IFM was written in 1950 and is one of the foundational movies which painted Mars as the hostile invader planet. IFM's martians invade on a very small scale (better for B-movie budgets). Nonetheless, Menzies puts together a captivating and erie tale which made a lasting impression on audiences and set the bar very high for B-movies. Few have met that standard since.
Quick Plot Synopsis
Young David, son of a rocket program scientist, sees a glowing green saucer land in the sand pits near his house. Soon his parents and other adult authority figures are acting strangely, or zombie-like. David surmises that they martians have taken them over to do their bidding, but no one will believe him. David finally convinces a social worker doctor and her astronomer boyfriend. Soon the military are properly alerted to the martians' subterfuge. Since the secret rocket project is so important, they react strongly. Trainloads of tanks and troops are brought in to surround the sand pits. For awhile, David and Dr. Blake are captured by the martian and his Mutant (pron.: Mew-tant) henchmen. The army breeches the tunnels place explosives aboard the ship. Everyone gets out just in time. David wakes up, as if it were all a dream, but he then sees a green light land in the sand pit, just like it had at the start of his "dream." Was his dream was prophetic?
Why is this movie fun?
Menzies did an amazing job with the limited budget he had. The stage sets have a surreal quality to them. Forced perspectives, angles or exaggerated proportions, such as the police station, keeps the mood edgy. The sets are reminiscent of the "art" sets of Russian Constructivism (Aelita's Mars) and German Expressionism (Metropolis). This is much more art than a B-film usually gets. See how much the sets defy normal proportions.
The effect of people being swallowed up by holes in the sand, accompanied by the atonal chorus is marvelous. The whole possessed-loved-one theme was striking and powerful. It showed up first in the obscure 1951 B-film The Man From Planet X but this film had too little exposure to make a lasting impression. IFM really kicked off the plot device of people being "taken over" by hostile aliens. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) would make this famous, but IFM had it first -- and very effectively.
Cold War Angle
The Russians aren't cited specifically, but the general angst over infiltration and invasion are dominant themes. Another subtle indicator of Cold War angst is the ample quantities of US military footage set with proud martial music. Morris Ankrum, playing Colonel Fielding sums up the American pride in it's military when he sees all the tanks surrounding the sand pit. "Tanks. Is there a more beautiful sight?" This is an upbeat aspect of Cold War feelings.
Notes
Unrealistic? -- Some reviews of IFM harp on unrealistic plot elements, but they usually miss the point of the film. It's told from young David's point of view. Yes, it's another one of those "it's all a dream" tricks, but since it's a 9 year old boy's dream, it would be unrealistic. The possession of David's parents, the police chief, etc. destroy the authority figures which make David's world secure. He's alone to face the frightening world. David finds a pair of ultra-caring surrogate parents in Dr. Blake and Stu. Stu's monologue about the 'theory' that the martians live in mother ships, created semi-human Mutants to serve them, and fear the earth rocket programs as threatening their status quo, is totally bizarre if it were intended as a serious bit of plot dialogue. But, since Stu becomes David's replacement male authority figure, he was expected to have everything all figured out. A boy's idolizing view of authority figures.
Stock Footage -- Many B-films make extensive use of stock footage -- often military footage. IFM is no different, but may have shot it's footage fresh instead of recycling. It's in the same color as the rest of the movie. The scenes of tanks rumbling by, or trucks of troops racing past the camera seem to go on and on, far beyond anything the plot required. Once again, however, keep in mind the perspective of a young boy's dream. All those tanks and troops symbolize the forces of Good preparing to take on the forces of Evil. Wallowing in the good-guys' heroic entrance is a natural.
They're After Our Women -- IFM has a scene of the iconic They're-After-Our-Women type, as it shows on the poster. One of the Mutants carries the unconscious Dr. Blake through the tunnels to the ship. (although she wears white, not red) In keeping with the icon, her suit jacket is torn at the shoulder -- part of the abducted & ravaged element -- even though the Mutants are just baggage handlers with no interest in anything. The image is there deliberately.
Cheap Ending? -- Some people feel cheated with the "dream" ending of IFM, though they may have missed the prophetic angle (or time loop angle). There were actually a two different endings. The American release had its all-a-dream, but then not, ending. The UK distributor didn't like the unresolved (and somewhat depressing) end of the original, so had an alternate ending produced, in which the dream angle was eliminated. The martians are simply destroyed in the end. The earth lives happily ever after. It's interesting that John Tucker Battle's original screenplay was between the two. In Battle's ending, the ship is destroyed but two Mutants and the martian escape through a tunnel and hide in the field until the army leaves. That night, another ship comes down to get them. David sees this and watches them fly away uttering his typical "Gee whiz." This may be what Menzies was striving for. The ship David sees at the end MIGHT have been the 'rescue' ship Battle wrote about, but without supporting scenes to let us know that the martian and mutants escaped, the ending has its prophetic time-repeat quality.
Bottom line? IFM is one of the decade's classics. Anyone making even a brief sampling of 50s sci-fi should include it on their viewing list.





