34 out of 37 people found the following comment useful :- Please Please Watch It!!!, 21 April 2004
Author:
Blacky1389
Okay, I know the feeling of many - This is an old horror film, so it can't
be all that good anymore. I know the feeling because a lot of horror films
from a long time ago tend to age badly, and end up being dull or laughable.
I think the problem is that a lot of the horror films before 1970s tended to
rely on stupid monsters that were more of a joke, than scary. The horror
films of pre-1970s tended to be of things we don't really fear. (i.e -
vampires, werewolves, creatures) and so when we watched movies like THE
THING, it was mostly just entertainment. Sure there were rare cases like
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS and ROSEMARY'S BABY, but not many. This film
is one of the rare cases....
Someone said that its like a cross between War of the Worlds and The
Exorcist. I have to agree. And if that hasn't caught your attention, then
nothing will. This film has one of the most unique plots I have ever come
across. Aliens are found buried in a tunnel in England, and soon the
Alien's ghosts start to take over the minds of the people in the city and
soon all hell breaks loose! Sorry about my weak summary, but I just urge
you to go out and rent this great horror film.
And just in case some of you think the film is dated and laughable, I don't
think so. It relies mostly on dialogue and characters rather than aliens
walking around in suits. This is a film that will stick with you after
you're done watching it. I think it's one of the best horror films England
has ever produced.
32 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :- Watch this movie, 28 December 2004
Author:
jlon from Dublin
One of the best Hammer movies. DVD review.
A large bomb-like item is found underground in Hobb's Lane subway
station. It turns out to be from Mars, 5 million years ago.
Absolutely amazing movie that must be seen by all sci-fans. Far more
intelligent than any sci-fi movie of recent years - the picture
discusses how humans may be evolved from beings from Mars. The superb
James Donald is the scientist who uncovers the skulls, Quatermass is
the military scientist who pieces the mystery together. There's the
usual science versus military (and media) theme. Confusing ending but I
liked the final shot where Quatermass and his female assistant recover
from the nightmare. Far better than any sci-movie from the last few
years - this is one classic Hammer picture. One other note: the
soundtrack music is one of the best I've ever heard in any movie.
Followed by a patchy sequel in the late '70s.
Quatermass And The Pit is a must-see Hammer classic.
Quatermass & the pit is one of the best movies made by Hammer studios, who
are more usually associated with 1960s English horror films. The screenplay
is by Nigel Kneale and is based on his 1950s 6-episode television
mini-series of the same name.
A mysterious object is unearthed during extension work on a London
underground station, and although the authorities try to explain it away as
an unexploded German weapon from WWII, the heroes (Professors Quatermass &
Rowney) discover it is far more ancient and threatening.
A horror/sf film which will appeal to thoughtful viewers. The plot is
intelligent and the film is quite different to the modern style of
blitzkrieg-action style thrillers. The acting and direction are faultless.
Highly recommended.
25 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :- One of the greatest science fiction films ever made - in fact my favorite., 14 May 2004
Author:
grafspee from Ballard Queensland Australia
This film is not your usual sci-fi monster from the deep or outer space but
a story based on comprehensible logic - the suggestion that the human mind
and it's psychic and sixth sense qualities was the result of alien
intervention with our ancestral primates millions of years
ago.
Andrew Keir plays a fine role as the tweedy dressed sometimes gruff
gentleman professor, Bernard Quatermass who teams up with equally amiable
James Donald as Dr.Mathew Roney and his attractive female assistant Barbara
Shelley as Barbara Judd to solve the riddle of a strange craft and several
ape like skeletons unearthed during the reconstruction of an underground
London railway station.
At first thought to be an unexploded second world war missile an Army
demolition team is brought in to disarm it, led by the bombastic single
minded military thinking Colonel Breen played by Julian Glover who scoffs at
the theories of the two scientists that this could be anything more than a
German V weapon.
The finding of large insect like creatures preserved within the hull of the
craft and an analysis of their physical attributes leads Quatermass and
Roney to conclude that they are Martians who along with their ape like
passengers were killed as a result of a crash landing five million years
beforehand. Quatermass also speculates that the apes had been previously
taken from Earth to Mars and altered in order to give them Martian thinking
characteristics which were then inherited by their human
descendants.
Breen dismisses the insect creatures as fakes and convinces his government
superiors that the missile is safe, against the advice of Quatermass, Roney
and Judd who have already discovered sinister awakenings within the craft
after a workman dismantling his drill therein is seized upon by an invisible
propelling force along with terrifying mental images.
