The Earth Dies Screaming

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The Earth Dies Screaming
"The Earth Dies Screaming" (1965).jpg
Directed byTerence Fisher
Written byHarry Spalding (as Henry Cross)
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyArthur Lavis
Edited byRobert Winter
Music byElisabeth Lutyens
Production
company
Lippert Films
Distributed byTwentieth Century Fox
Release date
  • 14 October 1964 (1964-10-14)
Running time
62 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom[1]
LanguageEnglish

The Earth Dies Screaming is a 1964[1] British science fiction film directed by Terence Fisher, and starring Willard Parker, Virginia Field and Dennis Price.[2][3]

Plot[]

Human bodies are scattered around an English village, apparently dead in a sudden cataclysm. A small group of survivors gather in the local hotel bar, led by an American jet test pilot, Jeff Nolan. It appears a mysterious gas attack has killed off most of the Earth's population. Figures in space suits appear in the streets; Vi Courtland thinks they have come to rescue them but they turn and kill her with their touch. Several of these bulletproof killers stalk the streets. The remaining group goes to a local Territorial Army drill hall to look for weapons. The group arm themselves and struggle for survival against the invaders in the first step in an alien invasion.

Vi rises from her death bed as a zombie with white eyes. Quinn Taggart shoots and kills her.

Quinn knocks out Jeff and heads north with Peggy Hatton in a sports car. She runs off when he stops for petrol. She gets trapped in a house pursued by invaders and zombies, and she hides in a wardrobe. She then runs outside and is saved by Jeff who is looking for her. He runs down a space suited creature in his Land Rover, revealing it is a robot. They go back to the drill hall where young Lorna Brenard is about to give birth to a daughter. Meanwhile Ed Otis cannot face it and is drinking anything alcoholic he can find.

Jeff and Mel Brenard use a short wave radio and triangulation to work out from where the aliens are transmitting their control signals to the robots. They locate the transmitter tower and are going to blow it up when robots start to appear. However, when the tower is destroyed the robots collapse.

Quinn returns to the village as a zombie and Otis shoots him, saving Peggy.

The survivors commandeer a plane and fly south in search of other survivors.

Production[]

Harry Spalding says someone said the title "as a joke" and "somehow it kind of stuck", and he always hated the title.[4]

The film was shot in black and white at Shepperton Studios in London. Location filming was done at the village of Shere in Surrey. It was one of several 1960s British horror films to be scored by the avant-garde Elisabeth Lutyens, whose father, Edwin Lutyens, designed in Shere, a small property which features prominently at several points in the film.[citation needed]

Cast[]

Reviews[]

Wheeler Winston Dixon wrote about the film's use of silence:

"... it's remarkable to note that in a 62 minute film, the first five to six minutes have conveyed Fisher’s vision of the end of civilization entirely through a dispassionate series of images ... Much of the film, involving the pursuit of the living by the dead, is done entirely through gesture...

— Wheeler Winston Dixon in 2014.[5]

Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle cited the film as "an obvious precursor to Night of the Living Dead."[6]

In popular culture[]

The Earth Dies Screaming was used in 1983 as the inspiration and title for an Atari 2600 video game released by Fox Video Games, a division of 20th Century Fox. The game is set in space, and involves shooting down satellites and fighter ships.[7]

The British band UB40 released a single, "The Earth Dies Screaming" (catalogue: Graduate GRAD 10), in 1980, which spent 12 weeks in the UK chart, peaking at number 10.[8]

The first track on Tom Waits' 1992 album Bone Machine is entitled "Earth Died Screaming."

Home Media[]

The film was released on Region 1 DVD on 11 September 2007, and on Region 2 DVD on 29 August 2011.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "The Earth Dies Screaming (1964)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  2. ^ John Hamilton, The British Independent Horror Film 1951-70 Hemlock Books 2013 p 129-132
  3. ^ "EARTH DIES SCREAMING, The". Monthly Film Bulletin. London. 32 (372): 150. 1 January 1965. ProQuest 1305820393.
  4. ^ Weaver, Tom (19 February 2003). Double Feature Creature Attack: A Monster Merger of Two More Volumes of Classic Interviews. McFarland. p. 333. ISBN 9780786482153.
  5. ^ Wheeler Winston Dixon, October 31st, 2014, Film International, “Turn It Off!” – Sound and Silence in 1960s British Gothic Cinema, Retrieved 1 November 2014
  6. ^ Dendle, Peter (2001). The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia. McFarland & Company. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-7864-9288-6.
  7. ^ "The Earth Dies Screaming". Moby Games. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  8. ^ Rice, Tim; Gambaccini, Paul; Rice, Jonathan (1995). British Hit Singles, 10th edition. Enfield: Guinness Publishing. p. 320. ISBN 0-85112-633-2.

External links[]

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