Dr Styner and his pair of nurses quickly set up an emergency hospital in a bombed out school to deal with the rush of casualties who arrive badly injured, burned and affected with radiation sickness. Over the course of two days over a thousand patients come through, many die. On the second day Dr Styner and his team are relieved and he will be reunited with his wife who he is informed is alive.

At only a half hour long there is not much story and less dialogue than the "Atomic Attack" but this episode is much more realistic and bleak. Gone are the Suzi Homemaker dresses and perfect hair. Instead everybody is quickly covered in soot and blood, looking exhausted and grim. In the previous show radiation poisoning is mentioned but any unpleasantness happens safely off screen here victims are shown with gruesome burns and one, a small boy suffers blindness and dies (albeit offscreen). As with the previous show most of the action takes place indoors in the makeshift hospital aside from a scene on the road (almost certainly shot on the indoor set) which is completely black and windswept. Again the radio announces the news from outside (voiced by actual veteran newsman Chet Huntley) but it is made clear that the city is utterly destroyed with the ground being too contaminated to bury the dead. Biological weapons are also mentioned as having been used. The handful of easily scared off looters from the previous show are replaced by news of mobs of violent rioters who must be brought under control by force as part of a larger partial societal breakdown. Instead of the stiff-upper-lip Spirit Of the Blitz speeches and attitude of the previous there is only a grim, weary determination but no real hysterics if only because everybody seems too shocked and tired to throw a fit. Once again the radio announces the ultimate likely victory in the war but this makes little difference to the characters who are too worn out to really care. When at the end Dr Styner attempts to give a reassuring speech it is done without conviction as if even he doesn't really believe it. As the story fades out we are left only with the cold sounds of a howling wind and the sound of more sirens. Clearly this is a far more harsh view of nuclear war than the previous entry or the numerous promotional shorts put out by the government or the TV networks and it's a little surprising that this episode was actually done with the Defense Dept's co-operation. This is the first drama to take a fairly realistic (if limited) view of nuclear war and it does a good job within the very real limits of it's budget and brief running time.  

  hqdefault
RICHARD BOONE

"The Medic" was a TV series that only lasted two seasons and was never a ratings hit but was praised by critics and medical professionals for it's gritty realism which is probably why the writers chose to do such a unique experiment of taking their regular show and characters and placing them into a different timeline apart from their usual stories as well as why the authorities trusted them enough to OK the project and associate themselves with it. Richard Boone was himself a veteran of WW2 which he returned from being heavily affected by what he had seen and his experiences may also have influenced the downbeat tone of the show. Boone was a craggy-faced, morose man with a chronic drinking problem as being a heavy chain smoker. A descendant of frontiersman Daniel Boone, he was nsturally primarily known for westerns, he would star in the popular, Emmy winning TV western "Have Gun Will Travel" (1957-63), appeared with John Wayne, including in his last film "The Shootist" (1976), starred as the TV western crimefighter "Hec Ramsey" (1972-74), as well as providing the voice of the dragon Smaug in the animated version of "The Hobbit" (1977) and turning down the lead role in "Hawaii 5-0" that went to Jack Lord. His lifetime of heavy smoking caught up with him when he was diagnosed with throat cancer in 1981. Informed he would have to quit smoking and drinking and undergo surgery he refused and went home to die. He was 63.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"A DAY CALLED X" (1957);


This was another TV special made by CBS in conjunction with the Defense Department. The plot runs down the preparations for an impending attack on Portland, Oregon and the preparations the local and federal governments have made. The city is quickly evacuated and local officials take shelter in a huge bunker complex to manage emergency and relief efforts. Everybody from officials to civilians, even school children are calm and professional. There is no panic or rioting. Everything runs according to careful planning and drills. The show ends with everyone waiting to see if the bomb actually drops with the assurance that everything has been prepared like clockwork. This time instead of featuring a few fictional characters the focus is on real live citizens and officials playing themselves (some of the civilians, like the dutiful mother and freckle-faced newspaper boy, are so perfectly cast and at ease on camera they may in fact be actors) including the Mayor Terry Schrunk. There is also a narration from actor Glenn Ford. Unlike the previous shows which were film on closed indoor TV studio sets, this show has plenty of outside scenes gorgeously shot, including an excellent opening scene, shot with a bird's eye, as a motorcade speeds up to the Civil Defence bunker. It is this last feature that makes the show so watchable today with plenty of great shots of 1950's Portland. The fast, no nonsense pace is also an asset. The brief half hour duration leaves little time for character developement and since the show ends before the actual bomb drop we do not learn their fate but we are assured everything is taken care of. The film's message of preparedness is essential but panic is unnecessary is noticeably more upbeat that the grim determination of the previous efforts and has been accused of fostering a false belief that a nuclear war is survivable as long as proper preparations are made. crucially these preparations are to be made by the entire society under government leadership. Unlike other, later post bomb films there is no hint of anybody holing up with their own guns and supplies, rioting, looting or societal breakdown.

