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IMDbPro

Les Envahisseurs de la planète rouge

Original title: Invaders from Mars
  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
9.9K
YOUR RATING
Helena Carter, Arthur Franz, and Jimmy Hunt in Les Envahisseurs de la planète rouge (1953)
A young boy learns that space aliens are taking over the minds of earthlings.
Play trailer2:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
Alien InvasionHorrorSci-Fi

A young boy learns that space aliens are taking over the minds of earthlings.A young boy learns that space aliens are taking over the minds of earthlings.A young boy learns that space aliens are taking over the minds of earthlings.

  • Director
    • William Cameron Menzies
  • Writers
    • Richard Blake
    • John Tucker Battle
  • Stars
    • Helena Carter
    • Arthur Franz
    • Jimmy Hunt
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    9.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Cameron Menzies
    • Writers
      • Richard Blake
      • John Tucker Battle
    • Stars
      • Helena Carter
      • Arthur Franz
      • Jimmy Hunt
    • 169User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    Trailer

    Photos138

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    + 132
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    Top cast35

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    Helena Carter
    Helena Carter
    • Dr. Pat Blake
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Dr. Stuart Kelston…
    Jimmy Hunt
    Jimmy Hunt
    • David MacLean
    Leif Erickson
    Leif Erickson
    • Mr. George MacLean
    Hillary Brooke
    Hillary Brooke
    • Mrs. Mary MacLean
    Morris Ankrum
    Morris Ankrum
    • Col. Fielding
    Max Wagner
    Max Wagner
    • Sgt. Rinaldi
    William Phipps
    William Phipps
    • Sgt. Baker
    • (as Bill Phipps)
    Milburn Stone
    Milburn Stone
    • Capt. Roth
    Janine Perreau
    Janine Perreau
    • Kathy Wilson
    Fay Baker
    Fay Baker
    • Mrs. Wilson
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Billingsley
    Barbara Billingsley
    • Kelston's Secretary
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Brocco
    Peter Brocco
    • Brainard - Wilson's Aide
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Cane
    Charles Cane
    • Old Cop Blaine Who Vanishes
    • (uncredited)
    Tommy Cottonaro
    • Mutant
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Deacon
    Richard Deacon
    • MP
    • (uncredited)
    Pete Dunn
    Pete Dunn
    • Mutant
    • (uncredited)
    John Eldredge
    John Eldredge
    • Mr. Turner
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Cameron Menzies
    • Writers
      • Richard Blake
      • John Tucker Battle
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews169

    6.39.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7robert3750

    Unforgettable memory from my childhood

    One of the most memorable SF films from the 50s. For anyone who was a kid in the 50s or 60s, just say "the movie where people are sucked into the sand", and everyone instantly knows which movie you mean. Those scenes are unforgettable, as are the scenes of the Martian Intelligence, and the image of the nurse about to receive the mind control device. And that haunting, otherworldly choral sound! Probably the most brilliantly eerie vocal sound ever made for a movie. Unfortunately, many people won't be able to look past the low budget 50s production values, but there's some great work here. William Cameron Menzies was a genius at production design. Check out the nightmarish forced perspective of the path leading to the sand pit, and the police station. A must see.
    7ma-cortes

    Sci-Fi cheapy semi-classic in which a young boy attempts to stop an Alien invasion who take over the minds of the townspeople

    Acceptable , estimable and well-made science-fiction/suspense/thriller in which a kid and military are confronted by an alien invasion . This film , nowadays , has achieved cult stature and with the passing of the years has attained rave reviews . A boy named David MacLean (Jimmy Hunt) tries to stop aliens that came from above and attack from below . As the aliens have taken over his town and are attempting to brainwash its inhabitants . As his parents (Hilary Brooke , Leif Erickson) are zapped by the weird and diabolic creatures . He can't convince the townspeople of this invasion because they've already possessed by the outer beings . As the people fall into a sandpit where martian slaves carry on their fiendish work guided by a malicious mastermind . As David is only helped by Dr. Stuart Kelston (Arthur Franz , also narrator) and the sympathetic Dr. Pat Blake (Helena Carter) . Later on , the boy enlists the aid of Col. Fielding (Morris Ankrum) and his U.S. Marines . The soldiers go under the surface where the Marines encounter extraterrestrials in the tunnels , leading to the powerful alien leader .

