THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT 🎬 Exclusive Full Sci-Fi Movie Premiere 🎬 English HD 2023

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
  • 🔴 Title: THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT
    🔴 Summary: Professor Bernard Quatermass, Director General of the British Experimental Rocket Group, launches the first manned space flight from Australia. A malfunction sends the rocket and its three man crew thousands of miles off course. When the rocket returns to Earth, it crashes in Wimbledon. To the shock of Quatermass, his team, and the spectators who gather around the crash site, only one of the three crewmen, Victor Carroon, is still aboard. Carroon seems unwell, barely able to talk. Examinations of the rocket by both Quatermass and Scotland Yard's Inspector Lomax reveal that something attacked the crew of the rocket as they were on course back to Earth. Even more alarming is that Carroon seems to be undergoing some sort of metamorphosis, which is accelerated by a botched kidnapping attempt by foreign agents. #sci-fi #sciencefiction
    YOP 1953
    Cast: Reginald Tate, Isabel Dean, Hugh Kelly
    Director Val Guest
    Writer Richard Landau, Val Guest
    🔴 Certificate: TV-MA
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    Tags: sci-fi movies english best movies 2023 English

Комментарии • 833

  • @simonmilligan7497
    @simonmilligan7497 Год назад +121

    Seventy years on this is still one of the best science fiction films ever made in Britain.

    • @timeWaster76
      @timeWaster76 11 месяцев назад +2

      That almost sounds like a complement .

    • @royjacksonjr.4447
      @royjacksonjr.4447 11 месяцев назад +6

      A great double-feature with "The Day of the Triffids."

    • @wolfgangkranek376
      @wolfgangkranek376 10 месяцев назад +3

      And it ends with crispy fried calamari for dinner.

    • @MrScaryLemonHead
      @MrScaryLemonHead 8 месяцев назад +7

      The Day The Earth Caught Fire…

    • @davelordy
      @davelordy 6 месяцев назад +2

      You are aware that the Muppets Christmas Carol was made in Britain ?

  • @clifforddalton3067
    @clifforddalton3067 Год назад +379

    Mum and dad were out leaving my brother 7 and me 5 at home at the time this film was on TV. We crept down from the bedroom to watch it and it was very scary for a 7 and 5 year old but we couldn’t help but watch it. I remember being scared witless and so was my brother. I will always remember this from my early childhood.

    • @Albiee0
      @Albiee0 Год назад +23

      I remember being scared too but I can't recall any details except I found it particularly upsetting the fingerprints. Also Quatermass and the Pit.....I don't who let me watch that but it may have been a factor in how I turned out in life 😃🤩😃

    • @jonathonjubb6626
      @jonathonjubb6626 Год назад +19

      I was born in 1950 and not allowed to see Quatermass and the Pit (1958)
      (I was a bit suspect to surprises)

    • @skateboardingjesus4006
      @skateboardingjesus4006 Год назад +13

      I'm not of that era, but of all the classic sci-fi, to a sci-fi nerd like me (and countless others), the original Quatermas and the pit series is amongst the best, for story, pacing, suspense, script and is genuinely frigging scary.

    • @naradaian
      @naradaian Год назад +14

      Good job the welfare didnt know

    • @bethparker1500
      @bethparker1500 Год назад +8

      My p aren't would us too, can't believe that it was normal.

  • @Hillbilly001
    @Hillbilly001 Год назад +90

    Love these old British films. They had something that Hollywood B flicks just couldn't get, class. The acting is not over done. Even when it could, it's played perfectly. I've seen this one many times and I've got part 2 on the playlist for this evening. Cheers from Tennessee

  • @RashManly
    @RashManly Год назад +101

    I was shocked by how great this movie is.
    Great script, acting, music, really a great film I have never seen before.
    Thank You for posting it! 👍

    • @45DidDid
      @45DidDid Год назад +3

      I'm not sure about great acting in the opening sequence with the terrible false laughing! 🤣

    • @fraggit
      @fraggit Год назад +8

      @pragmaticskeptic Sigh, you just don't get it, a shame really.

