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La amenaza verde

Título original: The Day of the Triffids
  • 1963
  • Approved
  • 1h 33min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.1/10
9.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La amenaza verde (1963)
Trailer for this classic sci-fi thriller
Reproducir trailer2:21
1 video
41 fotos
Ciencia FicciónInvasión alienígenaTerror

Después de que una inusual lluvia de meteoritos deja ciega a la mayoría de la población humana, un oficial de la marina mercante debe encontrar la manera de conquistar plantas altas y agresi... Leer todoDespués de que una inusual lluvia de meteoritos deja ciega a la mayoría de la población humana, un oficial de la marina mercante debe encontrar la manera de conquistar plantas altas y agresivas que se alimentan de personas y animales.Después de que una inusual lluvia de meteoritos deja ciega a la mayoría de la población humana, un oficial de la marina mercante debe encontrar la manera de conquistar plantas altas y agresivas que se alimentan de personas y animales.

  • Dirección
    • Steve Sekely
    • Freddie Francis
  • Guionistas
    • Bernard Gordon
    • Philip Yordan
    • John Wyndham
  • Elenco
    • Howard Keel
    • Nicole Maurey
    • Janette Scott
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.1/10
    9.4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Steve Sekely
      • Freddie Francis
    • Guionistas
      • Bernard Gordon
      • Philip Yordan
      • John Wyndham
    • Elenco
      • Howard Keel
      • Nicole Maurey
      • Janette Scott
    • 142Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 44Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Day of the Triffids
    Trailer 2:21
    The Day of the Triffids

    Fotos41

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    Elenco principal46

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    Howard Keel
    Howard Keel
    • Bill Masen
    Nicole Maurey
    Nicole Maurey
    • Christine Durrant
    Janette Scott
    Janette Scott
    • Karen Goodwin
    Kieron Moore
    Kieron Moore
    • Tom Goodwin
    Mervyn Johns
    Mervyn Johns
    • Mr. Coker
    Ewan Roberts
    Ewan Roberts
    • Dr. Soames
    Alison Leggatt
    Alison Leggatt
    • Miss Coker
    Geoffrey Matthews
    • Luis de la Vega
    Janina Faye
    Janina Faye
    • Susan
    Gilgi Hauser
    • Teresa de la Vega
    John Tate
    John Tate
    • Captain - SS Midland
    Carole Ann Ford
    Carole Ann Ford
    • Bettina
    • (as Carol Ann Ford)
    Arthur Gross
    Arthur Gross
    • Flight 356 Radioman
    Colette Wilde
    • Nurse Jamieson
    • (as Collette Wilde)
    Ian Wilson
    Ian Wilson
    • Greenhouse Watchman
    Victor Brooks
    • Poiret
    Chris Adcock
    • Train Passenger
    • (sin créditos)
    Michael Bishop
    • Flight 356 Pilot
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Steve Sekely
      • Freddie Francis
    • Guionistas
      • Bernard Gordon
      • Philip Yordan
      • John Wyndham
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios142

    6.19.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7michaelRokeefe

    Very good British made sci-fi.

    A meteorite shower lights up the sky and blinds all that watches it. Most of the world population must also deal with some rather weird plant life that can uproot itself and seek human nourishment.

    Howard Keel plays a sailor recovering from an eye operation, thus not being blinded by the mysterious glowing display. He finds a young girl that slept through the starry shower. Together they seek out help and a solution to this very weird problem. A couple of marine biologist, stranded in a lighthouse, get a 'hands on' encounter with the rampaging stalks of terror.

    An evenly paced movie considering the slow moving menace. This makes you ponder watering your plants. Very good movie.

    Also in the cast are Janina Faye, Nicole Maurey and Janette Scott.
    6guswhovian

    Howard Keel versus the Triffids

    When a meteor shower leaves most of the world's population blind, a US Navy officer (Howard Keel) has to discover a way to fight the Triffids, dangerous plants that are capable of movement and killing humans.

    This low-budget 1962 version of John Wyndham's famous novel pales in comparison with the much better 1981 BBC miniseries.

    The main benefit of the film is Howard Keel. He acquits himself surprisingly well in the dramatic part, but I wonder what would have happened if he started singing a duet with a Triffid!

    The special effects are passable, but there's a silly sub-plot about two marine biologists that seems shoehorned in. Veteran British character actor Mervyn Johns appears briefly, and it was fun seeing a pre-Doctor Who Carole Ann Ford as a French girl (her accent is terrible).

    Overall, cheesy fun.
    7lost-in-limbo

    Spectacularly campy.

    A intensely colourful and bright meteor shower covered the sky one night blinding most of the world's population and making people defenseless to man eating plants called "Triffidus Celestus'' that were grown from meteor-borne spores. Though, there are some people that can see. An American seaman whose eyes were bandaged during the meteor shower is battling his way through triffids and helping out people. While, a couple in a lighthouse are fending off Triffids and trying to find a way to stop them.

