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Pas de cette Terre

Original title: Not of This Earth
  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 7m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Beverly Garland in Pas de cette Terre (1957)
An alien agent from the distant planet Davana is sent to Earth via a high-tech matter transporter. There, he terrorizes Southern California in an attempt to acquire blood for his dying race, the result of a devastating nuclear war.
Play trailer1:29
1 Video
41 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

An alien agent from the distant planet Davana is sent to Earth via a high-tech matter transporter. There, he terrorizes Southern California in an attempt to acquire blood for his dying race,... Read allAn alien agent from the distant planet Davana is sent to Earth via a high-tech matter transporter. There, he terrorizes Southern California in an attempt to acquire blood for his dying race, the result of a devastating nuclear war.An alien agent from the distant planet Davana is sent to Earth via a high-tech matter transporter. There, he terrorizes Southern California in an attempt to acquire blood for his dying race, the result of a devastating nuclear war.

  • Director
    • Roger Corman
  • Writers
    • Charles B. Griffith
    • Mark Hanna
  • Stars
    • Paul Birch
    • Beverly Garland
    • Morgan Jones
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Corman
    • Writers
      • Charles B. Griffith
      • Mark Hanna
    • Stars
      • Paul Birch
      • Beverly Garland
      • Morgan Jones
    • 72User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:29
    Trailer

    Photos41

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Paul Birch
    Paul Birch
    • Paul Johnson
    Beverly Garland
    Beverly Garland
    • Nadine Storey
    Morgan Jones
    Morgan Jones
    • Harry Sherbourne
    William Roerick
    • Dr. F.W. Rochelle
    Jonathan Haze
    Jonathan Haze
    • Jeremy Perrin
    Dick Miller
    Dick Miller
    • Joe Piper
    • (as Richard Miller)
    Anna Lee Carroll
    Anna Lee Carroll
    • Davanna Woman
    • (as Anne Carroll)
    Pat Flynn
    • Simmons
    Barbara Bohrer
    • Waitress
    Roy Engel
    Roy Engel
    • Sgt. Walton
    Tamar Cooper
    • Joanne
    Harold Fong
    • Speciman
    Lyle Latell
    Lyle Latell
    • Paul Johnson (some scenes)
    Gail Ganley
    • Girl
    Ralph Reed
    Ralph Reed
    • Boy
    Jan Boleslavsky
    • Davanna Contact (face in the Davanna transporter)
    • (uncredited)
    John Clark
    • Man
    • (uncredited)
    Tom Graeff
    • Car Park Attendant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Roger Corman
    • Writers
      • Charles B. Griffith
      • Mark Hanna
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews72

    6.12.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Dethcharm

    "Don't Be A Drag! You Know How You Flip Me!"...

    Roger Corman's NOT OF THIS EARTH is a memorable story about extraterrestrial vampirism.

    Paul Johnson (Paul Birch) is a rather odd gentleman, in his dark suit, hat, and thick sunglasses. His speech pattern is different as well, sort of artificial sounding. He's also in search of warm bodies, in order to relieve them of their blood! Police are baffled by the gruesome state of his victims. We quickly learn the reason why Johnson has come to Earth from his home planet. Suffice it to say that it doesn't look good for the humans!

    Johnson hires Nurse Nadine Storey (Beverly Garland) to see to his rather bizarre medical needs. Can Nadine figure out what Johnson is up to, before he fulfills his murderous mission?

    Original and creepy, this is one of Corman's best efforts, owing much to Ms. Garland's perfect portrayal and Birch's memorable performance.

    EXTRA CREDIT: For Jonathan Haze (LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS) as Birch's lecherous chauffeur / henchman, Jeremy. Watch for Dick Miller as the pushy vacuum cleaner salesman!

    Low-budget sci-fi gold!...
    dougdoepke

    Arguably Corman's Best Sci-Fi

    A human-like alien leaves his dying planet to secure earthling blood that his planet needs.

    Too bad Corman didn't dump that flying lampshade that apparently sucks the doc's blood. Because that's really the only cheezy element of this otherwise effective monster flick. It's arguably Corman's best. Birch is pretty scary with his deadpan face and perfectly parsed diction. Just don't ask him to take off his glasses. Then too, I wonder what he puts down as eye color. Plus I would give dear Beverly Garland a drive-in Oscar for her sparkly portrayal of nurse Storey. It's a performance far and above the call of a paycheck.

    Yes indeed, what I remember from my first viewing decades ago is Dick Miller's vacuum salesman. He's so pesky and obnoxious, horns honked all over the drive-in when he got his. And what about the teen-age cutie who opens the film, even if she doesn't stick around. Too bad. Anyway, Corman sure knew his audience since we boys were hooked right then. Nonetheless, for the less hormonally minded, there's a message in the alien madness-- better watch out earthlings, nuclear war can cause a calamity that only a steady stream of blood can help.

    Okay, so the movie's not exactly Oscar bait. Nonetheless, it's got a better-than-usual Corman script, plus good location staging that keep the usual hokey sets to a minimum. Yes indeed, it's still fun to track the Darvana alien, and maybe honk your horn when Miller gets his.
    reptilicus

    Bizarre! But when was Roger Corman anything else?

