Invasion Of The Body Snatchers [DVD] [1978]
S**Y
The Pod People Are Already Here!
We currently live in an age of endless movie sequels, reboots and remakes but back in 1978, such regurgitation was not commonplace. So, when Philip Kaufman decided to remake Don Siegel's classic sci-fi film, 'Invasion Of The Body Snatchers,' eyebrows were raised. The original 1956 film had grown in stature since its release, with critics regarding it as one of the better genre films from that period, largely because they began to see the alien 'body snatchers' as a metaphor for either communism or conformity, depending on which side of the political divide they happened to be on. The genius of Kaufman's remake was to supplant the setting of the film from the moral certainties of small town America to the amoral uncertainties of the American city. As in the original, there are no large spaceships hovering in the skies above to herald an imminent alien invasion, or grave pronouncements on the news about our certain extinction, for this was an invasion by stealth; and by setting it in the city, where people don't really know their neighbours, it is so much more plausible that it goes on unnoticed. Largely unnoticed, for we have an engaging group of individuals who perceive that something strange is going on and club together to resist being taken over and forever losing that which makes them human - their individuality. After all, it would be so much easier to lay back, close your eyes and submit. In many ways, the film is about defiance in the face of authority and freedom of individual thought.In order to heighten the increasing paranoia and mistrust, Kaufman uses strange camera angles, bizarre sounds and shots of people silently gathering. He has also assembled a great cast: Donald Sutherland; Brooke Adams; Veronica Cartwright: a young Jeff Goldblum: and Leonard Nimoy. In my opinion, it is one of the finest remakes ever made!As well as the film, there are the obligatory extras and they are all worth a look but my favourite is, 'Discussing The Pod,' which is basically, novelist and film critic, Kim Newman discussing the movie with filmmakers Norman J. Warren and Ben Wheatley, which is heaven for a sci-fi geek like myself.
R**B
Blu-ray - No Booklet!!!
I won't mention anything about the film itself as there are already a ton of reviews here for the Blu-ray version. It's a great classic remake and I enjoyed it so no complaints there. However, I just want to point out that when I received my copy I did not get the booklet. Reading down the comments, another person did not get the book either. Going by the Amazon release date, this Blu-ray title was released in 2013 so maybe Arrow stopped printing the booklets after a while and if that's the case then Amazon should really change the description because it's false advertising and a great disappointment to the purchaser who is expecting a booklet and finds there isn't one.
B**N
Competent direction
Always loved this film, the Director keeps you on edge, what I liked the most were what I'd call the paranoia scenes, quick cuts, rushing about, people in streets, on buses. Who's real, who isn't?But the stuff that really get's you are the special effects scenes, very limited thank God, in a good way and execptional for the time. (1978) The leaf shot at the beginning, before CGI is wonderful, and later the key scenes with the pods and the bodies being born to the world, with the errie, frightening, and creepy sounds that go with it, scares the hell out of me every time. Very Stong cast, Goldblum, Nimoy and Sutherland, solid. A breath of fresh air with Nimoy, away from his usual roll and sadly would have loved to have seen more work away from outer space. Definately one for a Saturday dark night...
T**A
Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a rare example of how remakes equal their originals.
Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a rare example of how remakes equal their originals. Now, having never seen the 50s original and only seeing the modern remake 'The Invasion', I was sceptical about the acclaim this received. How many times can the same novel be adapted and still be enthralling as the source material? Turns out several times. This was incredibly eerie and edgy for its time. A health inspector and his colleague are in the midst of a gradual alien invasion where the rest of society start to act differently than before. The epitome of portraying totalitarianism (I've always wanted to use that word in a review!) and how easily manipulated society can be at conforming to new regimes. It's a timeless and always relevant story that seamlessly blends sci-fi with politics. Creating true order from falsified order. The inability of the freedom to act, the relinquishment of feeling...just the loyal obedience to the "bigger picture". That being a flourishing gelatinous alien race taking over planets by duplicating their hosts once they fall to sleep. It plays out like a classic sci-fi, but the horror elements crop up occasionally. The first five minutes were surreal and entrancing, it reeled me in immediately. The slow revelatory build up during the first two acts were extremely well paced. The survival instincts in the third act kicked in and then executed one of the best twist endings in the history of cinema. Sutherland performed very naturally, his character was very lifelike in terms of the actions he took. Adams was slightly over the top and sporadically annoyed me as she stated the obvious consistently. Nice small roles from Nimoy and Goldblum also. Kaufman's gritty and experimental camerawork really was the stand out. His technique has resulted in a film that has aged impeccably well. Oh, and the evocative sound effects that range from screams to synthesised sci-fi noises were deliciously haunting. The screenplay feels derivative in certain aspects, as it tries too hard to detail character development. All I know is, I now need to watch the original!