    John Wyndham's novel was brought to the big screen in this classic Sci-Fi with an A-grade story with b-grade effects, but it holds up fairly well. This is incredibly engaging kitsch with a nice idea that's very imaginative and it gives us a thrilling enough adventure. The film might be rough around the edges, but still it's rather effective because of a riveting story that we don't know what to expect and a solid lead performance by Howard Keel.

    It's a film of two halves making it fairly uneven. The opening half creates such a grand apocalyptic feel, becoming quite unsettling at times with good location photography of an eerie London that captures such a mysterious vibe. It's indeed very atmospheric. While the second half slows down a bit and kinda goes berserk with its stars "The Triffids". It's rather amusing when they're moving about and springing out of nowhere, but because of that it drifts away from the edginess of the opening half and becomes rather padded.

    Throughout the story we follow an American seaman trying to get to safety and helping blind people on his way and then there's a couple stranded in a lighthouse. While the first of the two is definitely the most interesting, but after a while it starts to fizzle out and leads to anticlimax. While the sequences with the couple (there weren't many) were mostly dull because of the bland dialogue and her constantly screaming and him constantly yelling, but the set-up for them was interesting enough. However, the climax involving the lighthouse couple is tense and exciting.

    The special effects were rather ordinary, cheap and shoddy. Visually wise it was quite stunning and vibrant, with the lights in the sky as the meteor shower were fairly hypnotizing. There was good composition with colour and lighting. Though, the plants don't look terribly great and will cause a chuckle, but still they are a sight to see, as they look wicked and rather horrendous in nature or maybe just plain ridiculous. Most of the violence happened off screen/implied. The music score was rather enforcing and good in keeping such downbeat mood. There are some incredibly well staged sequences and there are scenarios in the story that lacked logic and cohesion, but it didn't bother me too much.

    Howard Keel was fairly spirited and witty in his role. There are some fair if mundane support roles from Nicole Maurey, Alison Leggatt, Mervyn Jones and Janina Faye. While Kieron Moore and Janette Scott as the couple were rather shallow in their portrayals and that's mostly because they aren't given much screen time.

    The mysterious opening 45-minutes is engrossing and builds tension and uneasiness nicely. The pretty routine mid-section gets bogged down and is far less involving. Some interesting sub-plots add some life and another dimension in the slow mid-section. While leading up to the ending it has some bizarre visuals of the triffids and some entertaining moments. Though, when it came to the ending for me it just came across forced and hard to swallow.

    It's really nothing fancy, but overall it's an entertaining effort with ordinary special effects and cheesy dialogue that seem to add a lot of charm too it all.
    BaronBl00d

    Limber Limbs and Stalking Stalks

    Reading the previous reviews for this film were like watching a tennis match. One reviewer made a valid negative point(or serve) whilst another made a positive point. Back and forth....back and forth. Those people that read the book seemed to be in general much less happy with the film than those who had never read the book. I can understand that, but looking at films and their adaptations of books must sometimes be done with a more discerning eye. And, of course, sometimes the adaptations of books are so horribly done that nothing but a feeling of resentment, disappointment, and hate can be achieved from the viewer. I have not read the John Wyndham novel..yet. I will. But as sci-fi films and horror films go, The Day of the Triffids is an enjoyable flawed..very flawed film. I have such concrete memories of seeing this as a child and after watching it again after at least twenty years, scene after scene came back to my consciousness. The vivid, colorful meteorite showers over a London backdrop, the night watchman working in the greenhouse, the crowds of sightless people begging for help from those that could see, and the battle between life and death on a remote lighthouse island. The special effects are not very good, the plants look...well..a bit preposterous. The acting is not very grand either. C'mon, what did you expect with Howard Keel in the lead...Shakespeare? Actually Keel is decent as is the cast for the most part. The biggest flaw in the film for me is the script....which has little cohesion as it jumps from one thing to another and then another. The ending was vastly unsatisfactory as it really abruptly ends. Maybe there was no money or good thoughts left. But notwithstanding all of this, The Day of the Triffids is a fun film and a trip down Memory Lane for me.
    7silverscreen888

