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Quatermass And The Pit
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DVD detailsPrimary Contributor: Andre Morell Primary Contributor: Cec Linder Primary Contributor: John Stratton DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown) Format: Black & White, Full Screen, NTSC Running Time: 180 minutes Studio: Sinister Cinema
DVD Reviews of Quatermass And The PitDVD Review: An Imaginative And Brilliantly Crafted Piece Of Science Fiction, Summary: 5 StarsThere is a saying I am rather fond of about going out at your best. Over six weeks in late 1958 and early 1959 the BBC brought its involvement in the Quatermass stories to a close. In doing so they lived up to that saying by producing what remains one of the most imaginative and brilliantly crafted pieces of science fiction to ever be put on a screen either big or small.
For starters there is of course the excellent cast. As the third actor to play the role of Professor Bernard Quatermass for the BBC (and the fourth if you count Brian Donlevy in the first two Hammer Quatermass films made prior to this being aired) Andr? Morell gives what might very well be the definitive Quatermass. From the moment he appears Morell takes on the role and makes it his own with his excellent line delivery and very human reactions to the situations around him. Morell's Quatermass is more convincing then his predecessor as both scientist and as a man frightened by what he finds and is all the better for it. Yet Morell's Quatermass is just the first of what can be termed a trio of leading characters.
The other two characters in that trio are Cec Linder as Dr. Matthew Roney and Anthony Bushell as Colonel James Breen. Linder plays Roney as a man fascinated by his discoveries and willing to the consequences of them no matter the cost. Linder and Moreell also have some fantastic chemistry together that makes the friendship between Quatermass and Roney seem even more realistic. Bushell as Breen on the other hand is just the opposite: a man almost primitive in his thinking to the point of ignoring the facts. If Roney is Quatermass's friend then Breen is his enemy and the man most responsible for the serial's shocking finale. Bushell gives a fine, if not over the top at times, performance as the army officer forced into a sequence of events he can not understand nor wants to.
The rest of the cast is fine as well. From John Stratton as the leader of the bomb disposal squad to Christine Finn as Roney's assistant to Brian Worth as journalist James Fullalove to Richard Shaw as Sladden and Robert Perceval as the Minsiter of Defense amongst many there isn't a role miscast in the entire six episode production. The production proves that it isn't just the leading roles that count but the small ones as well.
For all the excellent members of the cast it is as much the aspects of the serial behind the camera that make Quatermass And The Pit as imaginative and brilliantly crafted as it is. Despite being a live TV production Quatermass And The Pit as the feel of being a feature film of the time. This is especially true of both the music and especially of the special effects. The haunting score of Trevor Duncan remains a fantastic example of how a simple score can be made highly effective. The special effects done by Bernard Wilkie and Jack Kine remain as impressive to this viewer today as they must have been for audiences fifty years ago including the sequence at the end of part four and of course the insect like Martians.
Then there is the script at the heart of it all. A decade or so before Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke brought it to the mainstream in 2001: A Space Odessy, writer Nigel Kneale asked the fascinating (and to some terrifying) question "what if what makes us human isn't human at all?" and terrifyingly answered it. Kneale looks at human nature and in particular racism and the occult in a science fiction context and shows us the consequences of racism in a way that is too realistic to be ignored. Kneale uses the limitations of live TV (i.e. a story driven by dialog mainly) to create a script full of fine dialouge and debates on everything from the nature of racism to the military takeover of otherwise peaceful scientific research. In particular there are two speeches by Quatermass (one at the Ministry in episode four and the other at the end of episode six) that stand out as amongst the best pieces of science fiction writing ever.
In short Quatermass And The Pit is television science fiction at its best. It is a production full of fine performances, good effects, fine music and a brilliant script. It might be fifty years old, in black and white and rather filled with dialouge but you know what? I wouldn't have it any other way for that makes Quatermass And The Pit brilliant fifty years on.
DVD Review: Great classic... Summary: 5 StarsIf you like Doctor Who?, the earlier years of the First and Second Doctor, you may enjoy Quatermass. British horror/ science fiction thriller at its best. Not really a movie as much as six television episodes, with a strong story, good characters and lots of cliffhangers. The spaceship looks like it had money spent on it and the plot and theme has been well thought out. All in all, this is a must for anybody interested in sci-fi, British sci-fi and classical sci-fi.
DVD Review: If you do not have this movie, hop to it! Summary: 5 StarsThis is a story about Martian hybrids that came to colonize earth five million years ago. One of their ships went off course and ended up in the mud. The ship is found during a subway excavation and the fun begins.
When I was a youngster many movies gave me nightmares such as "It Came from Outer Space" (1953) where I kept seeing eyeballs. Now only one movie left to get over, you guessed it, this one. I can not look a grasshopper in the face. And as with most viewers I saw it on late night television as "Five Million Years to Earth"
This film is logical and spooky especially by 1960's standards. And you get all the stereotypes such as the military that is just determined that this object found buried is a bomb. It makes you want to slap him around. Then there is the professor that knows better and is ignored. I could go on. But you need to see this movie. The only thing that is stretching but fits in a sci-fi movie is the device that changes thoughts into pictures; see this setup again in "Brainstorm" (1983).
It Came From Outer Space ~ Richard Carlson
DVD Review: GOOD BRITISH TV. Summary: 5 StarsI really enjoyed watching this series. The quality of the picture and sound were decent considering that this was British 50's tv and was probably recorded on video tape and not film.
I own all of the Quatermass movies on dvd, with the exception of the "Quatermass Xperiment" which I have on vhs.
Even though I have watched my "Quatermass and the Pit" on dvd several times, there were some interesting differences between the movie and the tv series. The tv series goes into a little more depth as to why the Martians landed and other occurances.
I would highly recommend any Quatermass fans to buy this one. The acting is good and the special effects are actually decent, but just realize that this is tv, not the movie.
DVD Review: There's a normal film, and this 6 part TV series. Summary: 3 StarsThis is what is probably the original TV serial in 6 episodes. It's the same story by the same originator, but with a different cast. Also, it has shabbier production values, is in black and white, and is a slower less effective presentation. I wanted the 98 minute, color film that I saw on TV back in the '80s, but instead got this cheaper older version of the story.
Description of Quatermass And The PitThe third installment in Hammer Studio's Quatermass series, originally shown in six parts on British TV, was later remade as "Five Million Years to Earth." London construction workers uncover the remains of an alien spaceship, and Professor Quatermass' investigation reveals a bizarre connection between the ship's long-dead crew and the evolution of man on Earth. With Andre Morell, Cec Linder, John Stratton. 180 min.
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