    • @PaulBrown-uj5le
      @PaulBrown-uj5le Год назад +2

      ​@pragmaticskeptic you're laughable 😢😊

    • @choc113
      @choc113 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@pragmaticskepticYou would prefer some modern masterpiece like "Transformers revenge of the fallen, risen, whatever, boom box voiced robot cliché doing the same old plot that would insult the intelligence of a lettuce juvenile garbage we have seen literally hundreds of times before"?

  • @immrnoidall
    @immrnoidall Год назад +46

    How on earth have I missed this movie all these years? Such a treat to find a new old movie. Thanks so much.

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Год назад +86

    I’ve seen this so many times and I still don’t tire of watching it. Very underrated cast. Some of Britain’s finest character actors on screen here.

    • @michaelarrowood4315
      @michaelarrowood4315 Год назад +5

      With an American lead actor of course - Brian Dunlevy. The accent grates in both of his Quatermass films, but the producers decided to go with a known American actor who could bring in the $$$. Out of place? Yes. Wrong culture and language? Yes. Sounds weird? Yes. But that's the movie biz, right? ;)

    • @sexobscura
      @sexobscura 11 месяцев назад

      except Hattie Jacques isn't in it

    • @ayrshireman1314
      @ayrshireman1314 8 месяцев назад +1

      Canadian actually wasnt he?

  • @randyacuna5643
    @randyacuna5643 Год назад +37

    All 3 Quatermass films could arguably be in the top 10 of many list of SF movies. They are all brilliant.

    • @robynmarler1951
      @robynmarler1951 Год назад +3

      I love the one that ends with Quatermass and his assistant quietly smoking cigarettes over the end credits.

    • @ayrshireman1314
      @ayrshireman1314 8 месяцев назад +1

      I think the 2nd is the best and nearly 20 years ahead of its time.

  • @frankhernandez6883
    @frankhernandez6883 Год назад +43

    *Don't you JUST LUV these old English sci-fi movies?* 👽👽

  • @randyacuna5643
    @randyacuna5643 Год назад +91

    A pioneer British science fiction classic with an absolutely brilliant score by James Bernard.

  • @babavee100
    @babavee100 Год назад +53

    Saw this on television when I was a child. I am now 77, so you can see how old it is.
    Frightened the life out of me !!! Gave me a life long addiction to Horror films... The name Quatermass will always send a shiver down my spine. even if it is a little less horrifying today, than it was then.
    Nowadays, I am more horrified about those poor, wild animals in cages ......
    Thank you for the upload, and my trip down memory lane.

    • @648Roland
      @648Roland Год назад +4

      Do you remember The Tingler?

    • @babavee100
      @babavee100 Год назад +7

      @@648Roland DO I REMEMBER THE TINGLER ???!!!
      We went to see it in our local cinema. This lobster like , crustacious 'thing' (if I remember correctly) was portrayed crawling under cinema seats...Never been so scared, or able -(since then) to lift my legs so high!
      All ideas of 'snogging in the back row, was forgotten as we sweated profusely.
      Here's one for YOU. Do you remember the TV series..The Trollenberg Terror? 'Things' coming through the ventilation shafts on a snowy mountain?
      Those were the days !
      John Carpenter? Hah !!!!

    • @sambrooks7862
      @sambrooks7862 Год назад +10

      The thing I always notice about these old films is the total lack of swearing.

    • @648Roland
      @648Roland Год назад +2

      @@babavee100 No. Don't think it was ever aired down here in Australia.

    • @rodneyfrost1674
      @rodneyfrost1674 Год назад +4

      I've been looking to see this movie again since I first saw it in 1955, It was really scary stuff then.

  • @jefferyhorton7496
    @jefferyhorton7496 Год назад +66

    Love films from this era. My favorite is "First Man Into Space". We literally had no idea what the dangers of going into space were back then.