    Realistic, Atmospheric and Memorable Adaptation of John Wyndham's Novel

    This is a well-told film that lacks post-1994 incredible special effects expenditures and massive overspending. What it has is a very solid story line, a number of memorable scenes and a feel of realism about it that adds a great deal I suggest to its eerie sci-fi atmosphere. Its central character, Bill, a career seaman played expertly by Howard Keel, is a man facing an nightmare. The film begins in a small typical and beautifully-presented small London hospital where he has to wait one more day before removing bandages to ensure that his vision will return to normal. Banter with a lovely nurse and his doctor turn into a prescient strangeness the next morning--when Keel awakes to find the hospital abandoned, all floors silent amid signs of damage and swift departure...Telephones are not working either. He removes his bandages to find a world without people. We learn, through his adventures and those of a couple in an isolated lighthouse off the coast, where the husband does scientific experiments and drinks too much, that a shower of meteors watched by billions, have destroyed their optic nerves and thus rendered nearly everyone blind. We soon learn that this is a worldwide phenomenon. In addition, a species of plants called triffids have developed from being small insect eating plants into towering and motile monstrosities that can sting and paralyze then absorb human beings as food. They spray small spores to propagate, are reproducing in millions and thus threaten all remaining human life. Keel picks up a young girl who can also see; and after escaping a crowd of the desperate in London and witnessing an attempt at an airliner landing turning into a massive explosion, they escapes from the city. Thereafter, their adventures deal with the plants' attacks, attempts to reach the continent and a rendezvous in Paris and then one in Spain; but the bulk of the film involves the couples' lonely battle with the triffids on their isolated island, and Keel's final escape from a doomed French haven with Nicole Maurey and the young girls as they make for a submarine pickup, the last scheduled for Europe's remaining sighted persons. The great task that everyone faces during the film is striving against all odds to find some way of defeating the plants as well simply escaping. The piece's screenplay by veteran Philip Yordan, adapted from a good John Wyndham novel, I find to be rather satisfying. Steve Sekely directed in swift-paced and intelligent style. The competent cast besides Keel, a most underrated leading man, include strong Kieron More and Janette Scott as the couple in the lighthouse, Mervyn Johns, Alison Leggatt, Geoffrey Mathews, Ewan Roberts, Janina Faye as the young girl picked up by Keel, Gilgi Hauser, pretty Carol Ann Ford, Colette Wild as the lovely nurse and Victor Brooks, among others. This estimable film was produced by Yordan, with George Pitcher as line producer assisted by Bernard Glasser. Rod Goodwin's musical score is powerful and well-above-average at all points. the cinematography by Ted Moore and Cedric Dawe's gritty art direction are also noteworthy. The film looks back I suggest to previous 1950s color sci-fi efforts; but its plants also became the model for the Star Trek "This Side of Paradise" spore-producing vegetation.. And its generally serious feel was copied many times thereafter, both the lighthouse sequence and the cross-country adventures of keep and his companions. But these achievements have seldom been approached let alone bettered. Anyone viewing the film today I assert should respond to its unusual realism; complaints about a lack of multi-million dollar graphics are undoubtedly more than misplaced. The storyline was a difficult one to capture in a brief film even in the 1960s. I suggest that the makers have done this exacting task rather admirably. Scenes such as the surrounding of an electrified yard by the carnivorous plants, the airliner's approach and crash, and the escape of Keel, Faye and Maurey from her house when it is taken over by convicts deserve critical acclaim. I judge this effort to be one of the most underrated of sci-fi films of all time.

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    • Trivia
      Kieron Moore and Janette Scott were only added to the cast when it was discovered upon completion of filming that there was only 57 minutes of good usable footage available. The whole lighthouse sequence, directed by veteran Cinematographer Freddie Francis, was only added to help extend the movie's running time - even though these scenes contain the movie's surprise- twist denouement. Presumably this was a last-minute script change. Freddie Francis, when asked about his uncredited contribution to the film, implied strongly that the whole production had been chaos.
    • Errores
      Tom and Karen are on a lighthouse situated on rocks when triffids appear. Tom turns a fire hose on them spraying the with salt water which causes them to melt in which case hoe did they survive the spray from the waves crashing on the rocks. The force of water from the hose Tom and Karen later use to destroy the triffids is much greater than what the triffid would have been subjected to by sea spray; when Karen told Tom about the triffid being on a rocky ledge and they returned to look for it, they were not soaked by the sea spray, so evidently the triffid would not have been either. As seen earlier in the film , the triffids grow incredibly quickly, so would only have been there for a few minutes when Karen saw it. In the short time she was away, the triffid moved away from the danger.
    • Citas

      Tom Goodwin: [to Karen] Keep behind me. There's no sense in getting killed by a plant.

    • Versiones alternativas
      In pan & scan versions of this film, there is an extra scene as Bill & Susan depart England for France. They are seen on the small motorboat and Susan asks Bill "Where are we going?". Bill answers "We're going to that meeting in Paris, if we can make it". They then hear an explosion behind them, and we see that the ship they had just left from has exploded. We then see their small boat heading out to sea past an estuary lighthouse. This scene is missing from the letterbox versions.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: The Day of the Triffids (1975)

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 11 de julio de 1963 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Day of the Triffids
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Poble Espanyol, Barcelona, Cataluña, España
    • Productoras
      • Allied Artists Pictures
      • Security Pictures Ltd.
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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 750,000 (estimado)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 33 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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