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It Came from Outer Space: Bradbury, 3D & 1950s Teens

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

Release Date: 10/26/2024

X-Ray Eyes: Roger Corman’s 1963 Psychedelic Sci-Fi show art X-Ray Eyes: Roger Corman’s 1963 Psychedelic Sci-Fi

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead!  You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .  If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show.   Roger Corman produced hundreds of films in his lifetime and directed dozens. X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes is a colourful, psychedelic, 1960s extravaganza with aspirations of transcendence. If you wanted to join in, you can watch the film X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes from 1963 first. DVDs of the film are available, but it is also...

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The Manchurian Candidate 1962: Politics, Power & Paranoia show art The Manchurian Candidate 1962: Politics, Power & Paranoia

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead! You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .  If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show.   In 1959 at the cusp of a new and exciting decade Richard Condon wrote a book that is largely described as a political thriller. And it is a political thriller. But it also fits neatly into my concept of science fiction. To learn more about what is and isn’t science fiction you can head to the heady days of the first episode where the topic...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

There are spoilers ahead for all versions of The Day of the Triffids and also for the film Signs. You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .  If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show.   This episode had been edited down to a more digestible length of under an hour but a longer (audio only) version is available for Patreon subscribers (alongside the shorter option). We are doing things a little differently and discussing the 1963 film along with the source material...

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Panic in Year Zero: Nuclear Apocalypse & the Nuclear Family show art Panic in Year Zero: Nuclear Apocalypse & the Nuclear Family

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead!   You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .    If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show.   There is a trigger warning for discussion of rape in this episode. I have marked the beginning of that part of the discussion with a beep and the discussion lasts for four minutes and four seconds after the beep if you wanted to skip past it.    Last week we told you “” but this week we focus in on the panic. ...

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Don't Panic: The Hitchhiker's Guide Phenomenon show art Don't Panic: The Hitchhiker's Guide Phenomenon

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead. You can buy the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy book in most bookshops and you can listen to the radio play on YouTube and also on the Internet Archive.   You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .   If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a month you can get ad free version of the show and be revered amongst both the G'Gugvuntts and the Vl'Hurgs:    As mentioned elsewhere this is not an analysis of the film or any kind of review of the book but more like a chat...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead!   A quick note that I shall be at the London Film Festival on October the 16th giving a whistlestop tour of sci-fi cinema. It is a free event but you have to reserve tickets so if you happen to be in London and wanted to attend .   Translation for the beginning of the podcast: “Later, he knew he had seen a man die. And sometime after came the destruction of Paris.”   You can follow the podcast on social media on ,  and .    If you would like to be a patron of the podcast you can join Patreon and for £3 or $3 a...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead!   If you’d like to join in on more conversations and keep up to date on what I’m working on you can follow me on social media: ,  and .    After last episode’s UK village setting we stay in the country but head to London for a newsroom apocalyptic drama. We have more hints that we are heading into the 60s with a surly hero and a sultry ex-Disney heroine.   The Day the Earth Caught Fire was finally released in 1961 after eight years of director Val Guest trying to get the film made. Perhaps the mid-50s Britian wasn’t...

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Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead! You can follow the podcast on ,  and .  If you want to support the podcast you can get ad free versions at .  In 1956 the film The Bad Seed was a big hit for Warner Bros featuring a blond-haired evil child. One blond scary child sometimes isn't enough! Writer John Wyndham published The Midwich Cuckoos in 1957 which had already sold to MGM before he’d completed it. The film tells the story of a different kind of alien invasion. Midwich village is infested with pregnancies affecting the female population who all give birth to blonde...

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The Silent Star: 1960 East German Sci-Fi & the Space Race show art The Silent Star: 1960 East German Sci-Fi & the Space Race

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead! In 1951 Poland, during its Stalinist era, acclaimed science fiction writer Stanislaw Lem released his first book: The Astronauts. (He had already written the novel The Man from Mars which was serialised).   In 1960 The Astronuats would go on to become the basis of East Germany’s ambitious communist sci-fi film Der schweigende Stern or The Silent Star. The script would go through 12 drafts before filming by which time Lem had removed his name from the project.  Although the script lacks focus it is full of historical and cultural significance...

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The Time Machine: HG Wells’ Legacy in 1960s Sci-Fi show art The Time Machine: HG Wells’ Legacy in 1960s Sci-Fi

Every Single Sci-Fi Film Ever*

As always there are spoilers ahead! You can follow the podcast on ,  and .  HG Wells shadow is a long one and his seminal work on time travel was published in 1895. But well over a half a century later Hollywood was still hooked on Herbert (George Wells). The Time Machine was directed by George Pal and released 1960. From the turn of the century to the beginning of a new decade my amazing guests break down the themes and influences on this mid-century steampunk precursor. Keith Williams is a Reader in English Literature at the University of Dundee where he runs the...

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Description
Are we sick of alien invasion films? I certainly hope not! Although this one is a little different as the aliens just want to leave. It Came from Outer Space (1953) was directed by Jack Arnold who would make a name for himself in the 1950s as a director of many sci-fi films. Although the script was written by Harry Essex the treatment for the film was by none other than the famous Ray Bradbury. The film is a mix of schlocky sci-fi and poetic soliloquies set in small town USA. To help us dig a little deeper into this film I have two fantastic guests.

The Experts
Scott Higgins is a Professor of Film at Wesleyan University as well as being the Curator of the Wesleyan Cinema Archives. 

Phil Nichols is a visiting lecturer at the University of Wolverhampton and a researcher with a special interest in Ray Bradbury. He is Senior Consultant to the Ray Bradbury Centre at Indiana University and editor of The New Ray Bradbury Review. He is also the man behind the Bradbury 100 podcast and the Science Fiction 101 podcast.

Chapters
00:00 Introduction to the show and guests
01:40 The beginnings of a sci-fi film director Jack Arnold
04:30 Ray Bradbury’s influence on the film
09:40 The schlocky and elusive Aliens
15:54 Bradbury’s politics in the 1950s
18:22 Bradbury’s treatment vs Harry Essex’s screenplay
21:38 Small town USA: provincial views, scandal and something simmering beneath the surface
28:11 Teenage culture: post war boom, TV and rock n roll
33:26 Body snatching
36:00 3D cinema!
42:57 Ray Bradbury’s treatment
45:22 The legacy of the film
50:56 Recommendations

NEXT EPISODE!
Next episode we will be taking one of my pesky detours! I speak to brainiac theoretical physicist Claudia de Rham about the science of Interstellar which is ten years old on November 6th 2024. Interstellar (2014) is available to rent or buy at an array of outlets. You can check JustWatch to check which platforms it is available in your region.

 


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