Portland Mayor Terry Schrunk was quite a character himself. Elected in 1957 and in office until 1973, the longest serving mayor of the post war era. In spite of the squeaky clean wholesome image portrayed in the film Portland was known as wide open town with plenty of gambling, booze cans and brothels and Schrunk, a Democrat, was elected with support of unions including both the longshoremen (led by the openly communist Harry Bridges) and Jimmy Hoffa's Teamsters, with their mafia ties. This brought him into conflict with national Democrats including the Kennedys and got him investigated by the Senate Committee on Organized Crime in 1957 (along with Hoffa) which tried and failed to have him indicted with Bobby Kennedy testifying against him. The Mayor, with a good record of urban renewal and public works retained his popularity and continued to be reelected. A decade later when Bobby ran for the Presidential nomination Schrunk came out against him and Kennedy lost Oregon to Gene McCarthy in his first major defeat. Schrunk continued in office until a heart-attack forced his retirement in 1973 and he died two years later. He was only 61 and there's a good chance he probably could have otherwise stayed in office til the eighties.  

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"TARGET AUSTIN TEXAS" (1960);


This is another project done in collaboration with Civil Defense authorities and is somewhat similar to "A Day Called X" showing a city preparing for an impending bomb drop. However while "A Day Called X" shows a detailed account of the preparations but stops short of the acual bombing this film takes up where the previous one left off. The bomb drops and people huddle in shelters waiting for the fallout to disperse. However unlike in Portland where everybody followed protocols without complaint this time there is some panic, there are traffic jams, one woman complains about being in shelter and one man disregards instructions and attempts to flee the city. The lesson taken from the previous films to be prepared and follow instructions remains though as the complaining woman gets a hold of herself and pitches in to help organize supplies and survives along with all those who also made preparations and take shelter while the man who fled dies alone of radiation poisoning. Since the bomb doesn't actually hit Austin, title notwithstanding, there is no actual damage, instead we get some fairly eerie shots of abandoned streets and offices. Both films rely on a narrator with this one having little actual dialogue. Another notable difference is the tone, particularly with the music which is rather dramatic (including a snippet from the "William Tell Overture"). The cinematography however lacks the beauty of "A Day Called X" and Austin is just not as scenic as Portland. Note that in one shot can clearly be seen the University Tower where in 1966 Charles Whitman would go on an infamous shooting spree.

Where "A Day Called X" used local citizens and officials this film has an actual cast. However most are completely obscure and probably recruited from local amateur theatrical groups and local TV and radio stations. The film was the work of Cactus Pryor, an award winning Austin TV and radio reporter who wrote the script and also provided the narration and presumably appears as well. He would also appear in small roles in a couple of John Wayne's pro-war films "The Hell Fighters" and "The Green Berets". Another cast member is Charles Lasater with a minor actor of that name appearing in another 1960's war movie, the low budget "None But The Brave" (1966), presumably they are the same person. Yet another name is Bob Gooding with an actor or musician of that name appearing in a small role in a 1944 musical "Swing Hostess" starring singer Martha Tilton and who may or may not be the same person. The rest have no other credits.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE WORLD THE FLESH & THE DEVIL" (1959);


This was the first proper proper Hollywood production with a big name cast in Harry Belefonte, Inger Strevens and Mel Ferrer. Belefonte plays a sewer worker who is caught underground after an unexplained cave in only to discover once he digs himself out that the bomb has dropped and everybody has fled from the speading radiation leaving Belefonte and Stevens (who soon discovers him) as the only survivors in the deserted city. New York may be a ghost town but as in 'Five" and "On The Beach" it is oddly untouched by any blast damage, instead everybody has fled the city or died due to radiation poisoning (there are no bodies to be seen), leading to many great shots of the canyons of empty towers and streets jammed with abandoned vintage cars. As in "Five" and "Atomic Attack" just because civilization has broken down doesn't mean people aren't still going to keep up appearances with Inger wearing fashionable dresses and coiffed hair while the men, when not wearing jackets and ties, are neat and clean shaven. The Belefonte character is an engineering wiz who is able to whip up a functioning generator allowing full lights and power along with a shortwave radio and (less credibly) phone line between his apartment and Inger's allowing them to live lives that are not only normal but downright luxurious. There are a few radio messages from the outside world to indicate there are other survivors far away. The scenes of Belefonte roaming alone through the cavernous city show an obvious influence on the later film "I Am Legend '' along with having Belefonte sending out a daily shortwave radio broadcast for any other survivors. At this point the movie isn't really about a post nuclear world anymore anyway but about a lonely interacial couple figuring out how to live together, they could just as easily be castaways. Eventually another survivor appears (Mel Ferrer) leading to a competition over Inger. The film has several speeches debating racial politics of the era including the issue of inter-racial couples which no doubt seemed daring a the time and adding Ferrer to the mix is supposed to bring these issues to a boil and it does but the racial politics subplot that the movie has spent the first half setting up are quickly dismissed by having Ferrer assure us that he has no such problem to which Belefonte quickly agrees. Their rivalry is merely over Inger's favours. Having set up a premise and conflict the movie constantly undercuts its own message by having Belefonte and Ferrer repeatedly state how much they respect each other only to have Ferrer quickly become violent and stalking Belefonte through the deserted streets with a rifle. Presumably the writers felt that making Ferrer overtly racist would make him too much of a villain and would take the tension out of the choice faced by Inger. But having him become suddenly violent has already done that as has made Belefonte almost absurdly perfect. He's not only handsome and charming he's talented (he even gets to sing a few songs), is a mechanical genius and has almost superhuman patience and understanding while Ferrer is overbearing from the start. Inger should have no problem making a choice. The movie ends on a hopeful note as the trio head off to live happily ever after presumably into some sort of group marriage which doesn't really jibe with the previous gunplay. In the end the film is not as intelligent and meaningful as it thinks it is, doesn't have the courage to deal with the issues it raises and basically seems like an extended episode of "Twilight Zone" albeit with some alluring cinematography and fine performances from the charismatic Belefonte and the charming Inger Stevens.