    • @marbleman52
      @marbleman52 Год назад +2

      Jeffery Horton....Yep, in the early 50's, when this movie was made, we knew very little about the dangers, especially the unknown area of what radiation dangers there might be once we left the atmosphere. But this is what made these sci-fi movies made in the 1950's so interesting and open to our imaginations. Anything was possible.
      Oh, your first name is how my last name is spelled: Jeffery

    • @howlinwulf
      @howlinwulf Год назад +2

      ​@Pat Luxor how do we have voyager 1 and 2 and the deep space James whatevwr it's called

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +4

      There's a Twilight Zone episode about 3 men returning from space. One by one they vanish and all historical records change, as if they never existed. Finally the 3rd vanishes and the newspapers announce "Successful unmanned space experiment.
      As you said we had no idea what might happen.

    • @LucyOLastic
      @LucyOLastic 11 месяцев назад +2

      It's not bad, but it does take a lot from this film. The scene where the rocket passes through a cosmic dust cloud is the eeriest. It is like what I imagine happened in this film. where an alien force penetrated the rocket to get at the astronauts inside. The cattle mutilations were a good touch too. Best of all was the appearance of Roger Delgado, who had first appeared in "Quatermass II." I think the casting of Donlevy as Prof. Quatermass was smart and contributed to the film's appeal in the US.

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 Год назад +16

    Monster POV -- nothing shown outright - just something hauling itself through the bushes and along the ground. Love it! Many thanks, Richard Landau, Val Guest and Hammer studios!

  • @darrenmiller6927
    @darrenmiller6927 Год назад +138

    Great film. The American cast members were in top form, the majority British cast was excellent. Great story, terrific plot twists. Stark and sober, and very scary. Suspense grows by the minute. British film making at its best. One of the best Sci fi films I've seen. Stands up with anything out of Hollywood at that time. Loved this movie. Thanks so much for posting this classic gem!

    • @sunbeam8866
      @sunbeam8866 Год назад +13

      Stands up pretty well, even today. Last time I saw this was in the '70s. It's as creepy today as it was then!

    • @harvestcanada
      @harvestcanada Год назад +10

      Today they would have news black outs, HASMAT teams, and security agencies all over the place.

    • @simonmultiverse6349
      @simonmultiverse6349 Год назад +7

      You could re-do this in a space ship, light years from home, and the ship picks up an unidentified life-form which starts eating all the crew and grows larger and larger. You could call it .. *ALIEN* !!

    • @simonmultiverse6349
      @simonmultiverse6349 Год назад +3

      It was a long-tailed red-eyed giant purple people eater, that she wore for the first time today.
      It was a long-tailed red-eyed giant purple people eater, in the water she wanted to stay.
      That sounds like a catchy number. :)

    • @sunbeam8866
      @sunbeam8866 Год назад

      @@simonmultiverse6349 Or the alien could fall to earth, near a small rural American town, and start 'absorbing' the local residents, growing larger and larger. Call it.... THE BLOB!
      Then there's the liquid creature, spawned by nuclear testing, that lives in the sewers of Tokyo, growing larger and larger with each human it dissolves. THE H-MAN!

  • @colinweir5807
    @colinweir5807 Год назад +14

    I love old sci-fi movies. Always chuckle at the phrase " move along, nothing to see here".

  • @LucyOLastic
    @LucyOLastic Год назад +54

    Just brilliant. It only hints at the deeper plot of the original, but still manages to pull it off. It reminds me of "It Came From Outer Space" and "The Thing from Another World" only this film is set in London and its eerie back streets. The zoo scene is especially creepy and well shot. The effects are just perfect, the "thing" being just the sort of monster you might imagine crawling around in the shadows, quickening your pace. It certainly beats all those men in rubber suits going "grrr, grrrr..." The score by James Bernard really sets it off and builds the tension right up. There was a similar monster in the film "Die Monster Die" which appears also to have been created by Les Bowie and his team.

    • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
      @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Год назад +4

      Similar monsters in various Dr. Who episodes.

    • @old-manparker6153
      @old-manparker6153 8 месяцев назад +2

      The astronaut, "Caroon" wandering through London, stumbling... in great pain, his extremely tall & thin scare-crow like form shown stark against industrial back grounds makes me think of the German expressionism films of the 20's and Frankenstein's monster. Very well done.

