| Christopher Lambert Movie: They Came from Beyond Space
Movie They Came from Beyond Space |  |  | | List Price: $3.95 | | Label: Tgg Direct
Salesrank: 105010
Released: October 3, 2000 | | Our Price: $0.12 | | Used Price: $0.71 | | MPAA Rating: Unrated Media: DVD | |
They Came from Beyond Space Reviews: British retro science fantasy . . .  2009-07-27 - They Came From Beyond Space (1967) is an old style alien contact fantasy. A British production, the film is based on the novel `The Gods Hate Kansas' (1964) by Joseph Millard. As you might guess, the original story was set in Kansas, but was relocated to the English countryside.
A team of scientists is sent to investigate an unusual meteor strike on a farm, and their bodies are taken over by aliens, through strange rays emitted by the glowing crystal-like meteorites. The scientists begin executing the aliens' mysterious plan, isolating themselves on the farm, turning it into a secured compound with armed guards, where they stockpile supplies and weapons, and carry on activities underground.
Dr. Curtis Temple (Robert Hutton) begins investigating, but is rebuffed by his girlfriend and assistant Lee Mason (Jennifer Jayne), one of those taken over by the aliens. Things escalate when a mysterious plague breaks out in a nearby town, but Temple presses forward, discovering that rockets are being launched into space from the farm. Temple then turns commando, penetrating the compound and displaying the fighting skills of a professional wrestler, manages to abduct Lee and escape. With the help of a friend, Temple frees Lee from the aliens' influence, and then things really get ridiculous with the story concluding at an alien council meeting on the moon.
More of a pulp or comic book adventure fantasy, They Came From Beyond Space with its action elements, was probably entertaining at the time it was made. It has more in common with science fiction films of the 1950's, then the more serious science fiction that was beginning to emerge in the late 60's. The level of realism is extremely low. Threads of the storyline make some sense, but most of what happens does not. If huge gaps in logic are not a problem, then it may be worth a look.
Awful DVD transfer  2008-08-20 - This is a real fun movie but this Platinum Disc release looks and sounds like a bad VHS tape. I've seen a good, clean version of this on TV so it's a shame to have to watch it this way
Put that colander on your head and follow me!  2008-07-29 - Hey, if it has shots of giant radar telescopes tuning in to the celestial symphony of outer space, the movie has to be good, right? Even if it features a dude wearing a colander on his head? Uh, I think not. Despite its great title, They Came From Beyond Space doesn't exactly impress. It starts OK, but once you spend what seems like an hour watching a guy try to sneak his way onto a farm, a lot of the magic is lost. I did like the main character, though. First of all, having a metal plate in your head is just plain cool - that's a well-established fact (driving around in a convertible roadster, sans seatbelt, is even cooler-- especially when that plate in your head came courtesy of an earlier automobile accident). Second of all, Dr. Curtis Temple isn't your average namby-pamby scientist; he's no Captain Kirk (although he does do a mean Kirk imitation whenever he's told to pretend that he just got zapped by some kind of subsonic gun) , but he can hold his own in a fight, even when his opponent keeps smashing him plate-in-head-first into posts. He does need some serious work on his spying and stealth skills, however. Fortunately for him, most of the bad guys are just plain dumb most of the time.
Let me take you back to the glory days of yester-year, back before weightlessness in space was even invented, when all you needed for a spaceship control room was some dials, a machine that goes ping, and miscellaneous whatsits, and where proto-MacGyvers could reverse engineer super-advanced alien technology in a matter of hours. Into this halcyon world a meteorite falls - actually several meteorites. No big deal, right? Well, what if I told you that they all fell close together in an obvious formation? Interested now? Well, somebody in the British government is, and he puts together a crew of brilliant scientists to go and investigate the thing. Naturally, Dr. Temple (Robert Hutton) is the obvious choice to lead the group. Sadly, though, his doctor won't write him a permission slip to go (darn that metal plate in his head), so his assistant Lee (Jennifer Jayne) goes in his place. Fine and dandy - until, that is, Dr. Temple loses contact with Lee and everyone at the site, even as pork barrel Democrat-sized requisitions start flooding his research lab. At that point, he tells his doctor to go sit on a tongue dispenser (OK - he doesn't actually do that) and off he goes.
To his surprise, he finds himself persona non grata (him, the great Dr. Temple) when he arrives at the heavily secured site of the meteorite crash. He doesn't know what's going on, but he knows that the folks working there so secretively are not behaving normally - especially his beloved Lee. That's where all the sneaking around the farm stuff comes in. The doc's determined to find out what is going on, despite repeated warnings and murderous attacks. Realistically speaking, Temple should have died early on. The guy may be a scientific genius, but he knows nothing about breaking and entering, not to mention alien technology sabotage. He actually throws very effective weapons down a couple of times and forges ahead empty-handed.
I won't tell you what the aliens are up to, but I will warn you that their leader can't do anything without giving a long, drawn-out speech first. What was it with these aliens in the 1960s? You would think they were all running for Congress given all the boring speeches they made. And that music? Each fight scene score was apparently performed by The Little Drummer Boy on acid.
They Came From Beyond Space isn't your typical 1960s science fiction film, but that shouldn't be a selling point in and of itself. This movie is average at best, with its most memorable moments coming in the form of unintentionally humorous scenes.
solid b hard scifi  2008-06-07 - It is hard to believe that this is the kind of thing I watched every afternoon as a kid. Back then, this was pretty cutting edge, impossible as it may seem. But beyond the crude effects, the story is really quite good: there is a mysterious landing of some space crafts. The hero is a man who recently had a steel plate grafted to his skull, a sure tip off that some kind of mind control will not effect him.
He heroically attempts to discover what is happening to his colleagues, which gets him into lots of trouble and danger. He then figures out, with a colleague he equips with a kind of collander helmet to protect him against the untraviolet mind rays from the aliens. Then they discover what the real mission of the creatures is, which is quite a surprise, and it changes the adversarial dynamic between Earthlings and aliens in a wonderful twist that is also interesting.
Recommended for fans of good b-grade scifi. It is for the peculiar connoisseur, like me, who loved these as a kid.
So why exactly must the Gods hate Kansas?  2006-07-11 - Don't understand the signifigance of the title of the book this film was based on, as it takes place in England. Nonetheless, it was surprisingly decent find on the Mill Creek Sci-Fi Classics package. Formless aliens trapped on the moon hitch a ride to Earth aboard some meteors (very Zontar, guys ;), and begin to possess the bodies of scientists investigating the crash. One of the scientists has a silver plate implanted in his skull from a car wreck that makes him immune to alien control, and he sets about to find out exactly what the creatures are doing and stop them...but should he? Definitely has a late sixties feel with the colorful sets and groovy music. The same chap who portrays the alien leader co-starred as Alfred in the Keaton/Kilmer/Clooney Batman films. Nothing to go out of your way to see, but good enough to waste an hour on.
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