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Rocketships, Monsters and Flying Saucers: SciFi Cinema of the 50’s

The 50’s, a time of monsters, rocketships and flying saucers. Hollywood’s film production was an all time high varying from big budget productions to cheap knock-offs. SciFi films in the 50’s were either great or schlock. It was the “Golden Age” and the rise of the “B-Movies”.

Two notable icons of the era, George Pal and Ray Harryhausen, created films that have become timeless classics. Advancing special effects with their techniques in stop motion and model animation, George Pal and Ray Harryhausen brought a sense of “realism” to SciFi cinema, amazing audiences with their ingenuity and imagination. Though George Pal would receive a number of academy awards for special effects, Ray Harryhausen received the Gordon E. Sawyer Award from the Academy in 1992.

Here’s a list of some of the memorable films of the 50’s.

Destination Moon (1950)
George Pal’s first feature film based on Robert Heinlein’s novel, Rocket Ship Galileo. This is the first SciFi film shot in Technicolor. Destination Moon depicted rocketships, spacesuits and the moon landscape in a realistic manner. A space battle with the USSR added a touch of the Cold War to the film.

 

rocketWhen Worlds Collide (1951)

Produced by George Pal based on the SciFi novel by Philip Gordon Wylie and Edwin Balmer. One of the earlier doomsday movies about Earth getting hit by another planet. Filmed in Technicolor, directed by Rudolph Maté and winner of the 1951 Academy Award for special effects. Inspiration for the movie “Deep Impact”.

 

 

Day earth stood still

The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)
Robert Wise directed this film about first contact. The strong non-violence message contrasted in the era of the atomic bomb and The Cold War. The classic line “Klaatu barada nikto” and the robot Gort are familiar pop culture icons.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Thing from Another World (1951)
The first SciFi horror movie about an alien spacecraft discovered buried in the Arctic. After recovering the occupant the arctic base is victim to The Thing’s terror. The film reveals only glimpses of The Thing riveting audiences in suspense. Directed by Howard Hawks (uncredited) and Christian Nyby released through RKO Radio Pictures Inc. “The Thing” is a precursor to “Alien” and future SciFi horror movies.

 

 

beast 20,000

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953)
Ray Harryhausen’s first solo production based on “The Fog Horn” a short story by long time friend Ray Bradbury. The first film to use “Dynamation” Harryhausen’s trademark model animation. A low cost special effect with effective results, the technique combines live actors with stop motion models. While rear projecting the live actors shot, animators can blend the model animation giving it an illusion that both elements are interacting. Harryhausen’s “Dynamation” films never failed in thrilling movie audiences.

 

 

War of the Worlds (1953)

war of the worlds

George Pal’s film adaptation of H.G. Wells SciFi novel. Pal reinvented the story by setting it in 50’s Los Angeles California. The Martian Tripods are replaced by sleek manta ray shaped crafts floating above ground with “invisible” legs. Attempting to use stop motion animation on the Martian’s machines proved impractical and time consuming Pal decided to use wires instead. The film became a box office hit and a memorable classic.

 

 

gojiraGojira (1954)
Japan’s first successful monster movie was a box office hit in its first release. Inspired by Harryhausen’s “Beast from 20,000 Fathoms” Gojira is Japan’s first “Kaiju”. Due to budget and lack of skilled animators Gojira was originally planned as a stop motion movie but later changed to a man in a rubber suit stomping miniature cities. The movie’s plot was inspired by an incident were Japanese fishermen came too close to a nuclear test site and got contaminated. Gojira would spawn numerous sequels and keep the tradition of a man inside the rubber costume. In later releases “Gojira” is renamed “Godzilla”.

 

 

this island earth mutantThis Island Earth (1955)
A big budget production directed by Joseph M. Newman and adapted from the novel by Raymond F. Jones. Though shot in Technicolor, the groundbreaking special effects was done with the new standard colour Eastman process. The film was the first to depict faster than light travel and interplanetary battles. Later spoofed in Mystery Science Theatre 3000: The Movie (1996).

 

 

sextopusIt Came from Beneath the Sea (1955)A six tentacled octopus terrorizes San Francisco after being awakened from the deep by a hydrogen bomb test.
Producer Charles H. Schneer and special effects visionary Ray Harryhausen first collaboration would be the beginning of many films to come. Due to budget restrictions the octopus had only six tentacles instead of eight.

 

 

flying saucer

Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (1956)
Charles H. Schneer and Ray Harryhausen’s next project about flying saucers invading Earth. Precursor to Independence Day.

 

 

 

20 Million Miles to Earth (1957)
Aymir showcase of Ray Harryhausen’s special effect wizardry. A returning space mission to Venus crash lands in the Mediterranean bringing with them an alien creature that grows to the huge “Ymir”. A low budget film, Harryhausen wanted the film to be in colour. In 2007 he worked with Legend Films to create a colorized version it was later released in the 50th anniversary version.

 

 

United Planets Cruiser C57D

Forbidden Planet (1956)
Based on Shakespeare’s “The Tempest”. A big budget film production with amazing special effects for its time. The film features a young Leslie Nielsen in command of the United Planets Cruiser C57D the spaceship journeys to the planet Altair-IV investigating the fate of colonists from an earlier expedition. Forbidden Planet’s look and feel became the inspiration for Gene Roddenberry’s “Star Trek” and George Lucas’ “Star Wars”. The film introduces Robby the Robot for the first time.