    The earlier first version loosely based on a story by John Battle results to be a potent lesson how to direct a film in low budget and it holds a subtle but efficient intrigue . Gradual as well as notable built-up suspense is quite superb as when the aliens are shown largely at the ending and to create a real menace . This exciting film packs chills , thrills , guessing , paranoia , absence of all characterization and spectacular FX by that time , though today dated . In fact , the sandpit opening and closing was done by cutting a long slit in a piece of heavy canvas and inserting a large funnel . And including stock footage , as it shows tanks being loaded onto train flatcars that were actually WW2 M10 tank destroyers and by the time of this film were superseded by newer models . Chilling tale of an alien invasion , this is a nice thriller/SciFi in its own right , dealing with a saucer descends on earth and takes over human beings when they fall into a sandpit . The story is told from the view point of a kid , including a surprising and unexpected finale . Several actors performed the slaves , working in shifts , which meant each performer who did the "walking" for a Martian needed his own custom-made footwear . It is one of the best of the Cold War allegories and a lot of filmmakers cited the movie as a key , influential film in their lives . Colorful cinematography by John Seitz in garish Cinecolor that gives the movie a distinctive , almost muddy look appropriate in particular to the strange underground atmosphere . This motion picture (1953) was well directed by William Cameron Menzies who shows real skill in the way that everyday things are made to carry a sense of menace . Cameron was one of the best production designers of film history and directed a few movies , such as : ¨The Maze¨ , ¨The Whip Hand¨ , ¨Drums in the Deep South¨ ,¨The Green Cockatoo¨ , ¨Thief of Bagdad¨ , and another classic Sci-Fi : ¨Things to come¨ . In ¨Invaders from Mars¨ Menzies provides a punchy suspenseful Sci-Fi in green-and-gold color about some unwelcome aliens . Although it aroused no great attention in its day and despite its commercial and critical failure , it has become a cult classic .

    This oddball vintage 50s SF tale is remade 33 years later with similar plot , as a Martian invasion perceived only by one young boy , being directed by Tobe Hooper again with Jimmy Hunt , who played young David MacLean in the original and the police chief in this remake , and Hunter Carson who is the real life son of Karen Black who plays a hysterical school nurse , Timothy Bottoms , Laraine Newman , James Karen , Bud Cort , Louise Fletcher , Eric Pierpoint . This second high-tech outing pays homage to the first retelling but being really inferior to precedent .
    7Leofwine_draca

    Childhood favourite

    This one scared the hell out of me when I first saw it as a kid; I remember them showing it in the evening on BBC2 back in the 1980s. Looks like a lot of other reviewers were similarly traumatised. Watching it now, as an adult, it's easy to laugh at what is a shoddy, low budget production. Scenes are repeated, special effects are wobbly to say the least, the aliens are silly rather than menacing, and the paucity of the production is apparent in every respect.

    And yet...there's something oddly menacing about this film. It's partly the Cold War paranoia-inspired plot about nice, ordinary people being taken over by a sinister foreign menace. Interestingly, this is the earliest version I've seen on that theme, predating INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS by a couple of years. The paranoia is cloying and really raises the hackles, even as an adult, and even allowing for the cheesy over-acting of the child star.

    The more overt aspects of the story, which take place towards the climax, are also profound, and in this case the imaginative nature of the production outweighs the budgetary constraints. That alien leader, little more than a head in a goldfish bowl, is oddly disturbing and an image that's stayed with me for my whole life. It's easy to forgive the problems in a film like INVADERS FROM MARS when it contains such classic, timeless material and I do think this is one of those '50s-era B-movie alien invasion classics.
    bonepilot

    A gem in the rough

    Invaders From Mars is, arguably, a cult classic. William Cameron Menzies, of "Gone With The Wind" and "The Thief of Baghdad" and "Things to Come" fame puts his artistic expertise to work in creating a world of impending doom, seen through the eyes of an 11 year old boy.

    It is because of this point-of-view that lends a nightmarish quality to a struggle this boy encounters when he tries to convince the authorities that a spaceship landed in a sandpit behind his house.

