Ignite Films: Invaders from Mars (1953) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Ignite Films
American film production designer, art director and occasional film director William Cameron Menzies who dabbled in everything from directing the burning-of-Atlanta sequence for Gone with the Wind to reshooting portions of the Salvador Dali sequence in Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbound, was no stranger to science-fiction/fantasy filmmaking.  From his gargantuan 1936 visionary H.G. Wells supervised sci-fi epic Things to Come to his 1953 independently made sci-fi horror thriller Invaders from Mars, Menzies though more of a film worker than an auteur created two of the most visually innovative and iconic examples of fantasy filmmaking yet attempted at the time.

 
A deceptively simple but steadily frightening story of a young boy David MacLean (Jimmy Hunt) who sees a neon-lit green flying saucer landing in his backyard, the son alerts his father to the scene who goes to investigate.  Many hours later David’s father returns with some sort of surgical marking on the back of his neck and his personality has changed from friendly and personable to hostile and domineering.  Gradually more and more people of the neighborhood start exhibiting the same peculiar characteristics and the boy finds himself on the run from both of his parents with only Dr. Pat Blake (Helena Carter in her final film role) believing in his otherwise insane story.  Meeting up with astronomer Dr. Stuart Kelston (Arthur Franz), they conclude the strange phenomenon are the beginning of a full-scale invasion from Mars, prompting a military battle ala Byron Haskin’s film of The War of the Worlds between man and extraterrestrial.
 
Despite being made independently on a low budget, Menzies’ film based on a screenplay by Richard Blake and inspired by a story told by John Tucker Battle’s wife involving dreams of alien conquest, Invaders from Mars is mostly remembered as that other space alien film that was desperately trying to beat the aforementioned The War of the Worlds of the same year to the finish line.  While Invaders from Mars did indeed make it there first with its striking experimental SuperCinecolor theatrical printing process that enhanced colors in the same way nitrate illuminated early black-and-white films, its legacy is overshadowed by the much more expensive and polished The War of the Worlds.
 
For being tightly budgeted however, the film nevertheless makes use of spectacular visual design from the Norman Rockwell Americana to a surreal use of gold-green colors including a recurring vista of a bright green saucer shaped craft burrowing underground.  Also present are the director’s trademark Dutch angled bird’s eye view shots looking down from atop alien machinery slowly creeping down to surgically alter the minds of their human hosts.  But even when it isn’t swimming in alien spacecraft replete with tall green aliens with lasers running around tunnels back and forth, the film takes a surrealist look at locations we take for granted such as a police station with an opacity and sterility that feels more like dream than reality. 

 
Brilliantly photographed by John F. Seitz, best known for his work on Billy Wilder’s Double Indemnity, The Lost Weekend and Sunset Boulevard, Invaders from Mars is, in fully restored 4K form by the independent distributor Ignite Films, really very visually striking.  While mostly shot in the open outdoors and interiors of the household interspersed with stock military footage of tanks firing and convoying, when it finds its way into the alien ship with a strange orb-like tentacled being in gold makeup being carefully guarded by taller green aliens it has a glisten and glitter most neon drenched filmmakers today would be drooling over. 
 
Then there’s the score by Raoul Kraushaar, best known for his work in television for The Abbott and Costello Show and Lassie.  Serving up a hair-raising score that ranges from subtly unnerving to shrill brass screeches in addition to an eerie chorus of voices some would say forecasted the use of Gyorgy Ligeti’s Requiem famously played during the shrieking monolith sequences in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.  While used as diegetic sound taking place in the movie, it nevertheless was a peculiar if not ethereal, haunted sound of dissonant disembodied voices howling away. 
 
The ensemble cast of Arthur Franz, Helena Carter and Jimmy Hunt is splendid with most of the film’s weight resting solely on the shoulders of its plucky child hero David.  While the film is populated by adults, Invaders from Mars is primarily focused on the child sensing something terrible is happening to the adults all around him.  Much of the film looks directly at his face with green lighting shining on him suggesting the magnitude of what he's seeing and the sense of fear and desperation he exudes is palpable.  Plus when he says that famous line “Gee whiz!”, you know you’re in a very special particular time and place in sci-fi lore.
 
Upon release of the film, critics initially wrote it off as a good yarn for kids while others charged the film was too frightening for youngsters but all agreed upon the gloss and color of the imagery.  However, in the years since the film’s stature has only grown with filmmakers such as Don Coscarelli citing Invaders from Mars as influential on his iconic cult horror hit Phantasm with respect to a child actor running around in a horror world intended for adult viewership.  Then in 1986, Cannon Films greenlit a remake directed by Tobe Hooper (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre), penned by Dan O’Bannon (Alien) with visual effects by Stan Winston (Aliens) and John Dykstra (Star Wars) that is despite the negative reception startlingly close to the original Menzies film.  Strangely however, the original 1953 Invaders from Mars was hard to come by.

 
That wrong has been righted however by independent distributor Ignite Films who, in conjunction with the George Eastman Museum and the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, have released a 4K restoration of the film available on both blu-ray disc and 4K UHD disc in a limited collector’s edition many home theater buffs are already calling “the number one 4K disc of 2023”.  For audiences who have never seen the film or only know of the Tobe Hooper remake, they’re in for a most special treat of one of the best top-to-bottom film restorations in recent memory.  Though expensive and only available online through Ignite Films’ website, their disc of Invaders from Mars marks an incredible opening to what will hopefully be a fruitful year of film restorations made available in lovingly rendered boutique special editions.  Bravo!

--Andrew Kotwicki