Film Review
One of the most impressive British science-fiction films of the 1960s
is this faithful adaptation of H.G. Wells' 1901 novel
The First Men in the Moon, just one
of many collaborations between producer Charles H. Schneer and special
effects maestro Ray Harryhausen.
Schneer and Harryhausen had already made
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958)
and
Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
and would notch up several subsequent hits, including
The Golden Voyage of Sinbad
(1974), and
Clash of the Titans
(1981).
First Men in the Moon
may not be as well-known as Harryhausen's myth-based fantasties but,
visually, it is every bit as laudable, one of the finest screen
adaptations of an H.G. Wells story.
The film is imaginatively directed by Nathan Juran, who had previously
worked with Harryhausen on
20 Million Miles to Earth
(1957) and
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad
(1958), and the screenplay was contributed by none other than
Nigel Kneale, famous for his 1950s
Quatermass
serials for BBC television.
Wilkie Cooper turns in some of his best work as cinematographer and
the score was provided by
Laurie Johnson, who composed some of the most memorable of themes for
British television, including
The
Avengers,
Jason King
and
The Professionals.
First Men in the Moon belongs
to the better stratum of Ray Harryhausen films in which the actors are
not totally outstaged by the special effects. Lionel Jeffries is at his
comedic best as the eccentric Victorian professor, a convincing and
likeable portrayal that is in perfect sympathy with the slightly
humorous tone of the film. Edward Judd makes an effective
sidekick to Jeffries' professor - not your conventional square-jawed
action hero but something much more prosaic: a moody, self-interested
little man who simply wants to survive. Martha Hyer provides a
welcome feminine presence, although her role in the plot is
minimal. The dialogue and the performances are superior for a
fantasy film of this era, and this partly explains why it has stood the
test of time better than most.
Of course, the film's main attraction is its effects wizardry, to which
Ray Harryhausen clearly had a large input. Stop motion animation
had been used since the 1930s, so by this stage it become a refined art
and the quality of the effects in this film are comparable to anything
that can be produced today (far more easily) using computer
graphics. From the cute little insectoid Selenites to the fierce
gigantic Moon Cows, Harryhausen's animated creations never fail to
impress, dispelling the oft-repeated lie that there was no decent film
fantasy before George Lucas's
Star Wars (1977). An
enjoyable, imagination-stretching romp,
First Men in the Moon is proof
positive that film sci-fi was alive and well, way before all those
effects-saturated blockbusters showed up in the late 1970s. More
importantly, it shows that you don't need a massive Hollywood budget to
create a visually impressive science-fiction movie. What matters
most is the skill and imagination of the technical crew, and in that
department Ray Harryhausen was unsurpassed.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1964, the United Nations Space Agency successfully lands a manned
rocket on the moon, but the astronauts are surprised to discover a
British flag and a note from someone named Katherine Callender claiming
the moon for Her Majesty Queen Victoria. Anxious to find
out more about this earlier, unpublicised trip to the moon, the UN
officials set about trying to find the note's author, only to discover
that she died some time ago. Her husband, Arnold Bedford, is
still alive, living in a retirement home in England. Reluctantly,
Bedford tells his fantastic story. In 1899, he was an aspiring
young writer who had just rented a house in the country to work on his
next play. His nextdoor neighbour is an eccentric inventor,
Professor Cavor, who claims to have invented a compound, Cavorite, that
can shield solid objects from the force of gravity. To test his
theory, Cavor has built a spherical vessel which he believes he can
pilot to the moon and back with his remarkable invention. With
creditors breathing down his neck, Bedford is quick to see the
commercial possibilities of Cavorite and agrees to accompany the
professor on his expedition. His girlfriend Kate stumbles aboard
the spaceship just before take off and within a few days the party has
landed safely on the moon. As they explore the lunar surface,
Cavor and Bedford come across an opening that leads to a vast
underground city. Here they encounter weird insect-like
creatures, Selenites, who are eager to dismantle their craft to
discover its secrets. Bedford realises that unless they fight
back he and his friends could be trapped on the moon forever, but
Cavor's scientific curiosity soon gets the better of him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.