Film Review
Towards the tail end of his career Edgar G. Ulmer directed a number of
low budget science fiction movies that are distinguished more by his
idiosyncratic mise-en-scène than by their hackneyed B-movie
plots and modest production values. Unlike Ulmer's previous
The Man from Planet X (1951) and
The Amazing Transparent Man (1960),
Beyond the Time Barrier is a
serious attempt to engage with contemporary themes, namely concerns
over atom bomb testing, and manages to conceal its derisory budget by
some truly inspired design. And, in contrast to most films about
time travel, it looks as if the film's authors have some understanding
(albeit slightly muddled) of the underlying science. In its
account of a pilot returning to a ruined Earth in his future the film
eerily prefigures
Planet of the Apes (1968).
As in Val Guest's
The Day the Earth Caught Fire
(1961), the film shows humanity driven to extinction not by nuclear war
but by the testing of nuclear weapons. The grim fate for mankind
depicted in Ulmer's film may be somewhat less dramatic than that of
Guest's but it is somewhat more plausible, with a more solid grounding
in scientific truth. It is fact that the Earth's atmosphere is
crucial in shielding life on the surface from the harmful effects of
cosmic radiation, so if this were to be damaged in the way the film
suggests then it is conceivable that man could be subjected to genetic
mutation that might render him sterile. (It has been established
that one of the possible causes of cancer is cosmic radiation.)
The film's over-laboured explanation for how the main protagonist
(Robert Clarke) manages to travel through time is, however, less
scientifically credible. The script claims that it was some
accidental conjunction of astral velocities which allowed the aircraft
pilot to attain a near light-speed and thereby experience time
distortion. Einstein wouldn't have been impressed by this glib
misunderstanding of his famous theories, and you wonder why the
overzealous screenwriters didn't just cut all the mixed up
pseudo-science and simply say that Clarke fell through a wormhole, time
warp or some such thing. In one aspect at least the film does get
it right: if Clarke
is able
to achieve a near-light speed then, when he does return to Earth, it
will be in his own future. Everything else is baloney.
Dodgy science aside,
Beyond the Time
Barrier is a surprisingly good film of its kind, even if it was
clearly made in a hurry on the tiniest of budgets. (In fact it
cost 125 thousand dollars to make and was shot in just ten days within
the buildings of the Texas Centennial Exhibition Fair Park.) The plot
owes a great deal to H.G. Wells's
The
Time Machine, which coincidentally was adapted the same year by
George Pal as a
lavish
full-colour feature. As in Wells's novel, a man is projected
into his own future by a technological marvel to encounter a
civilisation in which there are two distinct species - one badly
mutated, the other still recognisably human. Ulmer's film clearly
doesn't have the budget that Pal had to play with but it offers a more
convincing depiction of a future civilisation, one that seems
pathologically obsessed with triangles. In Ernst Fegté's
starkly geometric set designs, triangles are everywhere,
suggesting a world that is different from our own and yet not
ostensibly futuristic. The triangle motif extends to the editing,
which uses a triangular iris effect to bridge scenes. The make-up
for the mutant humans was the work of Jack Pierce, who had previously
created some iconic monster designs for Universal Pictures, notably the
original Frankenstein Monster. It's worth mentioning, en passant,
that the director's daughter Arianne Arden appears in the film, playing
one of the scheming Russian pilots.
Ulmer shows, as he did through pretty well most of his career, how it
is possible to make a stylish and idiosyncratic piece of cinema with
next to no money but plenty of flair and imagination. For the
scientifically ignorant,
Beyond the
Time Barrier is hard to fault and makes a compelling sci-fi
adventure as well as a cautionary tale on man's lack of concern for his
environment. The scientifically literate may mock the liberties
the script takes with the Theories of Relativity but even they should
be impressed by the film's smart design and the intelligent way in
which it broaches one of the most pressing concerns of the day.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
U.S. Air Force pilot Major Allison undertakes a probing flight on an
experimental aircraft that will be the crucial first step in America's
early space programme. On his return to Earth, Allison is
surprised to find the airbase abandoned and in the distance he sees a
vast futuristic city. Somehow, he has been projected sixty years
into his own future and now humanity is a dying species, sterile, mute
and confined to underground cities. Taken prisoner, Allison finds
himself in one such city, where he is welcomed by the leader, who
explains that humanity has been made sterile by cosmic radiation after
the Earth's atmosphere was ruined by the testing of nuclear weapons in
the 20th century. The only person who is not sterile is the
leader's granddaughter Triene, who appears willing to take Allison as
her mate and begin repopulating the world. Despite being
attracted to Triene, who can only communicate with him telepathically,
Allison is more interested in returning to his own time. He meets
some Russian pilots who share this ambition, having also arrived in
this Dystopian future after encountering a similar passage through
time. If one of them can get back to his own time he might be
able to warn the world of the dangers of nuclear weapons testing and
thereby prevent the future he has witnessed from happening....
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.