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La marque

Titre original : Quatermass 2
  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
6,7/10
5,1 k
MA NOTE
La marque (1957)
Official Home Video Trailer
Lire trailer1:56
1 Video
41 photos
HorreurScience-fictionInvasion extraterrestre

Après avoir découvert par hasard une mystérieuse usine dans la campagne anglaise, le professeur Quatermass organise son attaque lorsqu'il s'aperçoit que celle ci est en fait un centre d'accu... Tout lireAprès avoir découvert par hasard une mystérieuse usine dans la campagne anglaise, le professeur Quatermass organise son attaque lorsqu'il s'aperçoit que celle ci est en fait un centre d'accueil pour envahisseurs venus de l'espace.Après avoir découvert par hasard une mystérieuse usine dans la campagne anglaise, le professeur Quatermass organise son attaque lorsqu'il s'aperçoit que celle ci est en fait un centre d'accueil pour envahisseurs venus de l'espace.

  • Réalisation
    • Val Guest
  • Scénario
    • Nigel Kneale
    • Val Guest
  • Casting principal
    • Brian Donlevy
    • John Longden
    • Sidney James
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,7/10
    5,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Val Guest
    • Scénario
      • Nigel Kneale
      • Val Guest
    • Casting principal
      • Brian Donlevy
      • John Longden
      • Sidney James
    • 89avis d'utilisateurs
    • 66avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Quatermass 2
    Trailer 1:56
    Quatermass 2

    Photos41

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    Rôles principaux54

    Modifier
    Brian Donlevy
    Brian Donlevy
    • Quatermass
    John Longden
    John Longden
    • Lomax
    • (as John Longdon)
    Sidney James
    Sidney James
    • Jimmy Hall
    • (as Sydney James)
    Bryan Forbes
    Bryan Forbes
    • Marsh
    William Franklyn
    William Franklyn
    • Brand
    Vera Day
    Vera Day
    • Sheila
    Charles Lloyd Pack
    • Dawson
    Tom Chatto
    Tom Chatto
    • Broadhead
    John Van Eyssen
    • The P.R.O.
    Percy Herbert
    Percy Herbert
    • Gorman
    Michael Ripper
    • Ernie
    John Rae
    • McLeod
    Marianne Stone
    Marianne Stone
    • Secretary
    Ronald Wilson
    • Young Man
    Jane Aird
    • Mrs. McLeod
    Betty Impey
    • Kelly
    Lloyd Lamble
    Lloyd Lamble
    • Inspector
    John Stuart
    John Stuart
    • Commissioner
    • Réalisation
      • Val Guest
    • Scénario
      • Nigel Kneale
      • Val Guest
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs89

    6,75.1K
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    Avis à la une

    pv71989

    One of the best sci-fi films around

    This film was actually the first sequel to use a number in the title (although it's American title was "Enemy from Space"). Not only was this a cleverly written film, based on Nigel Kneale's screenplay, but it was a cruel satire on English and American culture in the 1950s.

    In a nutshell, Professor Bernard Quatermass, leader of England's rocket group, is at wit's end trying to get more funding for his projected moon project. The British government decides it has "projects of far greater importance.'' At the same time, workers at Quatermass' base detect scores of what look like meteorites falling close by. When Quatermass investigates, he not only finds remnants of the meteorites, but his moon base, conveniently appropriated by an unknown government entity. His lab assistant picks up one of the meteorites and it explodes in his face, immediately infecting him with an alien parasite.

    Quatermass is forced to go it almost alone, helped by a cynical police inspector, a drunken beat reporter and a vigilant member of parliament who can't get even his own party members to question where millions of pounds of tax dollars are going to.

    The cruel satire comes from the comparison of Western governments of the 1950s to the communist governments they vehemently opposed during the Cold War years. British citizens were taught to implicitly trust government even as it spent millions to unknowingly fund an alien invasion. Civilian workers were so glad to have jobs they don't question why the supposed "synthetic food" plant they're building needs huge doses of toxic gases like ammonia. Even when evidence of wrongdoing is brought up, government red tape squelches it.