  • @old-manparker6153
    @old-manparker6153 8 месяцев назад +5

    Excellent movie. Thank you for posting this. The astronaut, "Caroon" wandering through London, stumbling... in great pain, his extremely tall & thin scare-crow like form shown stark against industrial back grounds makes me think of the German expressionism films of the 20's and Frankenstein's monster. Very well done.

  • @ergbudster3333
    @ergbudster3333 Год назад +63

    The absolute best Quatermass shows were the ones done for BBC television. Terrifying stuff.

    • @sambrooks7862
      @sambrooks7862 Год назад +6

      I remember that, didn't John Mills play professor quatermass?

    • @misterbd9641
      @misterbd9641 Год назад +3

      @@sambrooks7862 yes, he did.

    • @ewaf88
      @ewaf88 Год назад +1

      @@sambrooks7862 1979

    • @ewaf88
      @ewaf88 Год назад +6

      Actually, having seen both, I actually prefer the film version of Quatermass and the pit, because it is better paced

    • @sambrooks7862
      @sambrooks7862 Год назад +5

      @@ewaf88 yes I think you're right, I was about 13 at the time, wasn't there a rhyme they used to chant about "ringstone round"?

  • @johngonce5901
    @johngonce5901 3 месяца назад +7

    This film is also known as THE CREEPING UNKNOWN. Easily the most frightening of the Quatermass films. I saw it when I was about 9 or so on the infamous "Science Fiction Big Show" on Channel 5 in Nashville, TN in the early 1960's. It scared the absolute peediddling stark raving living daylights out of me back then, and fascinated me no end. Watching this movie was kind of like looking at a bad car wreck and not being able to look away. :-) Great stuff!

  • @englishincontext4025
    @englishincontext4025 Год назад +9

    70 years on and these Quatermass films have stood the test of time. I remember being scared witless when they were first aired on the BBC. Today I see that their quality and longevity is based on rock-solid acting by seasoned actors. In many examples of this genre, the 'monster' or the 'being' is rather comical, inviting mockery, but in this and other Q films that's never the case. Because the acting is so brilliant. They are believable . There is music, but used judiciously and there are long sequences without a music track. I also really admire the way that the dialogue constantly overlaps, with one actor talking over another (the timing must have been damned hard to achieve), and this injects realism and pace into the action. Really, very well done.

  • @happyshopper1806
    @happyshopper1806 Год назад +18

    Thank you. I've been waiting for this film for ages.
    A classic

  • @fredrickmarsiello4395
    @fredrickmarsiello4395 Год назад +16

    The cinematography was excellent, it captures the drama. A remake of this would fail dismally.

  • @arnoldray6024
    @arnoldray6024 Год назад +7

    I HAVE NEVER SEEN A MOVIE THAT STARTS OFF WITH THE ACTION IN THE FIRST TEN SECONDS. IMPRESSIVE!

  • @45DidDid
    @45DidDid Год назад +14

    Thanks SO much for this movie. I live in Bracknell, and the old ambulance driving onto the field at the beginning was a treat to see. How the science was off! A rocket being able to get through the atmosphere without being burnt up, and still remain intact on impact impossible! I notice they actually consulted scientists for this. I remember watching the original BBC TV series called "Quatermass and the Pit". It was more scary than any of the subsequent movies. I wonder if a recording is still available of the original BBC series, just to see if was as scary as all that - but I still think the original was the scariest - Hobbs Lane, being possessed by the demons. Aahhh!

    • @scotpens
      @scotpens Год назад +5

      The 1967 theatrical film adaptation of "Quatermass and the Pit" (U.S. title "Five Million Years to Earth") with Andrew Keir and Barbara Shelley was also excellent.

    • @fraggit
      @fraggit Год назад +3

      The 1979 Quatermass was my era. But I must agree, the pit was a lot more scary.

    • @egverlander
      @egverlander 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@fraggit I saw QMP on the BBC as a young lad; it is as vid in my mind as the evening I first saw it. Very scary!

  • @tedrobinson372
    @tedrobinson372 Год назад +11

    I like how at 1:12:58 Gordon Jackson calls Lime Grove to fill in transmission. Plus the BBC OB equipment, including CPS Emitron camera mounted on an Austin 7 chassis, in the the Abbey.

