matrix: the news and media magazine of the british science fiction association
Issue 188
July 2008
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ARCHIVE
- Matrix 187 - Mar 2008

 

 

FEATURES: Best SF Movies Ever!…1950s
1950s by Tom Hunter

So by now anyone still following this round-up of the Best Ever…! Science Fiction films of the past glorious decades since the inception of the BSFA should have built up quite a tidy little DVD collection.

Back at the beginning of this time-traveling trip to the collective memory bank it was my intention to gather together and chart the progress of science fiction media (and here I really think we can still call it sci-fi and get away guilt free) from the 1950s to the present day. While it was beyond the remit of these pieces to insure the inclusion of every film out there, and after all any real fan is sure to have their own definitive list of best-ofs anyway, the idea was rather to provide an emergency pit-stop guide to the genre for those in need of a quick answer to prove the validity, seriousness and spoofiness, of our favourite genre in those all-important pub debates.

And so with no further ado, here for your reading pleasure is our round-up of the Best SF Movies Ever! – 1950s style!


Plan 9 from Outer Space1959, is the reverse of such stellar years as 1982 and 1968, and is nowadays perhaps most memorable for being the year that Plan 9 from Outer Space inflicted itself on an unsuspecting cinema audience.

Entirely inconsequential at the time of its initial release, this film has become a valuable edition to the canon thanks to its director Ed Wood being lauded as the single worst film director of all time. Today it is both a camp classic and an unintentional guide to how not to make science fiction films.

However it is also a warning to science fiction fans of how open our favourite genre is to easy parody and, thanks to people like Tim Burton and Johnny Depp, also now a testament to creative will triumphing over studio by-the-book filmmaking.

the fly
1958
was a classic year for movie monsters with no less than three iconic horrors being unleashed on the world. While Cronenberg’s re-imagining of The Fly is perhaps the superior film, the original remains a highly successful merging of science fiction and horror, and benefits (as all films do) from the screen presence of Vincent Price.

The Blob was another science fictional horror icon of its day but perhaps the most iconic of all was the Attack of the 50ft Woman, a film that continues to resonate today largely on the basis of its amazingly successful marketing rather than the quality of its central premise. Proof indeed that science fiction is never better than when dealing with BIG ideas.



The Incredible Shrinking Man.
1957 also proves that science fiction is well at home on the smaller scale, with the equally iconic The Incredible Shrinking Man. Based on Richard ‘I Am Legend’ Matheson’s original novel, we can only hope that when Hollywood finally gets around to remaking this one too that they don’t choose to cast Will Smith in it (update: since first typing this I’ve heard that this may now be a vehicle for Eddie Murphy’s shrinking screen presence – come back Will Smith we were just kidding!).



1956 transported Shakespeare into space with the still visually stunning Forbidden Planet. This film is an enduring testament to the fact that space exploration and adventure will always be a central pillar of the genre, and that when coupled with a truly imaginative story it can still retain the power to resonate with fans over half a century after its original release.

forbidden planet

Closer to home and our fear of the unknown was given a chillingly human face in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, the classic parable of paranoia and the enemy within. While much modern critical attention rightly focuses on the subtextual fear of the other and the allegorical threat of communism, it’s also worth pointing out that this a well crafted and suspenseful film in its own right and one well worth revisiting even while it continues to rack up its own pod of remakes.

Invasion of the Body Snatchers



1955
was the year of The Quatermass Experiment, Hammer studio’s first full venture into the horror genre and unquestionably one of the best British science fiction films of the decade.

The Quatermass Experiment

Them!



1954
was another classic monster year, especially if you liked your beasties big and radioactive.Them! reminded us that we share this planet with the insects, and that they were here a long, long time before we ever invented the kettle and started taking the offensive. Gojira on the other hand made it abundantly clear that there are some monsters who aren’t happy to share with anyone and they’d rather stomp your city and breath on you with atomic fire before ever playing nice.
Gojira

war of the worlds1953 and the movie of the year, and possibly one of the best and most influential science fiction films (and radio play and original novel) ever has to be The War of the Worlds. A classic adaptation of the already classic alien invasion story, this updated version typically transported the action to America and replaced the iconic tripods with equally iconic and much more timely (and easy to replicate on film) flying saucer style attack craft, but its beautiful colour photography, eerie aliens and spectacular action scenes all remain true to the original story where not even mankind’s enhanced nuclear armaments can stall the invaders and again the fate of the world hangs on the prevalence of our bacterial cousins.

red planet mars1952 was a particularly bland and boring year for science fiction – the cosmic balance for great years like 1982 and 1968 perhaps. The best of a bad bunch is Red Planet Mars, starring Mission Impossible stalwart Peter Graves and exhibiting all the usual communist, nazi and alien fears that were saturating science fiction at the time. Rummaging through film history’s dustbin is a dirty business and initially had us keen to head back to the future. Coincidently 1952 was the year director Robert Zemeckis was born, so it can’t have been so bad really, and was perhaps just biding its time.

1951 was a year of mixed messages regarding our extraterrestrial relations. Robots and humanoid aliens were apparently fine and friendly in The Day The Earth Stood Still, even if there was the implicit threat of the Earth being destroyed if we didn’t grow up and stop mucking around with the nukes so much, while the real threat was naturally from sentient alien plant life in The Thing From Another World. It’s always nice, though far too rare, that an already classic science fiction film will spawn an equally classic remake in future years as this film did for John Carpenter’s The Thing, but when it works it works well, and the original film continues to resonate with and inform the genre along with both its immediate predecessor and its many imitators.

The Day The Earth Stood Still

destination moon
1950
was the year of Destination Moon. An academy award winning film (for special effects) and these days a timely reminder of just how little time has elapsed between our dream of reaching the Moon, our realisation of that dream and the gradual fading of the space race from public consciousness once more. This film is also notable for the active involvement of SF author Robert A. Heinlein, and thus is doubly evocative of a time when Hollywood actively sought the involvement of our genre’s best writing talent.
StarShipSofa Pantechnicon Science Fiction Foundation