 

 

body snatcher

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

SciFi paranoia at its best an invasion film without invaders the film only shows people being victimized by “pods” and the resulting conspiracy of infected hosts out to take over the world. In the time of the McCarthyist witch hunt and Soviet Red scare of the 50’s the movie grew in popularity for its allegorical message of losing one’s individual freedom.

 

 

cyclopsThe Seventh Voyage of Sinbad (1958)

Inspired from Tales of the Arabian Nights. The movie retells the voyage of Sinbad and his encounters with fantastic creatures.
The incredible special effects without the use of computers or CGI animation is the culmination of Ray Harryhausen’s “Dynamation”. The movie needs to be mentioned here for reason that this film, Harryhausen refined his Dynamation techniques to a science. It took Harryhausen 11 months to finish the film’s animation.

 

 

blobThe Blob (1958)
A meteorite falls in a small town revealing a jelly like amoeba that later grows as it devours more people. The Blob is eventually defeated by freezing and dropped in the North Pole.
SciFi horror film introducing a young Steve McQueen. Produced with a budget of $120,000 it would later gross $4 million.

 

The SciFi films of the 50’s have become a source of inspiration and remakes for today’s studios. Special effects have taken a leap from early cinema with advances in film technology and colour film adding more realism. SciFi cinema will still go further to achieve greater believability and realism.

 

Entertainment Earth

Evolution of Science Fiction Cinema: The Early 20th Century

Modern day science fiction (scifi) films can find its roots in the beginnings of cinema in the early part of the 20th century. Filmmaking evolve together with photographic and special effects technology. Some of which are still adapted in one form or another in modern cinema. Contemporary scifi films can find its influence from this early period.

Regular camcorders have built in special effects features that were derived from this early film making techniques.

This article will touch on some of the films that have been an influence in the evolution of science fiction cinema.

The early silent films were short and a novelty, mostly to show off the technology of the new entertainment rather than tell a story. The subject could be everyday life, events or comedy usually accompanied by live music as the medium had no sound.
Films were increasingly drawing crowds who can’t get enough. The film industry boomed churning out more movies to supply demand. Film studios became lucrative, people got into the film business.

George Melies was a stage magician when he watched his first demonstration of the Lumiere brothers’ camera. Melies then bought a camera and begun his film career. Georges Melies would bring magic to the cinema with his photographic effects and tricks that were a marvel at the time.

He would introduce multiple exposures, time-lapse photography, dissolves and other effects. His most well known movie, the blockbuster of its time was “Trip to the Moon“.

Trip to the Moon

Written and directed by Georges Melies in 1902, with help from his brother Gaston. The first scifi film ever made had a running time of 14 minutes at 16 fps; Where the average running time for films of that era was 3 minutes. The most famous and popular of all George Melies films its special effects and animation were innovative for its time.

Loosely based on Jules Verne’s Earth to the Moon and H.G. Wells’ The First Men in the Moon. The film depicts man’s first attempt to the moon. The film includes the familiar scene where the spaceship hits the eye of the man in the moon.

 

Film directors were experimenting in cinematic style. Movies were evolving into an art form. German cinema was a leader in the early days with its expressionism, One of the well known directors was Fritz Lang and his most famous film was Metropolis.

Metropolis
Fritz Lang’s dystopian vision of the future set in the year 2026. The silent scifi film was released in 1927 produced with the budget of 7 million Reichsmark (equivalent to around $200 million in 2005.)

Metropolis depicts a social struggle between the thinkers/planners living high above in the skyscrapers of Metropolis and the workers living below who toil endlessly for them.

The film’s epic detail in design and its elaborate visual effects would influence later scifi films like Blade Runner, The Fifth Element, The Matrix. Metropolis’ Robot-Gynoid Maria inspired the design for Star Wars Droid C3PO.

Novel
Official Site


The advent of sound captivated audiences, movies began having “sound effects” while music was utilized to give an emotional impact.

King Kong

The movie that popularized the giant monster genre retells the story of beauty and the beast. Produced and directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack its innovative special effects and stop motion animation was done by Willis O’Brien who brought the monster gorilla to life. Willis O’Brien pioneered stop motion techniques that later SFX artists would honor him as founder and father. CGI animation can trace its roots to this film.

King Kong broke box-office records at its opening in 1933, its success saved RKO studios from bankruptcy. In later re-releases it still managed to gross at the box office. King Kong inspired a number of remakes the best one by Peter Jackson in 2005.

The image of King Kong on top of the Empire State building has become a familiar pop icon.

 

Flash Gordon
Adapted from the popular comic strip Flash Gordon by Alex Raymond was a space opera serialized in 1936. Budgeted at $350,000 the most expensive serial at that time.

Movie serials were 30 minute shorts shown before the main feature. Serials introduced the cliffhanger ending, making movie audiences return and watch the next episode.

Flash Gordon introduces many plot elements common in scifi films; The evil ruler bent on conquest, a hero fighting impossible odds, friendly allies or sidekicks. It also introduced the use of “ray guns” and other high tech props.

Flash Gordon used the scrolling text introduction to brief viewers on previous episodes. George Lucas’s Star Wars films adapted the scrolling text at the beginning of each film, homage to the early movie serials.

Early Science Fiction films were known for its innovation in visual effects that have evolved and adapted in today’s computerized technology. Common scifi story elements introduced in this early era would show up in later generations of films. Science Fiction in cinema wouldn’t be the same if not for these early pioneers.

Early SciFi Films Playlist