Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn alien spaceship crashes near a rural hospital. When the alien is taken to the hospital, a mysterious force field suddenly appears around it.An alien spaceship crashes near a rural hospital. When the alien is taken to the hospital, a mysterious force field suddenly appears around it.An alien spaceship crashes near a rural hospital. When the alien is taken to the hospital, a mysterious force field suddenly appears around it.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Yôko Tani
- Leader of the Lystrians
- (as Yoko Tani)
Ric Young
- The Lystrian
- (as Eric Young)
Recensioni in evidenza
Invasion is not a bad movie, but neither is it particularly good. I think the enthusiastic reviews are reaching. I will say, it is an awfully strange movie. The protagonists can't figure out whether the aliens are "Chinese" or "Japanese." All they know, or think they know, is that they are - "Asian" - and that apparently there is an alien Asian invasion. It seems like this component of the movie is supposed to lend some kind of air of mystery or exoticism, or perhaps mere novelty, to the story. It's muddled so you really can't ever tell what the filmmaker's intentions were. I would love to read an interview to hear what they were thinking.
In any case, as other reviewers have noted, the movie is atmospheric, has some nice B&W cinematography, and an effective, understated score. Unfortunately the heroic act of Edward Judd toward the end relies on a very weird stroke of luck, which is reflects the unevenness of the script, which is fine in parts but nonsensical in other parts. (Funnily, Judd is just as grim and sweaty in Invasion as he was in The Day the Earth Caught Fire, a far superior movie from a few years earlier.)
Being a fan of 1950s and '60s British sci-fi, it was very much worth the money. While I can't see myself watching it repeatedly the way I do classics like Village of the Damned, Day the Earth Caught Fire, and the Quatermass productions, it is worth tracking down if you like the particular temperament of the classical era of Brit sci-fi.
Fyi: I couldn't find this movie streaming anywhere so I bought a region 2 DVD for 12 bucks, including shipping, from Amazon. It's the Studiocanal edition. (I've included a few photos so you can make sure you're ordering the addition you want to order or so if you get the wrong version you can justifiably return it.) The picture is properly letterboxed at 1:66, which was the standard UK aspect ratio of the time. The picture is surprisingly good, with no blurring of grays and blacks, sharp lines between tones, with the blacks being surprisingly deep. The DVD includes a trailer, which, oddly, is narrated by the guy with an American accent, as well as the smallest photo gallery I've ever seen on a DVD, maybe six or seven pictures. Frankly, it's amazing this movie got a DVD release, so beggars can't be choosers.
In any case, as other reviewers have noted, the movie is atmospheric, has some nice B&W cinematography, and an effective, understated score. Unfortunately the heroic act of Edward Judd toward the end relies on a very weird stroke of luck, which is reflects the unevenness of the script, which is fine in parts but nonsensical in other parts. (Funnily, Judd is just as grim and sweaty in Invasion as he was in The Day the Earth Caught Fire, a far superior movie from a few years earlier.)
Being a fan of 1950s and '60s British sci-fi, it was very much worth the money. While I can't see myself watching it repeatedly the way I do classics like Village of the Damned, Day the Earth Caught Fire, and the Quatermass productions, it is worth tracking down if you like the particular temperament of the classical era of Brit sci-fi.
Fyi: I couldn't find this movie streaming anywhere so I bought a region 2 DVD for 12 bucks, including shipping, from Amazon. It's the Studiocanal edition. (I've included a few photos so you can make sure you're ordering the addition you want to order or so if you get the wrong version you can justifiably return it.) The picture is properly letterboxed at 1:66, which was the standard UK aspect ratio of the time. The picture is surprisingly good, with no blurring of grays and blacks, sharp lines between tones, with the blacks being surprisingly deep. The DVD includes a trailer, which, oddly, is narrated by the guy with an American accent, as well as the smallest photo gallery I've ever seen on a DVD, maybe six or seven pictures. Frankly, it's amazing this movie got a DVD release, so beggars can't be choosers.
I have seen Invasion a couple of times and found it rather eerie. I taped it when it came on Channel 4 during the early hours.
A spaceship crashes near a rural, English hospital and its occupant, who looks human, is taken there to be treated after being run over by a car. Just after, a force field appears around the hospital, obviously something to do with the aliens. The army are called in to help to investigate. Strange things then start happening in the surrounding countryside as two mysterious Chinese looking women kill a man and head for the hospital. These are more aliens. They are searching for their colleague. They find him and they head back to their home planet in a flying saucer.
This is a well shot, British sci fi and must one of the last to be shot in black and white.
The only actors I am familiar with in this movie are sci fi regular Edward Judd (Island Of Terror, First Men In the Moon) and Barrie Ingham (Dr Who And the Daleks).