When the public and press are admitted to the site the craft comes to life
generating a ghostly devil looking apparition, along with the now mind
affected local population banding into groups and unleashing a killing spree
on their own kind.
Quatermass and Roney must now pool their scientific expertise to
neutralize the menace and restore order.
Nigel Kneale's compelling screenplay is sheer brilliance and gives this
film a distinct and special uniqueness in the world of science
fiction.
A must see for the serious minded movie watcher.
20 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- One of the best British films of the Sixties - genuinely, 6 March 2005
Author:
burrobaggy from Newcastle, home of footie
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Quatermass and the Pit is a genuinely great screenplay, one of the
smartest sci-fi films ever written because it deals with interesting
ideas rather than stock effects. There are a few of them, some good,
some bad, and the budget isn't always enough for the ambition, but the
ideas are what carry this one - tying in colonisation, evolution, race
memories, the Devil, hauntings and other theories alongside military
and government closed-mindedness into a cohesive intelligent whole by
not going for the sensational but sitting to down to think, "Now where
could that belief in so many people have really come from?" The
conclusions may be outlandish, but the logic is rational and the
treatment straightfaced, and once it builds up its head of steam, it's
not just compelling but also a little bit worrying - particularly when
civilisation starts to break down in an extremely violent way. Andrew
Keir and James Donald are excellent and Barbara Shelley manages to be a
convincing strong female lead in a genre that doesn't usually allow
them and also to look really good in red jumper and Wellie boots!
Powerful stuff and highly recommended - there really is a lot going on
here, and it has a strong story sense to back it up. Just remember:
"We're the Martians now!"
14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Remarkable late 60s Hammer product, 29 October 2002
Author:
funkyfry from Oakland CA
Brilliant writing motivates a suspenseful sci-fi satire with intelligent,
but often over the top, acting. Aliens invaded the earth thousands of
years
ago, and left behind their hatred and evil as a sort of gift to our race.
One of the only films to successfully negotiate the fascinating territory
between science fiction and the supernatural -- or, science and religion.
Good suspense held up by a fast plot that reveals just enough to keep you
interested. Poor production values -- the monsters in the film are truly
laughable, which may hurt its reception by the younger
crowd.
16 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- "an attractive female interest"?!?!?!, 24 August 2002
Author:
Thomas Clement (Mr. OpEd) from Los Angeles
I usually don't comment on another's comment, but that the film lacked "an
attractive female interest" had my jaw dropping. Barbara Shelley NOT
attractive? She's beautiful and at 34 when this was made, she made being
"middle-aged" look like a great goal.
Other than that, the reviewer is right on the money. Great film. Great
acting. Great script. Not bad effects overall. AND Barbara
Shelley!
15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Brilliant Sci-Fi horror that will mesmerise and get you thinking!, 29 November 2004
Author:
The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
Quatermass and the Pit is one of the finest of Hammer's vast and
largely very fine oeuvre. Strangely, however, when you hear people
speak of Hammer horror, this film rarely gets a mention, and that's a
great injustice as it easily ranks up there with the best of them. The
plot follows a group of construction workers that discover a plot of
skeletons while extending London's subway station. This immediately
attracts the attention of local scientists Mathew Roney and Barbara
Judd, and later the man of the title; Dr Quatermass, who end up facing
opposition from both the army and the press while trying to investigate
the find. Where did the skeletons come from? How did they get there?
And what's the meaning behind that bomb in the tunnel? All these
questions and more are answered in Quatermass and the Pit.
As you might expect, the film is very camp. The effects are truly
ridiculous and very easy to laugh at; but they add to the fun and charm
of the movie. The reason why Hammer Horror films succeed is that,
despite being unpleasant at times, it's obvious that they were made
with a lot of heart, and the good nature that went into making them
always shines through. Unlike many horror (or Sci-Fi) films, however,
this one actually bothers to pose some interesting questions and really
gets you thinking. The normal idea behind alien based Sci-Fi is
completely turned on it's head, and it makes for both an enjoyable and
interesting, not to mention original movie. It's quite ingenious, in
fact; much more so than many recent 'thought-provoking' movies. There
is also quite a lot of the trademark British humour in the film, which
is always nice to see. It's obvious that the film is meant to be tongue
in cheek anyway, but it's always nice to have a few moments of laughter
in there. Quatermass and the Pit is directed by Hammer Horror supremo
Roy Ward Baker. When people think of Hammer directors, it's often
Terrence Fisher that comes out on top; but Baker is by far my
favourite. He's delivered the lovely Asylum, the ingenious Dr Jekyll
and Sister Hyde, not to mention The Vampire Lovers; and now this. And
that's only the ones that I've seen!