    The sense of "something's not right" with Mom and Dad starts as the boy's parents are sucked below the sandpit into the evil arms of the Martians, made into zombie-spies, and returned to the surface. The boy's fear mounts when local police and even high-ranking military fall prey to the Martians' mind control.

    Through the assistance of a well trusted astrophysicist and a school psychologist the boy convinces the local Army base to make a beach head in the boy's back yard... and the battle to return the boy's parents and the villagers to normalcy begins. Eventually, the boy and the psychologist confront the Martian intelligence (midget Luce Potter as a convincing body-less head with tentacle-like arms in a glass sphere). In a poor "race against time" sequence in which the little boy and psychologist are rescued from the spaceship before it blows up, the film reaches its climax to the cacophonous din of artillery explosions, and Raoul Kraushaar's eerie, disharmonious a capella choir.

    Many criticize the poor production values, the over use of stock footage, the idiotic costumes, and the fact that the film had TWO endings (one popularized in Great Britain, one here in U.S.A.).

    Yes, I agree that production and set values were cheap (green condoms to represent molten rock "bubbles" in the tunnels and obvious zippers in the velour-like jump suits of the Martian slaves, to name a few.)

    Nevertheless, Menzies applies forced perspective to his sets, and the skillful use of background mattes to lend an unearthly tone to the scene Remember folks, this is 1953... a time when Communism infiltration and subordination of Mr. and Mrs. Joe America was the chief "fear of the day". There are few other films of that period that deftly portrayed this paranoia so aptly as "Invaders From Mars"

    If one overlooks the "rough" edges of its obviously low budget, one can still appreciate the helplessness, fear and mistrust the little boy develops as his parents and others are turned into "tools of the Martians". Is it truly a nightmare, or did it actually happen? The viewer is left to make that choice.
    jpstax

    Saw it many times as a kid

    This movie scarred the hell out of me back in 1953 (I was 9 years old at the time). However, I don't ever remember seeing the 3D version. In fact, the booklet that came with my new DVD said that the limited number of 3D cameras weren't available for use when IFM was originally made, due to a number of other 3D films being made at the same time. The negative was instead shot on the new single strip Eastman film.

    Anyway, the movie was quite effective in creating a creepy and alien world in which a young boy could escape to on a Saturday afternoon. I enjoyed the story, and really didn't care about the mediocre special effects. In fact, because the story was obviously a dream, the soft focus shots and cheezy effects made it all the more surreal. I might also add that beautiful Helena Carter became my first dream babe! LOL.

    Sorry Bruce Cook (an earlier reviewer), the actor who played David in IFM was named Jimmy Hunt.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In one scene, Dr. Kelston refers to the "Lubbock Lights" and to a "Captain Mantell." These were-real life U.F.O. events that created a nationwide sensation in their day. The photographs shown by Dr. Kelston are actual photographs of the Lubbock Lights that appeared in newspapers and magazines.
    • Goofs
      The same shot of a soldier manning a searchlight on a tower beside the side of a building is used in both the scene at the rocket base of the attempt to blow up the rocket, and (three times) in scenes in the field where the Martians landed: this latter use is particularly ridiculous because there is no such building as is seen behind the light tower in that location.
    • Quotes

      Mary MacLean: [waking up] What is it?

      George MacLean: Well, ah, David says something landed in the field out back. It doesn't make sense, but he seems so convinced.

      Mary MacLean: What do you mean "land"?

      George MacLean: Well, he says he saw a bright light or something. He's not the type of boy that's given to imagining things. After all the work at the plant is secret. And we have orders to report anything unusual. And there have been rumors.

      Mary MacLean: Rumors?

      George MacLean: Oh, Dear, you know I can't talk about it.

    • Alternate versions
      The material added to the planetarium sequence for the British version includes a serious discussion of several American UFO incidents such as the Mantell case. Several UFO models, based on American UFO sightings, are also displayed and discussed.
    • Connections
      Edited into Batman: The Joker's Flying Saucer (1968)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 22, 1953 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • L'invasion vient de Mars
    • Filming locations
      • Palomar Observatory, 35899 Canfield Rd, Palomar Mountain, California, USA(location)
    • Production company
      • Edward L. Alperson Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $290,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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