giphy

The story was taken from a couple of novels with the title coming from a silent film which had an entirely different plot. By the time of filming Belefonte was a major star both as a singer and actor as well as being a civil rights figure and Mel Ferrer had a decade's worth of film credits while Inger Stevens was just starting her career. Born in Sweden and raised in Kansas City, Stevens was a tall willowy blonde with china doll features and soulful eyes. She would go on to star in a briefly successful if largely forgotten sitcom "Farmer's Daughter" for which she won an Emmy but is best remembered today for starring in two classic episodes of "Twilight Zone" both also in 1960. In "The Lateness Of Hour" she plays a woman who fears she may be a robot while in "The Hitch-Hiker" she plays a woman driving across the country who keeps meeting Mr Death over and over again. Later she would star as another tragic figure as a widow in "Hang Em High" with Clint Eastwood. Her real life also became associated with tragedy. Coming from a disposed background, largely abandoned by her parents, she ran away as a teen to become a burlesque dancer then an actor. Although she found quick success her personal life was a shambles. Personally shy, lonely and suffering from depression (qualities that seemed to come out in her roles) she would have two failed marriages (one to her agent) and have numerous affairs with unsuitable co-stars including Belefonte, Bing Crosby, Burt Reynolds, James Mason, Anthony Quinn and Dean Martin. Seemingly cursed she dodged death in two traffic accidents, a suicide attempt and even narrowly avoided a plane crash. She often talked in interviews about being lonely and unhappy even while successful. In 1970 another suicide attempt finally succeeded and she overdosed at the age of 35. At the time of her death she had been cast as the lead, against type, as a spy in a TV thriller "Most Deadly Game" with her role then going to Yvette Mimeux (the resulting series only lasted a season). Ironically given the issue of inter-racial couples raised in this film after her death it was revealed she had been secretly married to black actor Ike Jones since 1961, a fact that had been completely hidden from the public and most of Hollywood although they had been estranged at the time and she died alone.

on-the-wrong-track-03
INGER STEVENS

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Speaking of "Twilight Zone";
"THE TWILIGHT ZONE" (1959-1964);
6edf5c7a26f5945b06a0f4d8dc6d3b44

Rod Serling, heavily influenced by Arch Oboler, always intended to use the "Twilight Zone" and it's genres of Sci-Fi and Fantasy as vehicles to address social issues including war which led to some classic episodes. "The Shelter" was about a family that goes through the trouble to build a bomb shelter only to have the neighbours become violent trying to get in and was essentially the same theme as "The Monsters On Maple Street" although that story wasn't about a post nuclear disaster. Serling was both a humanist deeply concerned about injustice as well as rather cynical about human nature and in both stories people do not react calmly and carefully follow instructions from authorities (who are a distant presence), they instead panic and are quickly at each other's throats. Slighty more optimistically "Two" featured a young Charles Bronson and Elizabeth Montgomery as the last surviving two warring soldiers in a bombed out city who discover they need to put aside national hatred and live together. Note in this story we are never told what countries they are from, Montgomery, whose character speaks no English, is clearly meant to be Russian but Bronson, whose accent could never be confused for anything other than American, is wearing a finely tailored uniform that looks oddly Eastern European. The intent was probably to make him seem vaguely futuristic but he ends up looking like a turn of the century Hungarian guardsman. Serling wasn't always looking to make a political point however, sometimes he just enjoyed a twist ending of the O. Henry and Ambrose Bierce type as with one of the most iconic episodes. "All The Time In The World" featured Burgess Merideth as a mousy, bookish, nearsighted bank clerk who is saved when the bomb is dropped by being in the bank vault which is perhaps not coincidentaly the same thing that happened to two characters in Arch Oboler's "Five". Merideth, who is constantly bullied by his shrewish wife and smuggly officious boss for his obsessive love of books, emerges to find the city in ruins and everybody gone. After briefly feeling sorry for himself being alone he quickly decides he will now finally have time to read the entire library only to have his reverie shattered, literally. The character and his fate are rather ambivalent as while on the one hand it's hard not to feel sorry for the hapless little nerd ("Now that's not fair", he plaintively whines) it is worth noting that he doesn't actually miss us.