  • @Merylstreep1949
    @Merylstreep1949 Год назад +19

    Thank you! Great underrated classic
    Could you possibly post the two Peter Cushing Doctor who movies???

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Год назад +7

      I second that!

  • @Sartana1899
    @Sartana1899 Год назад +65

    it still has a high creep-out factor after 70 years.

  • @rossdavies-hooper3602
    @rossdavies-hooper3602 Год назад +7

    One of my absolute favourites. Thank you.

  • @ponchoman49
    @ponchoman49 Год назад +31

    Great stuff! You can see where Doctor Who got a lot of inspiration with episodes like The Ambassadors Of Death, The Ark In Space and The Seeds Of Doom from this one movie. A classic indeed!

  • @OdeeOz
    @OdeeOz Год назад +7

    Yes, this was quite entertaining, and thought provoking to us kids of the day when it aired. Quatermass became a role model of my brother and self, for several years. 10⭐& 👍👍 for great family friendly entertainment.

  • @tomleaf5790
    @tomleaf5790 7 месяцев назад +1

    ‘Are you in pain? Is it something to do with your arm? Let me take a look.’ Absolute classic.

  • @harri2626
    @harri2626 9 месяцев назад +1

    Good to see Jack Warner as the Inspector - who made Dixon of Dock Green so famous on TV in later years, and Sam Kydd (as the desk sergeant) who probably played in most 1950s British films, and a delightful performance by Thora Hird as the drunk lady.

  • @GradKat
    @GradKat Год назад +27

    Richard Wordsworth’s performance as the afflicted astronaut really makes this movie. Very scary for its time, and still good today. The little girl was played by Jane Asher, who would eventually become Paul McCartney’s girlfriend.

    • @kingbolo4579
      @kingbolo4579 Год назад +6

      Well, she's achieved a bit more than that.

    • @jacksimpson-rogers1069
      @jacksimpson-rogers1069 10 месяцев назад

      I was utterly charmed by her, too.

    • @Gorboduc
      @Gorboduc 3 месяца назад

      She's also in The Stone Tape, also by Nigel Kneale.

    • @proto-geek248
      @proto-geek248 3 месяца назад

      Peter's sister.

    • @ivelissediaz9583
      @ivelissediaz9583 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@proto-geek248yes of Peter and Gordon "I Go to Pieces".

  • @tango6nf477
    @tango6nf477 Год назад +6

    Some great old British character actors in this, all sadly passed away now, I particularly enjoyed Thora Hurd's gin soaked character, what a national treasure she was.

  • @sunbeam8866
    @sunbeam8866 Год назад +21

    For more Quatermass thrills, Brian Donlevy reprises his role in 'Quatermass II -Enemy From Space' 1957, Currently showing on RUclips.

    • @_XR40_
      @_XR40_ Год назад +3

      Also look for Quatermass and the Pit/Five Million Years to Earth.....

    • @thegreencat9947
      @thegreencat9947 Год назад

      @@_XR40_ The Pit......where do I find it?

    • @jonnytheboy7338
      @jonnytheboy7338 Год назад

      @@_XR40_ omg the pit was so good !! I watched it a couple of years ago on RUclips, and I looked for it a month or so ago and couldn't find it, thanks for reminding me. I'm going to see if I can find it today!

    • @_XR40_
      @_XR40_ Год назад

      @@jonnytheboy7338 Its downloadable from Internet Archive. I posted a link for another guy, but that post vanished....

    • @wideeyedoldguy5638
      @wideeyedoldguy5638 Год назад

      I'm amazed these aren't available for purchase from Amazon video.

  • @stellaumbrella3412
    @stellaumbrella3412 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love the old Sci-Fi films ❤ thanks for posting. This is a favourite

  • @manofaction1807
    @manofaction1807 Год назад +14

    One of the greatest SciFi shows ever made.
    They'll never make another like it.

    • @MrKatzinski
      @MrKatzinski Год назад

      ... that is the comment that is written under each and every movie clip on youtube ... boring comment ... and no this is not one of the greatest science fiction movies ever made ...