Overall, this is an incredible movie. It's generous mix of horror,
Sci-Fi and fantasy is truly refreshing and it makes for an interesting
and enjoyable ride. I loved every minute of this film, and it easily
ranks as one of the best Hammer Horror's that I've seen. Make sure you
don't skip this one.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- A great Hammer film, 15 June 2004
Author:
henry-girling from London,England
A lot of nonsense is written about the significance and meaning and quality
of Hammer Films, whereas mostly they were pedestrian and derivative. There
were some gems in their output and this film is one of them. The science may
be wayward but it unfolds plausibly from the initial discovery of the thing
in the pit to mayhem and madness in the streets of London. The opening
credits are sparse and it goes straight into the story and never lets
up.
It has a clear narrative and each new discovery pushes the envelope of fear
and amazement further out. There is no romantic interest (though I must
declare the Miss Judd character is pretty darn attractive) to hold up the
driving plot. If there is a fault it is that the story can scarcely contain
the wealth of material that Nigel Kneale puts in the script. Presumably
there isn't a longer director's cut in some film archive!
With limited resources at hand the director, Roy Ward Baker, directs some
great scenes, weird and strange and scary. He is served well by the acting
of James Donald, Andrew Keir and Barbara Shelley, which is perfect for their
roles. As the alien presence become stronger you believe it when it affects
the characters. The scene at the pit where Miss Judd has her visions
recorded is excellent. The special effects are varied but the green
arthropods and the space ship look quite malevolent. The ending is great and
somehow disquieting as the closing credits slowly roll.
This is a good example of an interesting intelligent film, costing less than
the catering budget of the elephantine mega-budget film we have these days,
but much more effective and memorable.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Intriguing, intelligent movie, 3 January 2006
Author:
capkronos (capkronos@hotmail.com) from Ohio, USA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Workers at the Hobb's End Underground Transport unearth skeletal
remains that seem to date back five-million years. They also hit a
strange non-metallic plate that ends up being part of an alien
spacecraft. Perplexed by the substance, which is harder than diamond
and resistant to the 3000 degree flames from a blow-torch, some
conflicting experts are called in to investigate. Derelict apartments
across the street from the excavation site have strange claw marks on
the walls. A hidden compartment on the ship also houses some dead,
medium-sized, horned, green, insect-like creatures. But it's really the
ship itself that poses the strongest threat. And what is lying dormant
in all of our minds. The military, of course, continually butt heads
with the scientists and call the whole discovery a hoax (a "German
propaganda item" from World War II).
But Professor Bernard Quatermass (Andrew Keir) thinks otherwise and
proposes a theory that offends just about everyone involved; managing
to question both creationism and evolution. Quatermass comes to the
conclusion that millions of years ago, aliens landed on Earth, removed
primitive apes and took them back to their home planet (which may have
been Mars) for experimentation. They continued to do so, each time
making them more intelligent until man was eventually born He could be
right, but not necessarily. The government definitely is on the wrong
track and open up the site to the general public. The dormant evil is
unleashed and those exposed to it become mindless and violent.
Buildings collapse, fires start, citizens go on a rampage and London
will eventually be completely leveled if Quatermass and chief
archaeologist Dr. Roney (James Donald) can't stop it. Barbara Shelley
co-stars as Barbara Judd, an assistant who has visions of an alien
colony and becomes possessed, eventually getting socked in the face by
Quatermass himself! Julian Glover is the close-minded militarist who's
fried into crispy critter.
All four of the principal actors are excellent in this intelligent,
thoughtful and multi-layered science-fiction film, which raises an
impressive number of interesting questions. And it's not without a
sense of humor. The "Hammer Collection" DVD has both the UK and US
trailers ("It could happen in your lifetime!"), plus the science
fiction episode of the ho-hum 1990 WORLD OF HAMMER TV documentary
series (narrated by Oliver Reed), which covers the titles DICK BARTON
STRIKES BACK, THE DAMNED (aka THESE ARE THE DAMNED), FRANKENSTEIN
CREATED WOMAN, QUATERMASS 2, QATP, QUATERMASS XPERIMENT, SPACEWAYS, X
THE UNKNOWN and a few others.