Rod-Serling-Twilight-Zone

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"ON THE BEACH" trailer (1959);


The first major Hollywood production to deal with the nuclear apocalypse was based on a novel by Nevile Shute and directed by Stanley Kramer starring big names Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Tony Perkins and Fred Astaire. The story starts after a massive nuclear war exchange has wiped out most of the world's population except for Australia where the survivors have learned that a huge radioactive cloud is on its way that will finish off the survivors in a few months. While waiting they go through the motions of life while coming to grips with impending extinction. Peck plays the Commander of an American nuclear submarine docked in Melbourne sent out to return to America to measure radiation levels and find out the source of an unknown random morse code signal coming from San Francisco. Gardner plays a single woman who falls for Peck whose wife and child have already died in America. Perkins is an Australian naval officer with a wife and infant daughter while Astaire is a nuclear scientist. Both are assigned to join Peck's submarine mission to America. Returning to a deserted San Francisco they discover that radiation levels are actually rising and will reach Australia sooner while the mystery morse code signal turns out to be a transmitter key accidentally caught on a window shade chord by the wind thus setting out random signals. One of the crew members deserts and decides to stay to die in America when the sub leaves.

Returning to Australia the characters adjust to their impending fate. With little fuel the only cars are official vehicles while the rest of the population use bikes or horsepower. Nevertheless enough fuel has been stockpiled to allow for a final Grand Prix car race which Astaire enters and wins while several other drivers, with nothing to lose, drive recklessly causing several flaming car wrecks. Peck and Gardner begin an affair while Perkin's wife sinks into a depression. Eventually the radiation cloud moves in and people begin to get sick. Some people throw drunken parties while Christians hold a mass service. Most of the population line up to accept suicide pills issued by the government. Perkins and his wife poison themselves while Astaire locks himself in his garage with his race car and runs the engine, dying by carbon monoxide poisoning. Peck's crew votes to return to America to die and he agrees to go with them. Gardner stays behind watching the sub leave. The final scenes show Melbourne's deserted windswept streets and a banner left over from the Christian rally warning people there is still time to repent. Finis.

8a38f76db372870686f626ffa7d51766

Unlike the previous films (setting aside "Five") where the government authorities have taken preventative measures and at least some of those who have also made preparations and follow government directives can survive, here none of that matters. The government continues to function with well-meaning efficiency right up to the end and society does not break down yet literally everybody dies anyway. The film is entirely hopeless. This rejection of the official Cold War line of "Be Prepared" meant that unlike the previous efforts (again setting aside "Five") this film would not receive any assistance from the US government or military. Luckily the novel was high profile enough (as was director Shute) that the Australian government was prepared to sign up especially since Kramer was prepared to make the journey to Australia to film on location, fairly rare practice for those days, and Australia (which was not a nuclear power anyway) doesn't come off badly in the film. They also helped get the British Royal Navy on board as well to loan out a submarine which helps with the film's realism. The lead cast however are all Americans and only one, Astaire, bothers to even try to wrap his mouth around a vaguely kinda Australian accent, which probably just as well. Peck is excused as his character is American anyway.

images-4

Since in this story the nuclear war took place elsewhere there is no need to show any bombed-out rubble but even when the sub goes to San Francisco the empty city is a pristine ghost town. However the shots of the starkly empty city and the later shots of an equally barren Melbourne with paper blowing through the empty streets are undeniably eerie. The focus of the story is more on the romantic subplot between Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner which is quite conventional and suffers from Peck's usual stolid performance. Peck is believable as a sub commander but his noble but wooden persona has no chemistry leaving Ava Gardner who has to lean into her depressed and lonely persona to carry the relationship which given the cloud of impending doom is acceptable enough but it does drag on. Fred Astaire was fine as the cynical, boozy but decent scientist (he certainly does a better job than Gene Kelly did when Kramer gave him the same basic role in "Inherit The Wind'') and would lead to a second career as a straight actor for the then aging hoofer but Tony Perkins and Donna Anderson as an Australian Naval officer and his neurotic wife barely registers in roles that could have easily been given to Australian actors. He was presumably cast for name recognition.

There are some good scenes notably at a party with a chorus of drunken Aussies singing a tuneless version of "Waltzing Matilda" (the unofficial national anthem) which repeats beyond the point of annoyance but then morphs into a nice romantic version as Peck and Gardner kiss. Fred Astaire's car race combines some laughably bad rear screen projection that's right out of the sixties with some realistic fiery car crashes and his death scene has power. Having the streets filled with horses and bicycles due to a fuel shortage is a nice touch. The movie made a few changes to the novel which some critics said were actually an improvement including adding or fleshing out a few characters including an Australian Admiral and his female aide and the final scene was slightly changed. In the novel Peck takes his sub out to scuttle it while Ava takes one of the suicide capsules. In the film version the sub crew votes to return home to die while Ava stands on shore watching them leave, then the scene fast forwards to scenes of the deserted streets of Melbourne. This was a stronger ending although I would have preferred to have the camera pull back from Ava watching the sub leave to reveal a one of the suicide pill packets issued by the government on the car dashboard. I also would have prefered that final shot of the empty streets with the banner reading "There Is Still Time '' not use the bombastic fanfare and instead go for dead silence aside from the sounds of wind and rustling paper. Still having an ending which has literally everybody die is oddly more satisfying than the grit-your-teeth and everything will eventually work out ending of most apocalypse films. One additional note; While the premise of the story is that Australia is the last country to be hit by the radiation cloud due to its being the the southernmost country, New Zealand is of course even further south and should thus have the last survivors yet it doesn't even rate a mention probably because author Nevil Shute (1899-1960) while originally British had long ago moved to Australia by that point.