This movie is worth a look if you get the chance, but it does not seem to be available on VHS or DVD anywhere.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
A spaceship crashes near a rural, English hospital and its occupant, who looks human, is taken there to be treated after being run over by a car. Just after, a force field appears around the hospital, obviously something to do with the aliens. The army are called in to help to investigate. Strange things then start happening in the surrounding countryside as two mysterious Chinese looking women kill a man and head for the hospital. These are more aliens. They are searching for their colleague. They find him and they head back to their home planet in a flying saucer.
This is a well shot, British sci fi and must one of the last to be shot in black and white.
The only actors I am familiar with in this movie are sci fi regular Edward Judd (Island Of Terror, First Men In the Moon) and Barrie Ingham (Dr Who And the Daleks).
This movie is worth a look if you get the chance, but it does not seem to be available on VHS or DVD anywhere.
Rating: 3 stars out of 5.
This film had a kind of haunting effect on me for over 25 years.
There is a scene in it where a man (later to be realised a doctor) drives his car away from a building in a manic fashion, trying to get away from something, and crashes, he stops dead, literally dead as his car hits an invisible barrier. Then other people come out of the building and comment on how it's their turn next etc. You know that moment in time has come back to me on a number of occasions through life and until last year I didn't have the faintest idea what film it came from. Then one night I stayed up until the early hours - the vegetable slot - and started watching this Very Low Budget but Very Intriguing film. Good lord, it must have been put together for a few shillings in the old money but HEY was it watchable. And then this same scene came up and it was like a sheer relief that a question that went unanswered for so long was finally solved.
If you get the chance, see this film. Don't expect Hollywood budgets or special effects 'cos they're not present - what you will see is the kind of solid acting and credible performances that only come from a cast who take pride in what they are doing; committing something to celluloid for the benefit of others and something sadly lacking nowadays - real movie art.
Not a masterpiece but certainly very worthy.
There is a scene in it where a man (later to be realised a doctor) drives his car away from a building in a manic fashion, trying to get away from something, and crashes, he stops dead, literally dead as his car hits an invisible barrier. Then other people come out of the building and comment on how it's their turn next etc. You know that moment in time has come back to me on a number of occasions through life and until last year I didn't have the faintest idea what film it came from. Then one night I stayed up until the early hours - the vegetable slot - and started watching this Very Low Budget but Very Intriguing film. Good lord, it must have been put together for a few shillings in the old money but HEY was it watchable. And then this same scene came up and it was like a sheer relief that a question that went unanswered for so long was finally solved.
If you get the chance, see this film. Don't expect Hollywood budgets or special effects 'cos they're not present - what you will see is the kind of solid acting and credible performances that only come from a cast who take pride in what they are doing; committing something to celluloid for the benefit of others and something sadly lacking nowadays - real movie art.
Not a masterpiece but certainly very worthy.
This is one of a cycle of low-key British Sci-Fi movies of the early to mid 1960s (see also UNEARTHLY STRANGER, NIGHT CALLER FROM OUTER SPACE and NIGHT OF THE EAGLE for other examples) which are technically unspectacular, but which establish and maintain an effectively eerie atmosphere. Its setting is a remote hospital under siege by humanoid aliens whose motives are initially unknown. The morning after I first saw it (on TV in the middle of the night), I thought I had dreamt it. An unheralded gem.
Made with a shoestring budget ,without stars (at least unknown to me),with very few special effects (Ed Wood style),the story takes place in a hospital where an E.T. (who looks like an Asian person)is cured.We learn he was actually a prisoner and that pretty soon,"the others" are going to take him away.An invisible wall -which is very economical in the end!-surrounds the clinic and the temperature rises and makes the staff sweat.
Shot in black and white ,it is a curious little film ,more MTV style than a flick for movie theaters.An Asian nurse has been added for good measure.
Shot in black and white ,it is a curious little film ,more MTV style than a flick for movie theaters.An Asian nurse has been added for good measure.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWriter Robert Holmes later reused elements of this story in the first Jon Pertwee Doctor Who (1963) story, Spearhead from Space: Episode 1 (1970). Like this film, it was initially set in a remote English cottage hospital complete with a mysterious and unconscious alien stranger, puzzled doctors, an army patrol, and lurking alien forces in the nearby woods.
- BlooperWhen Mr. Carter is thrown through the windshield of his car, nobody bothers to check if he might still be alive.
- Versioni alternativeThe print broadcast by Talking Pictures TV in 2018 sees the cover of "The G-String Murders" (the 1941 novel ostensibly written by Gypsy Rose Lee) blurred out when Lloyd shows it to Major Muncaster in the radar truck.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Invasion (1971)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Eisvoli apo to diastima
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Merton Park Studios, Merton, Londra, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(studio: made at Merton Park Studios London England)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 22min(82 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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