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Quatermass and the Pit (1967)
34 out of 37 people found the following comment useful :-
Please Please Watch It!!!, 21 April 2004
Author: Blacky1389
Okay, I know the feeling of many - This is an old horror film, so it can't be all that good anymore. I know the feeling because a lot of horror films from a long time ago tend to age badly, and end up being dull or laughable. I think the problem is that a lot of the horror films before 1970s tended to rely on stupid monsters that were more of a joke, than scary. The horror films of pre-1970s tended to be of things we don't really fear. (i.e - vampires, werewolves, creatures) and so when we watched movies like THE THING, it was mostly just entertainment. Sure there were rare cases like INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS and ROSEMARY'S BABY, but not many. This film is one of the rare cases....
Someone said that its like a cross between War of the Worlds and The Exorcist. I have to agree. And if that hasn't caught your attention, then nothing will. This film has one of the most unique plots I have ever come across. Aliens are found buried in a tunnel in England, and soon the Alien's ghosts start to take over the minds of the people in the city and soon all hell breaks loose! Sorry about my weak summary, but I just urge you to go out and rent this great horror film.
And just in case some of you think the film is dated and laughable, I don't think so. It relies mostly on dialogue and characters rather than aliens walking around in suits. This is a film that will stick with you after you're done watching it. I think it's one of the best horror films England has ever produced.
32 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :-
Watch this movie, 28 December 2004
Author: jlon from Dublin
One of the best Hammer movies. DVD review.
A large bomb-like item is found underground in Hobb's Lane subway station. It turns out to be from Mars, 5 million years ago.
Absolutely amazing movie that must be seen by all sci-fans. Far more intelligent than any sci-fi movie of recent years - the picture discusses how humans may be evolved from beings from Mars. The superb James Donald is the scientist who uncovers the skulls, Quatermass is the military scientist who pieces the mystery together. There's the usual science versus military (and media) theme. Confusing ending but I liked the final shot where Quatermass and his female assistant recover from the nightmare. Far better than any sci-movie from the last few years - this is one classic Hammer picture. One other note: the soundtrack music is one of the best I've ever heard in any movie. Followed by a patchy sequel in the late '70s.
Quatermass And The Pit is a must-see Hammer classic.
29 out of 32 people found the following comment useful :-

The thinking person's horror/sf movie, 14 June 2000
Author: Anthony Green (anthony.green@language.usyd.edu.au) from Sydney, Australia
Quatermass & the pit is one of the best movies made by Hammer studios, who are more usually associated with 1960s English horror films. The screenplay is by Nigel Kneale and is based on his 1950s 6-episode television mini-series of the same name.
A mysterious object is unearthed during extension work on a London underground station, and although the authorities try to explain it away as an unexploded German weapon from WWII, the heroes (Professors Quatermass & Rowney) discover it is far more ancient and threatening.
A horror/sf film which will appeal to thoughtful viewers. The plot is intelligent and the film is quite different to the modern style of blitzkrieg-action style thrillers. The acting and direction are faultless. Highly recommended.
25 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :-
One of the greatest science fiction films ever made - in fact my favorite., 14 May 2004
Author: grafspee from Ballard Queensland Australia
This film is not your usual sci-fi monster from the deep or outer space but a story based on comprehensible logic - the suggestion that the human mind and it's psychic and sixth sense qualities was the result of alien intervention with our ancestral primates millions of years ago. Andrew Keir plays a fine role as the tweedy dressed sometimes gruff gentleman professor, Bernard Quatermass who teams up with equally amiable James Donald as Dr.Mathew Roney and his attractive female assistant Barbara Shelley as Barbara Judd to solve the riddle of a strange craft and several ape like skeletons unearthed during the reconstruction of an underground London railway station. At first thought to be an unexploded second world war missile an Army demolition team is brought in to disarm it, led by the bombastic single minded military thinking Colonel Breen played by Julian Glover who scoffs at the theories of the two scientists that this could be anything more than a German V weapon. The finding of large insect like creatures preserved within the hull of the craft and an analysis of their physical attributes leads Quatermass and Roney to conclude that they are Martians who along with their ape like passengers were killed as a result of a crash landing five million years beforehand. Quatermass also speculates that the apes had been previously taken from Earth to Mars and altered in order to give them Martian thinking characteristics which were then inherited by their human descendants. Breen dismisses the insect creatures as fakes and convinces his government superiors that the missile is safe, against the advice of Quatermass, Roney and Judd who have already discovered sinister awakenings within the craft after a workman dismantling his drill therein is seized upon by an invisible propelling force along with terrifying mental images. When the public and press are admitted to the site the craft comes to life generating a ghostly devil looking apparition, along with the now mind affected local population banding into groups and unleashing a killing spree on their own kind. Quatermass and Roney must now pool their scientific expertise to neutralize the menace and restore order. Nigel Kneale's compelling screenplay is sheer brilliance and gives this film a distinct and special uniqueness in the world of science fiction. A must see for the serious minded movie watcher.