tumblr-053e34a9a784bb58ff24ce92f1f7557e-b8511f3b-500

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE FINAL WAR; 48 HOURS OF TERROR" AKA "WORLD WAR III BREAKS OUT" (1960);


It's fitting that the Japanese would make a post nuclear holocaust film and that it would be the darkest and the most fatalistic. This film is largely unknown outside Japan and given its bleak tone that's not a surprise. At a time when Japanese post atomic films were known for their giant fire breathing dinosaurs this one was not likely to become a cult classic. This nuclear war actually does not even really involve Japan directly and is between the USA and the USSR with Japan caught in the middle. At one point the Soviets announce they will be nuking Japan with the same sort of unctious combination of wounded petulance and self-righteous bullying they still use today in justifying their invasion of Ukraine. Unlike in previous films where the authorities are reasonably prepared (aside from "Five" where they are not mentioned) and most people do not panic, here the authorities are helpless and pretty much everybody panics. People flee the city, doctors and nurses abandon their patients, people are shoved out of the way or run down and nobody stops to help, children are left behind and people kill themselves. Before the bomb is even dropped society is already melting down.  

Previous entries had people die of course, in their millions in fact, but it was always safely off-screen. As a partial exception "Five" did show skeletons littering the streets but skeletons have been an acceptable (even comedic) screen presence since the dawn of film. This film shows bodies, dozens of charred, bloated, blackened bodies discarded in the debris. Lest anybody forget that the Japanese do have the right to be so gory in their presentation of nuclear holocaust the movie opens with a scientist giving a lecture about the effects of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with several graphic photos no American film would have shown. It does it again later on as well. In the end pretty much everybody dies, including those who flee the city, and there are no plucky survivors. The film ends with a radio message from Argentina mentioning that the Southern Hemisphere has survived but after what we learned in "On The Beach" they may not last much longer either and even that slightly hopeful message may be in vain.    

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

  "PANIC IN YEAR ZERO" (1962);


This film returned to the idea set out by "Five" to send characters out of the city turning them essentially into castaways. This premise allows the audience to identify with the characters and their plight as something that could potentially happen to them and would be survivable for those who are level-headed, resourceful and ruthless enough to possibly keep their heads, unlike the grim hopelessness of "On The Beach" or "The Final War". This incidentally also allows the filmmakers to shoot on smaller budgets without having to figure out how to film the actual mass destruction or have a huge cast. For this story a typical family including a Los Angeles father (Ray Milland), wife (Jean Hagen), teenage son (Frankie Avalon) and daughter (Mary Mitchell) heading out for a vacation camping and fishing. On the road outside of town with their trailer they see a giant mushroom cloud revealing World War 3 has started and L.A. is gone. They continue on into the hills of Southern California where they hole up in a conveniently clean and spacious cave. Father Milland takes charge to protect his family with grim determination, quickly showing resourcefulness and even ruthlessness. It's almost as if he was expecting this and is fully prepared. The father is grim and humourless as he stockpiles supplies, buys guns, eventually resorting to non-lethal violence. The women folk (naturally) are somewhat skeptical of all this, occasionally wondering if they are going to descend into barbarism. Milland dismisses and to be fair while he does sometimes use violence to for example get guns from a reluctant hardware store or gas from a price-gouging gas station owner, he still insists on leaving an appropriate amount of money. When the family is accosted by a trio of thugs on the highway and the son is forced to shoot one the father makes sure the wound is not serious and rebukes his son for being too enthusiastic over the shooting. He insists on maintaining civilized appearances with regular cleaning and shaves. That trio of thugs will challenge that ballance when they return and are revealed to be more than mere juvenile delinquents when they reappear to rape and murder another couple and attack the daughter leading the father and son to track them down to a farm house and murder them in cold blood. At the farmhouse they rescue a young woman and take her back to their hideout as the father relents on his siege mentality. In the end the state of emergency is lifted after several week and the family will be returning home.