M**E
One of the best remakes of the late 1970's
Classic Sci Fi remake with some very creepy sound and special effects. Donald Sutherland, Leonard Nimmoy and Jeff Goldblum star in this chilling version of the 1950's movie. Careful use of San Francisco adds to the general atmosphere and inevitable realisation that the humans are going to lose. Other versions have been made since but they simply don't have the same chill factor
M**L
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
Ein Remake funktioniert vor allem dann besonders gut, wenn es seine Vorlage so sehr verstanden und verinnerlicht hat, dass es ihm möglich ist, ihr im Kern neue Facetten abzuringen und hinzuzufügen statt blind zu imitieren. Genau das gelingt Regisseur Philip Kaufman mit der zweiten filmischen Adaption des gleichnamigen Romanes von Jack Finney in Bezug auf Don Siegels Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) und genau das stellt seinen Film in meinen Augen in eine Reihe mit solch hervorragenden Remakes wie The Thing (1982) von John Carpenter oder The Fly (1986) von David Cronenberg. Jack Finney ist 1955 mit seinem Roman etwas außergewöhnliches gelungen: er hat eine Geschichte erschaffen, welche einen allegorischen Rahmen bietet, der augenscheinlich etwa alle 15 Jahre erneut aufgegriffen wird um gesellschaftliche Zustände der Angst zu thematisieren.Don Siegel griff sofort zu, denn die Geschichte traf ganz wunderbar den Geist jener Zeit und fasste die Angst sowohl vor der kommunistischen Invasion als auch vor der von Paranoia geprägten McCarthy-Ära in passende Bilder – Red Scare, eine Idee, welche in den Science Fiction-Filmen jener Zeit oftmals behandelt wurde. In der Verfilmung von Philip Kaufman rückt die Kommunismus-Metapher dann deutlich in den Hintergrund, das Prinzip jedoch bleibt das gleiche, wenn die Angst vor einer Invasion durch fremde Mächte der Angst vor einem immer weiter voran schreitenden Wandel gesellschaftlicher Strukturen weicht. Immer jedoch ist es das Spiel mit der Angst vor dem Unbekannten im Bekannten – die Angst, die Menschen die wir lieben, könnten urplötzlich über Nacht nicht mehr dieselben sein wie zuvor. Die Angst vor dem Identitätsverlust. Ganz ehrlich? Warum nicht? So verlockend… ein Leben ohne Hass, ohne Wut, ohne Schmerz. Aber eben auch ein Leben ohne Liebe und ohne Freude. Sicherheit im Tausch gegen persönliche Freiheit. Klingt nur allzu bekannt, oder?Invasion of the Body Snatchers ist wahrlich furchterregend geraten, so leise wie sich das nackte Grauen mehr und mehr Bahn bricht. Selten kann ein Film eine solch beklemmende Atmosphäre aus Angst und Paranoia erzeugen und einen grauenvollen Strudel herauf beschwören, welcher sich immer weiter steigert und den Zuschauer nicht mehr loszulassen vermag. Ein eiskalter Griff, der einem die Luft abschnürt. Eine Schlinge um den Hals, die sich stetig zuzieht angesichts der Aussicht auf den Verlust der eigenen Identität. Auf der inszenatorischen Ebene ist das ganz hervorragend gelöst, wenn Kaufman sich allerhand Kniffe bedient, sein gesamtes Repertoire abruft und immer wieder Bilder findet, die geradezu beiläufig im Vorbeigehen oder im Hintergrund von nahendem Schrecken verkünden. Überhaupt ist Invasion of the Body Snatchers toll fotografiert, denn Michael Chapman (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull) nutzt seine Kamera oft ausgesprochen kreativ, lässt sie gern schräge Perspektiven einnehmen und einen Film in der Großstadt schrecklich klaustrophobisch wirken.Dazu gesellt sich ein schräges, manchmal schon beinahe experimentelles Sounddesign dominiert von dumpf verzerrten Ultraschall-Herztönen und geht zusammen mit dem starken Musikeinsatz von Denny Zeitlin eine finstere Verbindung ein. Die vollkommene Stille während des Abspanns steht im starken Kontrast zur letzten Szene und wirkt gerade deswegen ohrenbetäubend laut. Das ganze wird von einem starken Cast rund um Donald