Quatermass and the Pit aka Five Million Years to Earth (1967)
(On Cable TV, June 2020) One of the best Science Fiction films of the late 1960s, Quatermass and the Pit stakes out a very different kind of Science Fiction than many of its Hollywood contemporaries. Third Hammer film to feature the character of Professor Bernard Quatermass, it begins under 1960s London as an archaeological discovery ignites an investigation that, in turn, becomes science fictional and horrific. The distinctive late-1960s London flavour, presented in muted colour cinematography, adds quite a lot to the atmosphere. Compared to other monster movies, this one spends far more time on the quasi-procedural investigation to understand the creature than the expected sequences of death and destruction. It helps that the characters are smarter than the usual bears—or rather the usual SF protagonists of any era. The low budget and limited production means do damage the impact of the film, but the better-than-average quality of the script makes up for it. The impact it had on the later Lifeforce is undeniable, but Quatermass and the Pit is more than worth a look by itself.
(Second Viewing, On Cable TV, February 2021) I thought a second look at Quatermass and the Pit would be dull, but it’s actually making me enjoy its blend of procedural detail and apocalyptic narrative even more. I still tremendously enjoy the hook, as a dig beneath London for an Underground extension reveals fossilized evidence of aliens invading the Earth and modifying the ape species to become human. There’s an intellectual cleverness to the way Quatermass and his team approach the problem and try to figure it all out with honest science. Then the film shifts in second gear as the historical curiosity becomes a present-day threat, with London eventually succumbing to a paranoid mind-control ray. While the budget of the film can’t quite accommodate the shift to apocalyptic spectacle, the film does try its damnedest to make us believe and does deliver a halfway-credible climax. Frankly, I’d like to see more movies along the same line, with a little bit more control over special effects and pacing. It’s quite a fun film, and a second viewing goes down more smoothly than I expected.