20 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

One of the best British films of the Sixties - genuinely, 6 March 2005
Author: burrobaggy from Newcastle, home of footie
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Quatermass and the Pit is a genuinely great screenplay, one of the smartest sci-fi films ever written because it deals with interesting ideas rather than stock effects. There are a few of them, some good, some bad, and the budget isn't always enough for the ambition, but the ideas are what carry this one - tying in colonisation, evolution, race memories, the Devil, hauntings and other theories alongside military and government closed-mindedness into a cohesive intelligent whole by not going for the sensational but sitting to down to think, "Now where could that belief in so many people have really come from?" The conclusions may be outlandish, but the logic is rational and the treatment straightfaced, and once it builds up its head of steam, it's not just compelling but also a little bit worrying - particularly when civilisation starts to break down in an extremely violent way. Andrew Keir and James Donald are excellent and Barbara Shelley manages to be a convincing strong female lead in a genre that doesn't usually allow them and also to look really good in red jumper and Wellie boots! Powerful stuff and highly recommended - there really is a lot going on here, and it has a strong story sense to back it up. Just remember: "We're the Martians now!"
14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Remarkable late 60s Hammer product, 29 October 2002
Author: funkyfry from Oakland CA
Brilliant writing motivates a suspenseful sci-fi satire with intelligent, but often over the top, acting. Aliens invaded the earth thousands of years ago, and left behind their hatred and evil as a sort of gift to our race. One of the only films to successfully negotiate the fascinating territory between science fiction and the supernatural -- or, science and religion. Good suspense held up by a fast plot that reveals just enough to keep you interested. Poor production values -- the monsters in the film are truly laughable, which may hurt its reception by the younger crowd.
16 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-
"an attractive female interest"?!?!?!, 24 August 2002
Author: Thomas Clement (Mr. OpEd) from Los Angeles
I usually don't comment on another's comment, but that the film lacked "an attractive female interest" had my jaw dropping. Barbara Shelley NOT attractive? She's beautiful and at 34 when this was made, she made being "middle-aged" look like a great goal.
Other than that, the reviewer is right on the money. Great film. Great acting. Great script. Not bad effects overall. AND Barbara Shelley!
15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

Brilliant Sci-Fi horror that will mesmerise and get you thinking!, 29 November 2004
Author: The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
Quatermass and the Pit is one of the finest of Hammer's vast and largely very fine oeuvre. Strangely, however, when you hear people speak of Hammer horror, this film rarely gets a mention, and that's a great injustice as it easily ranks up there with the best of them. The plot follows a group of construction workers that discover a plot of skeletons while extending London's subway station. This immediately attracts the attention of local scientists Mathew Roney and Barbara Judd, and later the man of the title; Dr Quatermass, who end up facing opposition from both the army and the press while trying to investigate the find. Where did the skeletons come from? How did they get there? And what's the meaning behind that bomb in the tunnel? All these questions and more are answered in Quatermass and the Pit.
As you might expect, the film is very camp. The effects are truly ridiculous and very easy to laugh at; but they add to the fun and charm of the movie. The reason why Hammer Horror films succeed is that, despite being unpleasant at times, it's obvious that they were made with a lot of heart, and the good nature that went into making them always shines through. Unlike many horror (or Sci-Fi) films, however, this one actually bothers to pose some interesting questions and really gets you thinking. The normal idea behind alien based Sci-Fi is completely turned on it's head, and it makes for both an enjoyable and interesting, not to mention original movie. It's quite ingenious, in fact; much more so than many recent 'thought-provoking' movies. There is also quite a lot of the trademark British humour in the film, which is always nice to see. It's obvious that the film is meant to be tongue in cheek anyway, but it's always nice to have a few moments of laughter in there. Quatermass and the Pit is directed by Hammer Horror supremo Roy Ward Baker. When people think of Hammer directors, it's often Terrence Fisher that comes out on top; but Baker is by far my favourite. He's delivered the lovely Asylum, the ingenious Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde, not to mention The Vampire Lovers; and now this. And that's only the ones that I've seen!
