Skip to content

THEY CAME FROM BEYOND SPACE (1967)

Written By:

Paul Mount
beyond space

What better to gladden the heart in difficult times than settling down to watch a big hammy slice of long forgotten micro-budget British sci-fi? Who can resist a film in which the legendary Michael Gough turns up playing ‘The Master of the Moon’? Who can think badly of a film in which the heroes melt a shelf full of sports trophies to fashion silly helmets to help them ward off the baleful influence of hostile body-possessing aliens? Welcome to They Came From Beyond Space, a 1969 Amicus Production from the Milton Subotsky/Max Rosenberg partnership who had recently brought Doctor Who and his Daleks to the big screen (the film even reuses some leftover props and sets from the second Doctor Who movie) and directed with some reluctance by Freddie Francis who was already a bit peeved at the quality of some of B-movies he was finding himself lensing.

A shower of meteorites land in formation (a plot device reused in the first Jon Pertwee Doctor Who serial the following year) in a field in Cornwall and a top team of boffins are dispatched to investigate the site. They uncover strange, angular space crystals that quickly take them over and they seal the area off as they work on a mysterious unearthly project. Dr Curtis Temple (Robert Hutton), recovering from an accident that required a metal plate to be inserted into his head (pay attention, this becomes important later on in the film), travels to join the team but discovers that strange alien shenanigans are afoot when he sees a rocket launched from the crash site, heading for the moon. Before long a strange disease starts to spread around the area which is quickly quarantined and the contagious bodies are secretly disposed of (by sending them off to the moon). Temple discovers that a cabal of disembodied aliens led by the inestimable Mr Gough are operating from a base on the moon and are using the bodies of the diseased victims (who aren’t actually dead) to restore their physicality. Temple and his friend Farge (Zia Mohyeddin) and love interest Lee Mason (Jennifer Jayne), freed from alien control, travel to the moon for a final and somewhat less than dramatic confrontation with the Master of the Moon and his minions.

They Came From Beyond Space is shameless tosh but hugely enjoyable. Early sequences create a pleasing Quatermass-like atmosphere of creeping dread and paranoia as humans fall under alien control but this quickly fades away when the film crashes into a hokey concoction of utter silliness – the aforementioned alien-resistant helmets and Temple and co. travelling to the moon with nothing more than a tin hat on their heads. Any unlikely pretensions towards credible science fiction are jettisoned well before the limp ‘is-that-it?’ finale, which brings the film to a juddering and utterly undramatic conclusion. Quite rightly considered as – how can we put this politely? – one of UK cinema’s less accomplished genre movies, They Came From Beyond Space is still a harmless and fun ninety minutes that looks pleasingly sharp and colourful on this new Blu-ray transfer, accompanied by a fond and chatty commentary from film historian David Del Valle and filmmaker David Decoteau.

Release Date: March 8th

 

Paul Mount

You May Also Like...

still from titane film by julia ducournau, who has set her third film, titled alpha

TITANE And RAW Filmmaker Sets Her Third Film

French filmmaker Julia Ducournau should be a name well-known to any self-respecting horror fan, the mind behind the cannibal film Raw and the wild, genre-defying Titane. And in some good
Read More
godzilla x kong filmmaker adam wingard has upcoming film onslaught scooped up by A24. Still from The New Empire

A24 Scores Adam Wingard’s Action-Horror ONSLAUGHT

A24 has come out on top of an auction to pick up Onslaught, an action thriller directed by Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire filmmaker Adam Wingard, which he’s co-writing
Read More
louis leterrier to direct and produce sci-fi horror feature 11817

FAST X Filmmaker To Direct Sci-Fi Horror Film 11817

Fast X and Transporter filmmaker Louis Leterrier has been tapped to direct and produce the sci-fi horror film 11817, based on a script by Matthew Robinson (The Invention of Lying,
Read More

Emily Booth Teams Up with NYX at HorrorConUK

Genre legend and all-round icon Emily Booth will be joining forces with free-to-air TV channel NYX UK at this year’s HorrorConUK, which takes place at Magna, Sheffield on May 11th
Read More
kristen stewart to star in vampire thriller flesh of the gods. still from twilight franchise

Kristen Stewart, Oscar Isaac To Star In Vamp Thriller FLESH OF THE GODS

Kristen Stewart and Oscar Isaac will star in vampire thriller Flesh of the Gods, the next project from Mandy filmmaker (and STARBURST favourite) Panos Cosmatos. Adam McKay is aboard to produce the feature with
Read More

Get Ready for Take-Off With the SUPER WINGS: MAXIMUM SPEED Trailer

Animated TV spin-off Super Wings: Maximum Speed is heading to cinemas! Check out the trailer below… Synopsis: Young airplane Jet is proud to be the fastest in the world, but
Read More