    • @DrQuadrivium
      @DrQuadrivium Год назад +1

      "Quatermass II" and Quatermass and the Pit" were better.

    • @williamwalker8107
      @williamwalker8107 Год назад

      @@MrKatzinski I concur.

    • @thematey3592
      @thematey3592 Год назад +1

      @@MrKatzinski did you take a grumpy pill on purpose today?

    • @MrKatzinski
      @MrKatzinski Год назад +1

      @@thematey3592 ... I dont need pills to be grumpy ... its my nature ... it is true though ... people always write some bullshit in the comments under every video and there is always one idiot who finds even a total crap movie "the best movie ever made" ... thanks for the answer anyway ...

  • @Maddoktor2
    @Maddoktor2 Год назад +53

    I love how crashed spaceships almost always ended up looking like Lawn Darts in these old movies. Back then, those were pretty much all the physics examples film studios had to work with due to the prohibitive cost of hiring an extremely rare and hard to find scientific consultant. Nowadays they're a dime a dozen, but back then, people in the field of science had much better things to do than that.

    • @vincentconti-jb3hd
      @vincentconti-jb3hd Год назад +5

      They had the examples of illustrations in the early sci Fi books....Buck Rodgers, HG Wells etc.

    • @RSEFX
      @RSEFX Год назад +5

      Many of the ships at that time were based on research and serious projections of space craft advanced by scientist and rocket engineers/pioneers like Werner Von Braun, Willy Ley, Dr. Heinz Haber, etc, much of which first depicted in DESTINATION MOON. Interesting to see that Space X ships look so very similar to the one in ROCKETSHIP X-M. We've come full circle. Looks like the ships won't be resembling anything from STAR TREK, STAR WARS or even 2001 for quite a while. More like, well, Space-X/ROCKETSHIP X-M. (Btw, the scientists mentioned WERE, in fact, paid as consultants on some of these films.)

    • @stainlesssteelfox1
      @stainlesssteelfox1 Год назад +7

      The one example they did have was the V2 rocket. Single stage, cigar shapoed body, tail fins. It wasn't until later that the cylinder with an cone design was developed, providing an almost equivalent areodynamic profile for a great reduction in machining complexity.

    • @david2869
      @david2869 Год назад +5

      @@RSEFX Remember those types of ships like from Star Trek, Star Wars, or even 2001, were space ships not intended to land on planets (with a few exceptions). Spacecraft that cross an atmosphere usually need to be rocket or plane shaped to reduce drag that kills thrust.

    • @RSEFX
      @RSEFX Год назад +3

      @@david2869 Yes indeed. Huge interplanetary/interstellar "space only" vessels, sort of "motherships" from which smaller landing-take-off craft can be launched to planetary surfaces. I probably will miss out on seeing that, unless something changes real fast!

  • @jeanniegillis7490
    @jeanniegillis7490 Год назад +3

    Wow!! First time watching this. It's a real "edge of your seat" grabber! How did I miss it as a kid?! Thank you!!

  • @kimba381
    @kimba381 Год назад +23

    That rocket hit the ground at god knows what speed, buried itself 5 metres in the ground, and not only was it undamaged, but so was the passenger! We could use that technology on the road.
    Must be made of impossiblium.

    • @petertorvik8413
      @petertorvik8413 Год назад +7

      Please there is no impossibilium. Unobtainium.

    • @williamwalker8107
      @williamwalker8107 Год назад +4

      @@petertorvik8413 Unobtainium was a power source, whats wrong with you? Impossiblium is the structural material that has the properties of canceling changes of momentum. to

    • @jlvfr
      @jlvfr Год назад +4

      @@williamwalker8107 proper science!

    • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
      @Woodman-Spare-that-tree Год назад +5

      Speaking as a scientist myself, I can confirm there are four types of matter.
      Ordinary Matter, Anti-matter, Dark-matter, and Doesn’t-matter.

    • @bobp6742
      @bobp6742 Год назад +1

      ​@ThatRaggedyDoctor
      And he had his hard hat on, he was safe as houses 😂

  • @outfoxthefox
    @outfoxthefox Год назад +8

    I remember the original on the BBC, the only TV at the time. It was made even more dramatic by the soundtrack from The Planets: Mars, the Bringer of War.