    As for the movie itself, it is much better written than the original ("The Quatermass Experiment"). Nigel Kneale softens Quatermass' dour and brusk personality. Director Val Guest effectively uses a string musical score to build a creepy atmosphere. He and Kneale even overcome the first movie's dull ending, which had an alien getting electrocuted with no suspense whatsoever. Here, the plant workers, angry that one of their own is carted away by infected security guards at gunpoint, try to storm the plant, turning the aliens' carefully planned invasion on its ear. The irony, of course, is that the plant was conceived because government bureaucracy kept it secret. Now, as the plant is threatened, the same secrecy prevents the aliens from calling for help from the police or armed forces.

    The special effects are better in this film, though the giant aliens at the end are not as convincing as they could be. Still, the film is a great example of British science fiction, which relied more on plot and characterization than the special effects that dominated American science fiction.
    m_sabrettes

    Terrifying Sci Fi Atmospheric Classic

    Val Guest's Quatermass II is my favourite film ever. The cold, dawning revelation that builds up all the way through the first half of the film that the invasion is actually underway and that the 'zombies' not only WALK AMONG US, but are actually IN CHARGE and IN POWER is terrifyingly atmospheric. I always like to think that if the invasion ever did come, it wouldn't come through massive mother ships as per Independence Day, but from within, from the suburbs, the rural villages. Really clever invaders would use Earth's own power structures, governments and resources against it without anyone noticing, not turn up en masse in flying saucers spoiling for a fight. The idea of the invasion falling to Earth in meteorites through a form of collective intelligence (recycled in the 1973 BBC Doctor Who serial Spearhead From Space) continues this threatening vein of invasion, and provides the most atmospheric scene in the film when Quatermass stands in the open night air as whizzing sounds around him give away the increased number of the meteorites now falling (the invasion is now fully underway!). Other scenes are just downright terrifying and follow the Kneale tradition of 'terror through revelation': the lorries in London carrying the symbol; Quatermass' first glimpse through the dome viewing panel; and when it is revealed how the zombies are blocking the pipes!! This 'revelation' aspect can be seen in all of the Quatermass films and serials (in The Quatermass Conclusion: when it is revealed by the body parts that the hippies weren't 'transported', in Quatermass and the Pit: 'you mean WE are the Martians!!'). Storytelling, atmosphere and terror like this hasn't survived the onset of today's special effects. Film makers like Dean Devlin just don't need to employ methods like this anymore, and this is why thinking people's science fiction relying on chilling, atmospheric and scientifically valid stories, plots and concepts will never ever be repeated.
    8youroldpaljim

    An unsung fifties sci fi classic.

    I first saw this film once when I was about five or six years old on TV. Because the film had location shooting at an oil refinery, for years I was always reminded of this film when ever I drove past one, wondering if something sinister was going on inside those tanks. However, soon after I first saw this film, QUATERMASS 2 (or ENEMY FROM SPACE-as it was called here in the USA), was pulled from distribution for various legal reasons, and this film was for years impossible to view. Then the film was released from its legal limbo in the mid eighties and I purchased a video copy as soon as it came out.

    Unlike so many hard to view films that have been promoted as "a long lost classic", that often turn out not to live up to their reputations when finally viewed again*, QUATERMASS 2 truly deserves its reputation as a rediscovered lost classic. It is one of the best British science fictions films from the fifties.

    The films acting and direction are uniformly good. The black and white photography is excellent and the film has an excellent musical score (although sometimes the music is a bit too loud.) The scene where the giant aliens burst from the domes is one of my favorite scenes in a fantastic film. Its like something out of a nightmare: the dome begins to crack, like a giant egg, and emerging from is not a cute little chick, but a hideous malignancy. The gloomy dark gray lighting enhance this scene. However, the aliens that emerge, while gross and repulsive looking when viewed for the first time, begin to look a tad bit silly after repeated viewings.

    Perhaps one of the most interesting thing about this film when viewed today, is the films story has many similarities to the "Area 51" mythology. In the film there is government owned plant where everything is top secret, it gets unlimited tax payer funding, but no one in the government dare asks whats going on. This sounds lot like what we are told about the so-called "Area 51." I'm surprised " psycho/social reductionists" like Curtis "Watch The Skies" Peebles overlooked this film. Then again, maybe we are lucky they have.

    QUATERMASS 2 is an excellent fifties science fiction that should be more widely shown. Like the other films in the famous "Quatermass" series, its literate, suspenseful and thrilling.