Sutherland, der wundervollen Brooke Adams, einem noch recht jungen Jeff Goldblum und Veronica Cartwright abgerundet, doch die Besetzung des Dr. David Kibner mit Leonard Nimoy ist schon ein kleiner Geniestreich. In einer Phase seiner Karriere, in welcher Nimoy sehr bemüht darum war sich von seiner legendären Rolle als Mr. Spock zu lösen, übernimmt er eine Figur, die dem Vulkanier doch sehr ähnelt. Sein Dr. Kibner wirkt sehr distanziert, rational, Vernunft getrieben und deutlich weniger emotional als die anderen und auf dieser Ebene wird dann auch geschickt mit der Erwartungshaltung des Zuschauers gespielt. Dazu haben Kaufman selbst sowie Michael Chapman und Robert Duvall kleine Gastauftritte und sogar Don Siegel und Kevin McCarthy – die Hauptfigur im Film von 1956 – haben kurze Szenen.Invasion of the Body Snatchers ist einer der seltenen Fälle, wo das Remake besser als ist als seine Vorlage. Auch die Verfilmungen von Abel Ferrara (1993) und Oliver Hirschbiegel/James McTeigue (2007) erreichen die Qualitäten von Philip Kaufmans Film nicht. Die Angst vor der drohenden Entfremdung unserer Selbst wird hier einfach annähernd perfekt aufgearbeitet und kongenial in Szene gesetzt. Leider erhält Invasion of the Body Snatchers heute nicht immer ganz die Würdigung, welche der Film in meinen Augen verdient hat, gehört er für mich durchaus zu den ganz großen seines Genres jener Zeit.
C**R
DVD kann eingestampft werden...
Ich beziehe mich auf das Blu-ray Steelbook von 2017. Kurz und schmerzlos: Die DVD kann man endgültig einstampfen! Natürlich ist der Film aus den 70ern und hatte nicht das grösste Budget aber im Vergleich zur DVD (wo man auf einem 16:9 Bildschirm entweder gezwungen war, den Film wahlweise mit schwarzen Balken auf allen VIER Seiten oder mir abgeschnittenen Untertiteln zu sehen) ist die Verbesserung der Bildqualität dermassen augenfällig, dass man sogar immer wieder mal das Gefühl hat, eine aktuelle Produktion zu sehen - Daumen hoch!
I**O
Good movie with good cast
Still like the 1st version with Kevin McCarthy as the best version but this is 2nd best. The cast played it all straight and a rarely seen Leonard Nimoy plays a great part. Kevin McCarthy makes a quick surprising appearance in this movie. Having a bigger budget, there's more special effects and bigger sets. This one is more suspenseful and spookier that the original.For the most part the Blu-ray was pretty clear but there were some grainy scenes. Since lots of this movie takes place at night that's to be expected with an older like this. This is a good companion to the Kevin McCarthy version as the story is quite a bit different from the original so that it doesn't feel like it's a direct remake but a different take on the same story.
R**E
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
Dopo aver restituito due DVD della MGM "Terrore dallo spazio profondo" perché difettosi ed aver poi abbandonato le speranze, trovo l'edizione polacca dello stesso film completa di audio in lingua italiana.La confezione è molto carina, fatta a libro con copertina cartonata rigida, completa di libretto con la descrizione del film e dei singoli personaggi. Peccato perché il tutto è chiaramente scritto in polacco, una lingua che non conosco e quindi non fruibile appieno.Ma non importa: il disco è perfettamente funzionante ed io mi sono potuta finalmente rigustare questa piccola perla della filmografia di fantascienza.
M**O
Invasione...
Bel film, ottima regia, sceneggiatura e ottimi attori.Qst edizione non è male, il DVD si blocca leggermente per poi riprendere, credo sia un problema di Enconding, spero esca in Blu Ray, per ammirarlo a schermo Widescreen, e in video audio migliore, ne fanno tante di cretinate, ed i film come questo che sono Capolavori, rimangono di nicchia, peccato.....Straconsigliato se trovate qst edizione credo polacca editoriale..
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