  • @jamessnee7171
    @jamessnee7171 Год назад +29

    So it seem the writer Nigel Kneale did not care for Brian Donlevy in the title role. Donlevy was said to be a difficult person, drunk a lot at the end of his career. Of course Nigel also had a fear of hippies. He thought they were the end of society.
    I myself like the way Donlevy portrays Quatermass. His terse abrupt acting style suits the character of Quartermass and his single minded pursuit of the conquest of space.

    • @rogermunyon6867
      @rogermunyon6867 Год назад +10

      There's something about the Donlevy playing of Quatermass that corresponds with the Peter Cushing portrayal of Dr. Frankenstein. Seeing the second rocket being launched at the end shows the same attitude of Cushing's doctor - a determination of pursuing a goal with little to no concern as to the harm or tragedy it causes to others.

    • @harvestcanada
      @harvestcanada Год назад +3

      @@rogermunyon6867 Well the inspiration from frankenstien can be seen with the astronaut/creature interaction with the child. Straight out of the frankenstien movie.
      But we can see this as an anti-imperialism film, where the need for Quatermass to conquer space no matter the danger implicit in his experiment, can be compare to the British expansion which bought with dangerous diseases previously unknown to the temperate climes of Westrn science.
      The astronaut previous seen as a full human being becomes the other, an other-worldly creature previously unknown to humanity.
      A reboot would cool, just to see if the themes are relevant to today.

    • @_XR40_
      @_XR40_ Год назад +4

      Donlevy was a professional. Made nearly 90 films from 1924 to 1969. He acted the part as the Director (Val Guest) wanted him to. Kneale could write a good script, but doesn't seem to be very perceptive about how movies work....

    • @CaminoAir
      @CaminoAir Год назад +2

      @@_XR40_ I've always liked Donlevy, but he is a big change from Reginal Tate in the BBC serial. The characterisation is very different. Yes, Val Guest was very positive about Donlevy. I think it depends on which Quatermass actor we see first. Mine was Andrew Keir, with John Mills being the second. Donlevy's Quatermass was softened a little for the second Hammer film and I prefer that Donlevy performance, becuase it allows his performance to have wider range.

    • @_XR40_
      @_XR40_ Год назад +2

      @@CaminoAir I think Quatermass has a certain amount in common with Doctor Who that way. I prefer Brian Donlevy the same way I prefer Jon Pertwee. Andrew Keir comes in second and John Mills last. However, this might be because, though I've always liked Mills as an actor, I didn't think much of the _story_ in his version...

  • @harryopal
    @harryopal Год назад +21

    I particularly like the bit where the monster threatens to keep growing and take over the world. People have gathered at the scene and a police loud speaker is saying, "Please remain calm. There is no danger. Please go home there is nothing to see."
    The best of the early sci films was The Thing from Another World" 1951 with a flying saucer crashed in the Arctic circle and frozen in the ice. Black and white, in many ways I think a superior film to the 1980s remake where the colour and technical capabilities created a vivid film. I was 13 in 1951 and every time I went out at night I remembered the admonition at the black and white film's end, "Watch the skies."

  • @Aengus42
    @Aengus42 Год назад +24

    "So... so, it wasn't a gin goblin?"
    Any chance of "Quatermass & the Pit" next please?

    • @robynmarler3839
      @robynmarler3839 Год назад +7

      Now that's a classic.

    • @jeanthomas8872
      @jeanthomas8872 Год назад +2

      I got a dvd of Quatermass and the Pit from Amazon.

    • @jacquelinebell6201
      @jacquelinebell6201 Год назад

      I liked Rosie lol. The actress did a good job. 😊

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes Yes.... Reading down all the commons and no -"Quatermass & the Pit".... that that was a scary and demonic references movie from 1967. I think the US release was titled - "5 Million Years to Earth".
      Seems it has the strictest copyrights vs any other. Only short snippets are on youtube. Great movie that is still scary vs young seeing it. Perhaps it is too much for youtube also.... The others probably are in Public Domain? The Best IMO mentioned is not for a reason.