1F2O

Ray Milland would probably not be given such a lead role today, being too obviously middle-aged, paunchy, balding and average looking to be an action hero in today's films but this makes him more believable. The Welsh born Milland was in fact a WW1 combat veteran who also previously starred as Bulldog Drummond is a series of hardbitten detective films as well as playing the cold blooded killer in Hitchcock's "Dial M For Murder" so he was also believable the he becomes a take-charge and even gun-toting hard man. The film gets down to business within minutes and we never really learn very much about his or the family's prior life; What was his job? Was he always this cold and distant? It would be nice to know. Milland himself directed and while it was his third directing job producer Sam Arkoff (known for shooting with limited budgets and short shooting schedules) later claimed that Milland had been "overwhelmed" and had forgotten some scenes in the rush to finish so perhaps there were some earlier background scenes that got lost in the shuffle. Milland's direction is no-nonsense and efficient and there are no really spectacular shots of empty streets unlike "The World, The Flesh & The Devil" or "On The Beach" since the whole film takes place in a rural and small town area with the town looking suspiciously like the western backdrop it undoubtedly was, but there are no slow parts either as the story starts quickly and stays on point.

panic-in-year-zero-1962-social-breakdown

Unlike a lot of Arkoff movies this one had a fairly top flight cast. Milland had an extensive filmography going back to the start of sound films including an Oscar and Golden Globes win for 1945's "Lost Weekend". Jean Hagen, a three time Emmy winner from the TV sitcom "Make Room For Daddy" who is similarly believable and not glamorous (compared to Inger Stevens) as the mother. Teen Idol Frankie Avalon as the son was added for his marquee value and was not known as a serious actor but is acceptable enough. Daughter was played by Mary Mitchell who had a few other minor film credits including the early Francis Ford Coppola B-Movie "Dementia 13". Thereafter she would retire from acting but would continue to work behind the camera in various Coppala films. The rest of the cast were low key but realistic although the three thugs who menace the family do spout some cliche 50's Beatnik slang which hasn't dated well.

MV5-BOTAw-Nm-Vj-Zj-Et-ZGI2-Ni00-ZWFi-LTk4-ZTUt-MWFm-Nz-I5-Mzhi-Zm-Nl-Xk-Ey-Xk-Fqc-Gde-QXVy-MTk2-Mz-I2-Ng-V1
FRANKIE AVALON, JEAN HAGEN & RAY MILLAND

The film takes a harsher look at societal breakdown than most of the other films of the era with many people quickly panicking, turning to looting or worse while the authorities are notably absent until the end. In order to survive, the family takes the law in their own hands instead of the stiff-upper-lip cooperation of most of the previous films. Eventually however the government does reassert itself apparently none-the-worse for wear as soldiers arrive and we are assured that the war was won and the cities will be rebuilt (this time there is no talk of lingering radiation) and we assume the family will live happily ever after.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++  

"THIS IS NOT A TEST" (1962);


As we have seen, Post Apocalypse films can be done on a limited budget but it would be hard to come up with a more bare-bones film than this. Somewhere on the highway at night in the Arizona desert a highway patrolman is told that a nuclear attack is pending and he needs to roadblock to stop people from driving to the city. A few cars and a semi truck show up. People who stop include a few couples, a truck driver, and old man and his daughter, and a fugitive killer on the run. It is revealed that the war has started and there has been an alert about an incoming missile. The cop takes charge and gets the idea to take shelter in the truck, emptying out the cargo. While waiting one married woman leaves her husband and starts an affair with the trucker and the fugitive tries to make a run for it. The husband shoots himself. A couple of the locals remember there is an abandoned mine shaft nearby and decide to run there for shelter. Before the bomb even drops people turn on each other as the cop kills a pet dog. Another group of looters fleeing the city shows up and beats up the cop with some taking his car while others lock themselves in the truck while the radio reports the missiles are about to strike. In the end the cop is left outside with the killer (who has returned) begging to be let in as the missiles hit. The movie ends without knowing their fate but is assumed that everybody dies with the possible exception of the couple who fled to the mines assuming they had enough time to get there which seems doubtful.

One of the most odd things about this film is that it's impossible to know if it intends to subvert the other films in this genre but it does. In previous films authority figures (the government, police, military, doctors) are usually efficient, conscientious and all knowing, but here the authority figure, the cop, is not only an arrogant stiff-necked martinet, he's also totally wrong. Even the largest semi trucks can be blown aside by gale force winds to say nothing of the radiation fallout so the truck is clearly not strong enough to serve as a shelter and is little better than a deathtrap. The plan to hide out in the mine shaft is the only one that has a chance of success. Still the cop is completely unreasonable, relying on force to assert his authority and refusing to listen to any other opinions and even though he objectively doesn't know any more than anybody else he assumes that since he has a badge and a gun he is qualified to make all decisions and everybody basically complies albeit with some grumbling. A couple people sense that he's wrong but nobody seriously challenges his assumed power to make all decisions until the end. Instead of representing an efficient, prepared authority he is a distant unreasonable force who can not be questioned assuming dictatorial powers. Unlike the stiff upper-lip stocism of earlier films here everybody panics and are at each other's throat before the bombs even drop. We are even told the nearest cities immediately erupt in rioting and looting. Authorities are either distant (via the radio) and unhelpful or randomly dictatorial and ignorant (the cop). There is a certain grim satisfaction in watching the stiff-necked bullying cop breaking down in the end and begging to be let into the truck, not that it would make a difference.