    You have to hand it to Roger Corman, he could not only stretch a dollar but our imaginations as well. In this one he put character actor Paul Birch in a black suit, stark white contact lenses and sunglasses. He's playing a blind man, right? Wrong! He's playing a space alien and if you look at his pupil-less eyes your brain burns right in your skull (could this be where David Cronenberg got the idea for SCANNERS?). Anyway, Birch has come to our world looking for blood. His own planet is worn out due to years of atomic war and only the uncontaminated blood of Earth people can save what is left of his race. Birch's superior intellect has made him extremely arrogant (he refers to Earthlings as "subhuman") yet his unfamiliarity with the simplest things on this world continually attracts attention to himself. He makes no attempt to cover his many killings, leaving bodies where they can easily be discovered. His contempt for Earth and its people mirrors that of THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD who brutally knocked Dr. Carrington aside when he dared to compare his feeble Earth brain to that of the alien. Also in the cast are Beverly Garland as the nurse who knows her patient is unusual but does not realise how much. Jonathan Haze as the former petty crook who is his chauffeur (Haze's last line is a classic!). Morgan Jones, the former "Green Hornet" in the 1940 Universal serial, is the cop in love with Garland who labels Birch "a creep"; and Dick Miller is a vacuum cleaner salesman who deserves some sort of award for using the word "purchase" the most times in a single sentence. Oh yes, there is a monster too, sort of. A briefly seen what-is-it designed by Paul Blaisdell that looks like an inverted umbrella. It kills the one person on Earth who knows who and what Birch really is and then (apparently) dies. Talk about thrifty, that isn't blood at the end of that scene, the actor who appears to have his head crushed by the monster just had a mouth full of grape juice and spit it out at the right moment. Roger has remade this film twice (what, will he keep doing it until he gets it right?) but the original is still the most fun.
    6info-996-828544

    I watched this X cert aged 7.

    I first saw this film in 1959 as a 7 year old while on holiday in Ireland. I remember feeling very scared watching it. It was part of a double bill with "The Attack of the Crab Monsters", another equally scary film for a child of such tender years. Both were rated "X certificate" by the UK censor.

    The reason for my review is that I've just watched a doc on TV which deals with censorship in Ireland from 1923 to 1980 and one of the films discussed was "Casablanca", which in my opinion is the greatest film ever made. Though released in 1942, it was not shown until 1945. In those days, Ireland only had one certification, and any film that had content that was deemed "offensive", had to be cut, or was denied a certificate. The offending bit in this case was the portrayal of the Germans, quite rightly, as the villains.

    At that time, they were treading a path of strict neutrality and they did not want to show the film in case it led to an anti-German backlash. To give some idea of how rigidly they stuck to this policy, when Hitler committed suicide, the then Irish Prime Minister, Eamonn De Valera, signed the book of condolence at the Germany Embassy in Dublin after Hitler's death

    But I digress. Thinking about Irish censorship compared to the UK version and remembering how scared I was watching this X cert double bill, I wonder how scary the uncensored version must have been?

    In case anyone is unaware, the film is considered a "Cold War allegory" with the invaders from Davanna representing an attempt by the Russians to take over the world.
    march9hare

    look me in the eye

    Evil, blood-sucking alien (like there's another kind in Corman's universe?) Paul Birch is draining the citizenry of L.A. to save not only himself but the dying planet Davanna in this creepy Corman classic. When nurse Bev Garland and her not-too-imaginative cop boyfriend discover what Birch is up to, the fun really gets going: foot chases, car chases, fiery crashes - in short, the works. Even though there's something for almost everybody in this little gem (except spaceships; sorry, all you hardware freaks), "Not of this Earth" remains one of the very few Corman films that has never been released on either VHS or DVD. Supposedly, the reason for this is that Corman himself wasn't satisfied with the finished product; hence, at least two remakes, or, three if you count the stupendously awful "Star Portal." As is typical in Corman films, the budget was very tiny; so tiny, in fact, that the only piece of the original, lavish "dimensional warp chamber" to survive fiscal reality was the multi-orbed thingamajig at the very top of the otherwise spartan black chamber. Too bad. The word is that the original design by Paul Blaisdell was pretty impressive. Well, for a low-budget B/W 1957 thriller, anyway. So, while a lot of money does not necessarily a hit film make (witness "Alexander"), it doesn't really hurt, either. Bottom line: don't pay too much attention to the, er, lean FX, such as the deadly lampshade bug. The story isn't bad, the acting is, for the most part, okay (although the three bums are laughable), and you actually feel some pity toward the end for Birch and his ilk. If you can find this one, go for it. Believe us, there's A LOT worse out there

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Paul Birch walked off the film before shooting was completed after having a physical confrontation with Roger Corman. He was quoted as saying, "I am an actor, and I don't need this stuff... To hell with it all! Goodbye!" According to co-star Beverly Garland, Birch objected to the fast pace of the film, the old-fashioned, uncomfortable hard plastic contacts he had to wear, and the film's low budget, which he considered beneath his status. As a result, Birch's remaining scenes were shot with Lyle Latell doubling for Birch.
    • Goofs
      When Johnson is being chased by the motorcycle cop, the siren comes on momentarily and then goes off several scenes before it finally comes on to cause the crash.
    • Quotes

      Paul Johnson: In the place from which I come, no person would dare sleep in insecure quarters.

    • Connections
      Featured in 100 Years of Horror: Scream Queens (1996)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 10, 1957 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le vampire de New York
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood Receiving Hospital, 1350 Wilcox Avenue, Los Angeles, California, USA(hospital location, now a parking lot)
    • Production company
      • Los Altos Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $100,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 7m(67 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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