The Day Mars Invaded Earth

The Day Mars Invaded Earth

Directed by Maury Dexter
Produced by Maury Dexter
Written by Harry Spalding
Starring Kent Taylor
Marie Windsor
William Mims
Music by Richard LaSalle
Cinematography John M. Nickolaus Jr.
Edited by Jodi Copelan
Production
company
Associated Producers, Inc.
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox
Release dates
  • February 14, 1963 (1963-02-14)
Running time
70 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Day Mars Invaded Earth (aka Spaceraid 63) is an independently made 1963 black-and-white CinemaScope science fiction film produced and directed by Maury Dexter that stars Kent Taylor, Marie Windsor, and William Mims. The film was released by Twentieth Century Fox. Dexter later said the film's title came from Associated Producers' Robert L. Lippert and was meant to evoke memories of Fox's 1951 classic The Day the Earth Stood Still.[1]

The film's plot is a cross between George Pal's The War of the Worlds (1953), and Don Siegel's Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), and involves energy-being Martians duplicating a scientist and his family in order to prepare for their invasion of Earth.

Plot

NASA successfully lands a robotic surveyor on Mars. The rover begins to explore, but after just a few minutes it is completely destroyed by what appears to be a high energy surge. At exactly the same instant back at mission control, Dr. Dave Fielding (Kent Taylor), in charge of the project, suddenly feels oddly disconnected and not himself; he shakes it off and then goes to face the crowd of expectant reporters. Right after he leaves, his exact body double is sitting at his desk.

Dave then leaves for a vacation and flies to California to be with his family; they are now staying in the guest house of a lavish mansion belonging to his wife's family. His children, 10 year-old Rocky (Gregg Shank) and teen Judi (Betty Beall), are very happy to see him, but it is very clear that his marriage to Claire (Marie Windsor) is in trouble because of the time he must spend away from his family. At first, the tensions between Dave and Claire make it less obvious that they are seeing their body doubles walking around the estate. Eventually, though, as things turn strange, the whole family suspects something is wrong and pulls together. They soon discover they are trapped, unable to leave the isolated estate due to a malfunctioning main gate.

Dave then encounters his body double in the mansion's main house. The duplicate Dave informs him that Mars is inhabited and that all Martians are beings without any physical bodies, an energy-like intelligence. They traveled to Earth via the Martian probe's high-gain, two-way radio transmitter, destroying the robotic rover in the process. Now on Earth, the Martians plan to replace key humans with duplicates to quash any further Earth missions to Mars. Since Dave's wife and children would likely recognize a duplicate, they had to be replaced, too. Family friend Web (William Mims) comes by later and finally gets the main gate open, but on his way back, the Martian-Dave reduces Web to ash.

Later, Dave and his family get into a car and leave the estate, a duplicate Martian-Web behind the wheel. As they drive past the estate's empty swimming pool, five distinct body shapes of piled ash can be seen on the concrete bottom. The pool's water jets then turn on, slowly washing the ashes away.

Cast

  • Kent Taylor as Dr. David Fielding
  • Marie Windsor as Claire Fielding
  • William Mims as Dr. Web Spencer
  • Betty Beall as Judi Fielding
  • Lowell Brown as Frank Hazard
  • Gregg Shank as Rocky Fielding
  • Henrietta Moore as Mrs. Moore
  • Troy Melton as Police Officer
  • George Riley as Cab Driver

Production

The Day Mars Invaded Earth was shot at the historic Greystone Mansion.[1] Photographed in black-and-white, the film was hampered by low production values.

Reception

Appearing as a second-billed feature with an Elvis Presley programmer, Kissin' Cousins (1964), The Day Mars Invaded Earth was critically reviewed in The New York Times. "This pallid, pint-sized exercise starts out with a scientist and his little family vacationing on a huge California estate after he has supervised a rocket landing on Mars. At least, we're told he has. Then the family begins seeing spots and double images, to spook music. This took 40 minutes, before one viewer came back to earth, retreating. The picture also traditionally wastes one of Hollywood's low-budget queens, the gifted Marie Windsor."[2]

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Weaver 2014, p. 101 "Maury Dexter Interview".
  2. Thompson, Howard. "Review: 'The Day Mars Invaded Earth' (1963)." The New York Times. Retrieved: July 20, 2015.

Bibliography

  • Weaver, Tom. I Talked with a Zombie: Interviews with 23 Veterans of Horror and Sci-Fi Films and Television. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2014. ISBN 978-0-78649-571-9.
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