download-3

The actual filming of this film is beyond B-Movie basic. The only set is a short stretch of highway and surrounding scrubland with a few cars and trucks. Note that while the flim references California a few times the county listed on the police car door is in Arizona so they must be on the border. The cast counts about a dozen including extras. The entire film takes over a single night so the whole film is shot in darkness except for one brief shot at the end when it suddenly switches to daylight suggesting they may have been shooting in day for light and missed a shot. There is little need for music although that is probably for the best considering the bombastic fanfare they probably would have used. The cast are largely no names and would stay that way and as with "Panic in Year Zero" one of characters talks with dated 50's Beatnik slang. Seamon Glass who plays the cop is duly wooden but that might actually suit his dumbly overcompensating small town cop. He would have more minor screen credits including a bit part in "Deliverance". The one actor here with a real resume is Carol Kent which is actually the pseudonym for actress Marie Windsor who plays the blonde cheating wife. Windsor had a long career starting as a joke writer for Jack Benny who encouraged her to try acting. Starring mostly in B-Movies and Film Noirs from the 1940's to end of the 1980's including the Stanley Kubrick's "The Killing" (where she plays Elisha Cook's shrewish wife), "Force Of Evil" (with John Garfield), "Narrow Margin", "The City That Never Sleeps" and "Cat Woman Of The Moon". She died in 2000 the day before her 81st birthday and she has a star on Hollywood Blvd. 

images-1

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"LADYBUG LADYBUG" (1963);


This quiet little film is focused on a small elementary school in a rural area which has its emergency alert system send out a warning of an impending attack. Being unable to ascertain whether or not the alert is real the Principal (William Daniels) decides to send the kids home. Some of the kids have to walk home escorted by a teacher. Much of the film is taken up by conversations between various kids as well as the teachers with the kids talking about war and the bomb. Once at home some kids and their parents react in various ways with some hiding in their basement, others praying and others trying to convince their parents that the alert is real. One group takes shelter which leads to infighting about food and water and allowing in other kids in a plotline inspired both by "Twilight Zone" and "Lord Of The Flies". The ending is heavy on symbolism and packs a huge emotional punch with one (probable) death seeming more devastating than the deaths of millions in some previous films. The film is shot in a low key verite style with no music or special effects which only adds to its power. The plot is advertised as being based on real events but it's unclear how true that is at this point. Note the cast of then no-names includes the first film roles for future Oscar winner Estelle Parsons ("Bonnie & Clyde") and future multi Emmy winner William Daniels ("St Elsewhere"). Kathryn Hayes, who plays the pretty secretary, would go on to a long soap opera career and just died this past March. Most of the kids did not go on to professional film careers.



+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"THE WAR GAME" (1966);


Previous post apocalypse films have either treated the subject in a fairly detached and antiseptic fashion or used it as a setting for other stories and were in the end treating the subject for entertainment, thoughtful entertainment at times, but entertainment none-the-less with the exceptions of the grim episode of "The Medic" and the documentary styled "A Day Called X" and "Target Austin". That is not the case here. This film can not be considered entertaining nor was it meant to be. This film was meant to horrify people. Not in the fun, cathartic way that horror films do, but to scare the audience into awareness and political action and to critique the governments of Britain and the US in direct ways that no previous film would have dared to. This British film is set in a not too distant future when a nuclear war breaks out and missiles strike Britain. Shot in the style of a news documentary it does not have any central characters instead ranging from various man-on-the-street interviews and footage in the small Northern city of Kent along with some talking head experts as well having an offscreen narrator. At the beginning we are shown various people attempting to follow the government's instructions to build shelters and stock food but it is clear that these measures will be woefully inadequate. There are shortages and price gouging but more confusion and annoyance than panic. At least not yet.

p07shw3v

Naturally things worsen with a build-up to war which starts with a Chinese invasion of South Vietnam followed by a US threat to use tactical nukes which is followed by a Soviet attack on West Berlin which leads to trapped Allied forces using tactical nukes followed by the USSR launching missiles at Britain and a counter strike. When the strike comes it is not a distant explosion and mushroom cloud but we are instead given an extended on location view of a shattering blast which reduces blocks to rubble and blinds many people followed by a howling firestorm which kills through both fire and suffocation. Neither firemen and police or civilians, adults or children are spared painful on camera deaths. Even once the fires are brought under control radiation burns and poisoning are rampant. Medical staff are overwhelmed by the flood of injured and dying with many too far gone to be helped being instead simply shot in the head. Inevitably rioting breaks out over food shortages with rioters and police being killed. Eventually some rioters are summarily executed. The end of the film occurs at Christmas as shell shocked children huddle listening to a warped record of "Silent Night" plays on a broken record player. Asked what they want to be when they grow up they mutter "Nothing at all".