Overall, this is an incredible movie. It's generous mix of horror, Sci-Fi and fantasy is truly refreshing and it makes for an interesting and enjoyable ride. I loved every minute of this film, and it easily ranks as one of the best Hammer Horror's that I've seen. Make sure you don't skip this one.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

A great Hammer film, 15 June 2004
Author: henry-girling from London,England
A lot of nonsense is written about the significance and meaning and quality of Hammer Films, whereas mostly they were pedestrian and derivative. There were some gems in their output and this film is one of them. The science may be wayward but it unfolds plausibly from the initial discovery of the thing in the pit to mayhem and madness in the streets of London. The opening credits are sparse and it goes straight into the story and never lets up.
It has a clear narrative and each new discovery pushes the envelope of fear and amazement further out. There is no romantic interest (though I must declare the Miss Judd character is pretty darn attractive) to hold up the driving plot. If there is a fault it is that the story can scarcely contain the wealth of material that Nigel Kneale puts in the script. Presumably there isn't a longer director's cut in some film archive!
With limited resources at hand the director, Roy Ward Baker, directs some great scenes, weird and strange and scary. He is served well by the acting of James Donald, Andrew Keir and Barbara Shelley, which is perfect for their roles. As the alien presence become stronger you believe it when it affects the characters. The scene at the pit where Miss Judd has her visions recorded is excellent. The special effects are varied but the green arthropods and the space ship look quite malevolent. The ending is great and somehow disquieting as the closing credits slowly roll.
This is a good example of an interesting intelligent film, costing less than the catering budget of the elephantine mega-budget film we have these days, but much more effective and memorable.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Intriguing, intelligent movie, 3 January 2006
Author: capkronos (capkronos@hotmail.com) from Ohio, USA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Workers at the Hobb's End Underground Transport unearth skeletal remains that seem to date back five-million years. They also hit a strange non-metallic plate that ends up being part of an alien spacecraft. Perplexed by the substance, which is harder than diamond and resistant to the 3000 degree flames from a blow-torch, some conflicting experts are called in to investigate. Derelict apartments across the street from the excavation site have strange claw marks on the walls. A hidden compartment on the ship also houses some dead, medium-sized, horned, green, insect-like creatures. But it's really the ship itself that poses the strongest threat. And what is lying dormant in all of our minds. The military, of course, continually butt heads with the scientists and call the whole discovery a hoax (a "German propaganda item" from World War II).
But Professor Bernard Quatermass (Andrew Keir) thinks otherwise and proposes a theory that offends just about everyone involved; managing to question both creationism and evolution. Quatermass comes to the conclusion that millions of years ago, aliens landed on Earth, removed primitive apes and took them back to their home planet (which may have been Mars) for experimentation. They continued to do so, each time making them more intelligent until man was eventually born He could be right, but not necessarily. The government definitely is on the wrong track and open up the site to the general public. The dormant evil is unleashed and those exposed to it become mindless and violent. Buildings collapse, fires start, citizens go on a rampage and London will eventually be completely leveled if Quatermass and chief archaeologist Dr. Roney (James Donald) can't stop it. Barbara Shelley co-stars as Barbara Judd, an assistant who has visions of an alien colony and becomes possessed, eventually getting socked in the face by Quatermass himself! Julian Glover is the close-minded militarist who's fried into crispy critter.
All four of the principal actors are excellent in this intelligent, thoughtful and multi-layered science-fiction film, which raises an impressive number of interesting questions. And it's not without a sense of humor. The "Hammer Collection" DVD has both the UK and US trailers ("It could happen in your lifetime!"), plus the science fiction episode of the ho-hum 1990 WORLD OF HAMMER TV documentary series (narrated by Oliver Reed), which covers the titles DICK BARTON STRIKES BACK, THE DAMNED (aka THESE ARE THE DAMNED), FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN, QUATERMASS 2, QATP, QUATERMASS XPERIMENT, SPACEWAYS, X THE UNKNOWN and a few others.
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