    *Sometimes the films promoted as "long lost classics" aren't even lost!
    9worldsofdarkblue

    Boy! Do I Remember This One!

    I was never aware that this movie was anything other than a stand-alone feature. I'm not familiar with 'Quatermass' in any way whatsoever. But I saw a movie when I was a kid that was titled 'Enemy From Space' and I've never forgotten it. The scene where a man who has been covered in some black stuff shockingly, jarringly shrieks out and stumbles down the outside stairway of some huge, weird, vat-like structure frightened me enormously. I didn't know what the stuff was exactly, I just knew it was burning the man horribly and his utterly convincing screams drove it into my brain permanently.

    I was pretty young when I saw it at my local 'B-Movies Only' neighborhood theater. I'm not sure how it was elsewhere, but in my hometown there was a movie house that got all the A-List pictures (Cary Grant, James Stewart, Liz Taylor, Disney) and another that made the most of the plentiful supply of small-budget monster movies that were released in the late fifties and very early sixties. Triple Features were often offered in these 'lesser' venues. The beauty of it was that both types of theater thrived in those cable-less, vcr-less days. But I digress.

    So I see this movie and I'm only about 7 years old at the time and that night I couldn't sleep. And though I had sat through the entire thing, my mind was locked into that horrifying scene so completely that I did not really recall another word spoken in the film. It came around to the Biltmore a couple more times and, though terrified, I was irresistibly drawn to see it again, each time absorbing a little more of the content. The challenging storyline wasn't all that easy to grasp - a lot of it went over my young head.

    It was a long time ago but I remember a meteorite falling through a roof, a road that went nowhere, a silent and sinister industrial area, a man who becomes suddenly very sick (in the pub I think) and has a white splotch on his face, severely serious soldiers who seem to be bad guys, a window through which an alien something-or-other is observed and, of course, the unfortunate man covered in burning black oil.

    A truly eerie movie, as engrossing as it is chilling. I would very much like to see it again
    8Matti-Man

    Taut, well-crafted early Hammer horror movie

    The second of the Quatermass films (the first was THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT, the "X" used to emphasise the adult X-rating the film received on its initial release) was allowed a slightly larger budget and benefited enormously from Nigel Kneale's participation in the screenplay. In this film, at least Brian Donlevy behaves a little more like Quatermass ought to, though I still don't think he was right for the part.

    For my money, Quatermass should be a pipe-smoking English boffin with leather patches sewn on the elbows of his jacket. The original character was conceived as a kind of Barnes Wallis type, as portrayed by Michael Redgrave in THE DAM BUSTERS.

    The movie is set in a post-war Britain that was a little panicked by the idea of nuclear weapons and even more unsettled by the knowledge that our former allies, The Soviets, had the same weapons and they were pointed at us. This was the climate that gave us Orwell's 1984 and Don Siegel's INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS. Paranoia was out to get us ...

    This same atmosphere lasted well into the 1960s and can also be glimpsed in TV shows like THE AVENGERS. This was the era I grew up in, so I speak from personal experience :-)

    This movie is one of Hammer's better offerings of the period. Released the same year as CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, it more than holds its own against the other, better-known Hammer colour offerings. Indeed, it benefits from its monochrome photography, which brilliantly communicates the austerity of the years immediately following WWII.

    Thoroughly recommended, this film will appeal to anyone who can get beyond the admittedly primitive 1950s special effects to be rewarded by the rich and clever story that lies beneath the slightly dodgy veneer ...

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This is believed to be the first film ever to use the arabic numeral 2 as an indicator that it was the sequel to another film (as opposed to Roman numerals).
    • Gaffes
      When hurrying to the phone in the Pressure Control Block, McLeod puts down his jacket, which slips to the floor. It appears to have returned to where he originally placed it when he retrieves it in another shot, however.
    • Citations

      Quatermass: They tell me you have no police here?

      Dawson: Police? We don't need them - we're a law-abiding community, aren't we?

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Saturday Afternoon Movie: Enemy From Space (1966)
    • Bandes originales
      Midsummer Mood
      (uncredited)

      Music by Kenneth Essex

      Paxton Music Ltd

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Quatermass 2?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 10 mai 1957 (Pays-Bas)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Terre contre satellite
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Shell Haven Refinery, Essex, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Société de production
      • Hammer Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 92 000 £GB (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 77 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 25min(85 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White

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