Previously the episode from "The Medic" had been the most grim, "One The Beach" had been hopeless and the Japanese film "The Final War" and "Ladybug Ladybug" had shown anger but "The War Game" went further showing real rage at the suicidal destruction and goverment stupidity and arrogance. Throughout the film various talking heads representing figures from government and religion give smug assurances about the winnability and morality of war including one religious leader who advises not allowing neighbours to share your shelter (one man shows off his shotgun he has stored for this reason) and an American official who pompously states that after a pause to rearm and plan they can safely fight "World Wars Four through Eight". Note all the official statements made in the film were taken from direct quotes of actual American and British leaders and officials. There is not even the sort of cheery "Spirit Of the Blitz '' muddle-through attitude normally considered typically British. Instead when at the start of the film as women and children are moved out of the larger cities to smaller ones like Kent to be billetted with local families (eight members at a time) that are met with resentment. One man tries to refuse (to be threatened with arrest) while another insists he won't take any "coloureds". Compare this to the stiff-upper-lip muddle through attitude when such billeting happens in the 1954 TV show "Atomic Attack" where after some perfunctory arguments everybody pitches in and works together. There is anger, violence and murder and eventually numb, shocked hoplessness. When people are informed that NATO missiles have struck Russia in response nobody cares. "As if that matters" says one woman.

wargame-food

As shot in Cinema Verite style the film is immediate and kinetic with a "you are there" immediacy of a news cast having various characters directly addressing the camera and answering an oddly unseen interviewer. There is also a grim voiced off-screen narrator coldly reading off statistics which are also shown onscreen with occasional maps and graphs to illustrate points and repeatedly remind us that this is what nuclear war would be like. While most previous films showed their casts clean and wearing neatly pressed clothes, here everybody is filthy, sweaty, unshaven and utterly exhausted with visible fresh wounds and hollow eyes. There are no fantasies about a hero holing up with his family and a gun and emerging to take charge. Here society has not completely broken down, the government continues to function, however ineffectively, but millions are dead, the cities are in ruins and it is clear that it will take decades to rebuild any sort of civil society at all. By contrast even the ending of "On The Beach" where literally everybody dies, is almost upbeat by comparison as it is at least a clean ending with little suffering and everybody still looks great. This film may not have a big budget with many shots suspiciously cropped suggesting small sets and less extras than appears at first glance. There are no recognizable actors and no soundtrack which would have detracted from the verite feel and relentless angry gloom.

image-w1280

Made by for the BBC by documentary filmmaker Peter Watkins who had previously done a well regarded similarly gritty verite doc about the 1745 Battle Of Culloden (ie the final defeat of the Scottish Highlander army of Bonnie Prince Charlie) the previous year but this time the BBC and British government were horrified by the results. Note that besides the graphic portrayal of war itself the film also rages at the governments of Britain and America. Unlike in the reassuring government sanctioned films "Atomic Attack", "A Day Called X", "Target Austin" and even the darker "Medic" episode" where government preparations were fairly effective here they are shown to be woefully inept, incomplete, outdated and slapdash and given the lack of warning time people would actually get, pathetically inadequate anyway. These themes would reappear in the later British made "Threads" and "When The Wind Blows" in the eighties. This is combined with the clueless belligerent displayed by the collection of talking heads representing the government. Incidentally while previous films had either placed the blame on the Soviets for starting a nuclear war here it is clearly NATO who strike first and the jaw-droppingly arrogant comments from various talking heads make it clear that some of our leaders would be perfectly prepared, even blase about doing so. The film was banned from the airwaves although it did play as a theatrical feature in some festivals and won an Oscar in 1967. There would also be a paperback version. It would then make it's way to America for a festival screening in 1968 but was also banned from TV. It did not appear on UK TV until 1985 the day before the broadcast of the similar British nuclear film "Threads" which has many very similar scenes and general look minus the voiceover. The film has been called a masterpiece by many critics including Roger Ebert and judged one of the top hundred documentaries of all time. Even today it is second only to the slightly more graphic "Threads" as the most disturbing post nuclear film ever and easily surpasses the more high profile and bigger budget American TV movies "The Day After" and the quieter, heartfelt "Testament".

images-2

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

At the start of the Cold War post nuclear films, while always accepting that mass casualties were inevitable, also insisted that with enough preparation, resourcefulness, pluck and luck, some people would survive none-the-worse for wear and society would rebuild. Films like "The Five", "Atomic Attack", "The World, The Flesh & The Devil" and "Panic In Year Zero" are essentially castaway movies using nuclear war as a setting but not really addressing the larger issues. "A Day Called X" and "Target Austin" are meant to reassure the viewer that plans and preparation were indeed being done and government officials were firmly in control of the problem. We should be prepared but no need to worry. The one exception is the episode of the TV series "The Medic". With "On The Beach" attitudes had changed, in that film and the entire population was wiped out albeit in a nice clean style. By that time the Red Scare had waned and it was safer to question the official narratives about war and nuclear weapons. Later films, from the bitter Japanese "The Final War" to the more artistically tragic "Ladybug Ladybug" to even the low budget "This Is Not A Test" are openly angry and scornful of official authorities and the pointless stupidity of war. By the time we get to "The War Game" we have a rasping scream of pure rage.

THE RENEGADES ~ "13 WOMEN";