A glowing meteor falls into a secluded pond into which Mafia hitmen have dumped the body of one of their victims. Students from the local college use the pond for a swimming hole. Then the f... Read allA glowing meteor falls into a secluded pond into which Mafia hitmen have dumped the body of one of their victims. Students from the local college use the pond for a swimming hole. Then the fun begins.A glowing meteor falls into a secluded pond into which Mafia hitmen have dumped the body of one of their victims. Students from the local college use the pond for a swimming hole. Then the fun begins.
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Intergalactic mega-star Wink Roberts headlines this gripping tale of alien vengeance.
Gangsters dump the body of an informant into the world's cleanest swamp. A meteorite splashes into the same swamp, causing the waterlogged man to rise from his watery grave. This all occurs next to the local college.
What could have been a rampaging kill-o-thon is actually pretty dull. The annoying college kids are allowed to survive, while the zombie wanders around, taking out his vengeance only on those who killed him.
Co-stars George Gobel in a nearly lifelike performance as a college professor. Also, watch for a very young Rita Wilson as Debbie...
Gangsters dump the body of an informant into the world's cleanest swamp. A meteorite splashes into the same swamp, causing the waterlogged man to rise from his watery grave. This all occurs next to the local college.
What could have been a rampaging kill-o-thon is actually pretty dull. The annoying college kids are allowed to survive, while the zombie wanders around, taking out his vengeance only on those who killed him.
Co-stars George Gobel in a nearly lifelike performance as a college professor. Also, watch for a very young Rita Wilson as Debbie...
If 1986's "Night of The Creeps" were a parody of a specific movie, it would be this one. Actually this film is considered a bit of a parody itself in that it was made in 1979, but feels much older. Really, it does not feel cutting edge in any way. The characters may be send-ups of more innocent 50's and 60's teens, but it's not done in a clever way. The effect is just that of over-acting and it's all in all a very bad movie. Extremely low body-count as well.
The corpse of a Mafia informant, reanimated by powers from beyond, rises nightly from a watery grave to reek vengeance and recover the source of his bodily resurgence. Sounds like the makings of a good parody of everything from Frankenstein to The Mummy to Night of the Living Dead, huh? Well, yeah, but only a few of the laughs in this wannabe lampoon are intentional. A whole lot more of them are not. No satire on earth could be brought to life from such a slipshod script, spartan sets, and profoundly unstellar performances. George Gobel, who could have made a comedic splash with his signature dry and droll personae, is instead doused in a role as a straight-up pedagogue of a prof who explains what asteroids are and such. Most of the movie's attempts at humor fall with a thud harder than a meteor hitting the moon. Sometimes, though--like an elephant joke--it's the sheer flat unfunniness of these attempts that make them so risible. And this film is full of them. There's no time given to introspection in such an uncerebral offering, so the pace never slows down enough to make the movie dull. Like the turquoise-looking asteroid itself, it's something of a little gem.
This film is pretty cheap and dire, with occasional flashes of fun and a lot of very dark cinematography.
The amazing thing is, I think it's supposed to be funny. There's a scene where the police detective (who believes the kids' story about the monster) says that what they're dealing with is a "Geophysical Gaseous Goon." He helpfully writes this on a blackboard for his bemused subordinate.
He then suggests that they abbreviate it to "GeGaGoo" in order to refer to the creature. Really. Someone wrote that, and someone else filmed it, and everyone thought it was good enough to put in the movie.
I think "Wow" is the appropriate response.
The amazing thing is, I think it's supposed to be funny. There's a scene where the police detective (who believes the kids' story about the monster) says that what they're dealing with is a "Geophysical Gaseous Goon." He helpfully writes this on a blackboard for his bemused subordinate.
He then suggests that they abbreviate it to "GeGaGoo" in order to refer to the creature. Really. Someone wrote that, and someone else filmed it, and everyone thought it was good enough to put in the movie.
I think "Wow" is the appropriate response.
The title alone makes it sound like this movie belongs in the beautiful list of a genuine 1950's Sci-Fi classics, right alongside imaginatively titled stuff like "Earth vs. the Flying Saucers", "War of the Worlds" and "The Day the Earth Stood Still". Many of my fellow reviewers seem to be convinced (and perhaps they are right) that "The Day it Came to Earth" is purely a parody of those legendary milestones, due to the fact this film stars a famous comedian (George Gobel, with whom I'm personally unfamiliar with) and because the script contains so many goofy situations and over-the-top acting performances. Like I said, perhaps they are right, but I still prefer to think that the creators of "The Day it Came to Earth" nevertheless intended to make a bona fide and refreshing Sci-Fi feature in spite of all their budgetary and professional restraints. Thanks to immeasurably successful franchises like "Star Wars" and "Star Trek", the Sci-Fi genre was going through a revival during the late seventies and thus even alien invasion flicks and all possible variants were being unleashed again. The tone and atmosphere of the film are very uneven, to say the least. It starts out quite seriously, with a mafia execution and the subsequent dumping of the body in a remote little lake. Immediately after this, we're treated to cheerful opening sequences showing a collection of college student pictures to the joyous tunes of fifties twist-music! Then, a cheesy meteorite crashes into the little lake and intergalactic radiation causes the mobster's corpse to emerge from the water – heavily disfigured, of course. The ghoulish creep promptly seeks bloody revenge against his assassins, but then strangely enough he returns to his final resting place in the lake. He comes out for a stroll every now and then, but he doesn't commit any gruesome murders anymore and only seems interested in collecting all the little pieces of rock that fell of the meteorite. Meanwhile, two goofy college guys went swimming in the lake and took back pieces of the meteorite to school. It's a tremendous shame that the monster doesn't continue its killing spree, which is why the film becomes boring before it is even halfway, and it's certainly not appreciated by horror fanatics. The male characters are all dimwits, including the police officers that nickname the monster GeGaGoo (short for Geophysical Gaseous Goon), but the two lead girls are cute and can act a lot better than their male colleagues. I think another reviewer already referred to the similar but much more superior 80's Sci-Fi/horror gem "Night of the Creeps". I agree they would make an excellent double-feature.
Did you know
- TriviaCast includes Rita Wilson, wife of Tom Hanks, in her film debut.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Movie Macabre: The Day It Came to Earth (1982)
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- Le jour où il arriva sur la terre
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- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
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- 1.85 : 1
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