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  3. It's an Invasion, Charlie Brown!

It's an Invasion, Charlie Brown!

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    fgadmin
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    #1

    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Invaders from Mars


    escalera-2 — 16 years ago(December 17, 2009 12:49 PM)

    I know there are people who like this version and ask others to enjoy it from a child's perspective, a director's vision, on its own terms and please understand, I have tried to be fair. I came in expecting a good picture. I wanted to like it from the get go.
    While it has some nice touches, overall I can't get it to work.
    Maybe
    Hunter Carson
    grew up to be a marvelous actor having learned a great deal from this experience, whatever he's doing, I, for one, wish him well. However, he is not very good in this title. When he runs he looks like he's swimming. I'm sure frightened people look silly when they are in their panic, but his methods are only distracting.
    For my sake, on my third viewing in several years, somewhere along the way I started to imagine this as a live action
    Peanuts
    movie. That's right, the
    Charles Shulz
    character by way of the animated TV cartoons. I'd imagine
    Karen Black
    and all of the other adult character's making warbling sounds like a muted trumpet when they spoke instead of words:
    "Wah-wah-wah-wah-wah!"
    "No! We can't! We have to look for my parents!"
    "Wah-wah-wah!"
    "I know! General Fielding!"
    "Wah-wah-wah?"
    "General Fielding! He'll know what to do!"
    Then it all made sense. Now that's entertainment!

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      stazza — 16 years ago(December 18, 2009 09:45 AM)

      just watched this again last night for some mindless entertainment. worked great for that. I enjoyed it again.

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        escalera-2 — 16 years ago(December 18, 2009 12:27 PM)

        The Invaders plan
        worked!
        I watch some horrible movies strictly for "mindless" entertainment mainly because they are short
        usually
        .
        I'll watch this title again someday.
        Invaders from Mars
        (1986) features some nice cinematography.

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          MystMoonstruck — 15 years ago(August 17, 2010 11:31 PM)

          Tobe Hooper is staying true to the original version. In the Fifties version, everything is from David's POV and generally angled upward at times to stress that he is a small boy in an adult world. Even the sets are sometimes built to play up that, as when David goes to the police station. The desk looks very high and very large, making him appear even smaller.
          This wasn't some creative decision on Hooper's part. HE didn't think to do that; the original director did it first.
          I know many people have seen only this version, and I've been seeing the remarks about Tobe Hooper showing it from a child's angle. I just wanted to clear up that he's following someone else's lead.
          As it is: This does not come close to matching the original. I've watched it twice today, and it just has too many bad performances. It's as if they couldn't decide if this was a parody or a straight approach. It just doesn't work though there are some effective moments. I like the redesign of the Martian leader but still prefer the original, which also has a neater cave design.
          MystMoonstruck

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            escalera-2 — 15 years ago(August 18, 2010 05:08 AM)

            Cameron Menzies
            's version struck a chord with me when I was boy though I did not know why at the time. Years later I came to the same conclusions as you mention in your posting. It is the boy's nightmare and it explains all.
            This movie was a bit too rich in detail for it to be a dream. Had the sets and costumes been saved for another story, well no point in going into
            "what if"
            And your observation about the indecision
            "if this was a parody or straight"
            is the whole problem. It is as if someone chickened out along the way and said something like,
            "This isn't going to worklet's throw in some gags!"
            and so the little "in-jokes" started. Nudge, mudge - wink,wink.
            I may have suggested it before on this page but I'll say it again this title works better as a silent movie.

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              The_Dying_Flutchman — 15 years ago(August 19, 2010 12:55 PM)

              I'v asked this in a few other places, but no one seems to know. Andrew Menzies, who is a production designer today and has worked on many fantasy and sci fi films, is he related to William Cameron who did the same thing as well as directing a few. And in the remake its "General Fielding", but in the original its "Col. Fielding. What up wid dat?!
              A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep.

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                escalera-2 — 15 years ago(August 19, 2010 04:03 PM)

                I don't know about Andrew, not much on him and no tie-in under
                William Cameron Menzies
                . Could be coincidental.
                Changing the rank who knows why? is one of the lessor details changed apparently for the sake of attempting make the story "fresh". A misguided tact.
                Holy cow
                Bud Cort
                was wasted in more ways than one, becoming a poor man's
                Dr. Arthur Carrington
                character as in
                The Thing from Another World
                (1951)

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                  #8

                  The_Dying_Flutchman — 14 years ago(May 14, 2011 03:29 PM)

                  Even Bozo Miller couldn't be as empty.
                  Let it be unsaid: insignificance is the locus of true increpation.

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