  • @fredfarnackle5455
    @fredfarnackle5455 Год назад +3

    I vividly remember watching the original BBC TV series on a neighbour's 12" black and white TV as a 13 year old boy. It was riveting stuff back then and I couldn't wait to see the next episode the following week.

  • @petdoe8938
    @petdoe8938 10 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely amazing love all old sf movies from the UK

  • @geraldstiling3735
    @geraldstiling3735 Год назад +2

    1:00 jack Warner ,Sam kydd and Thora Hird ..🎞️🎥 brilliant actors This film still scares me now😱

  • @timothymiller-9920
    @timothymiller-9920 5 месяцев назад +3

    My brother and I would stay up all night on Saturday night as kids to watch the old Horror movies and this was one of our favorite movies we grew up in the early 70s what great time to be a kid

  • @RynardMooreVstar1
    @RynardMooreVstar1 11 месяцев назад +7

    What always made this film timeless for me was how it ends with Quatermass' stoic walk away reaction where he ignores everyone he encounters except for Morris. Which when Quatermass tells Morris "we're going to start again..." and walks away followed by the final scene where the rocket lifts off speaks powerfully to Quatermass' resolve. The aforementioned was and always will typify the excellent acting which made this movie work back then and why it still holds up today as a great scifi movie.

    • @trevormiles5852
      @trevormiles5852 11 месяцев назад

      kind of a scientific tower of babel. A lot of symbolism. loved the movie. Really liked how the relationships grew in this movie.

  • @linnmatthews8615
    @linnmatthews8615 Год назад +2

    I Love ALL the Quartermass stories, and the movies are excellent. Thank you for the Upload.

  • @Jimvanhise
    @Jimvanhise Год назад +11

    This is based on an early 1950s UK TV mini-series but some of those episodes are lost! A few years ago in the UK they did a modern remake but it was terrible!

  • @jimmyhudson3031
    @jimmyhudson3031 Год назад +21

    "Life drained out of him" same thing used in the film "Life Force" (1985) with the most beautiful woman ever to appear in sci-fi. Also "The Blob" from 1957.

    • @sambrooks7862
      @sambrooks7862 Год назад +9

      I was an extra in "lifeforce", the beautiful woman you're referring to is Mathilda May.

    • @jerryshunk7152
      @jerryshunk7152 Год назад +2

      Barbara Crampton in 'From Beyond,' was also a winner, Blob was '58

    • @reesetorwad8346
      @reesetorwad8346 Год назад +2

      Barbara Crampton in Re-Animator, but Mathilda May was gorgeous.

    • @EndingSimple
      @EndingSimple 6 месяцев назад

      At the time, Mathilda May was the most naked woman I had ever seen up to then. I was not expecting that at all. Then the rest of it came and I was not expecting THAT at all. That was the most unexpected movie of that year. I remember the electricity that went through the whole audience. Believe me, entertainment was had.

  • @2ndcornets
    @2ndcornets Год назад +3

    I worked with the late Richard Wordsworth years ago in Theatre. Descended from the Lake Poet Wordsworth and ran a language School at Rydal. . Hugely intelligent and witty. A very good actor. Turning into a giant cucumber was a bit of a waste of his greatly underrated talents.

  • @davidelder756
    @davidelder756 Год назад +1

    Dave (4/15/2023) I've been watching scifi/horror movies for over 65 years (the first movie of any kind I remember seeing is "It Came from Beneath the Sea" with my Dad, also a fan, at a Midnite Monster Marathon at our local drive-in theater. It came out in 1955, so I was 4. I've been in love with the genre ever since. I had the good fortune of growing up in the broadcast area of Rochester and Buffalo N,Y. Channel 13 and channel 7 had great late monster movies every weekend. Channels 8 and 10 occasionally aired them as well. I barely remember seeing this Quatermass film, except for that memorable climax in Westminster Abbey. My aging brain confuses it with Marshall Thompson"s "First Man into Space" (1959). "Quatermass and the Pit" aka "Quatermass II (1957) was often aired, while at the movies they ran a more comp;lex Quatermass movie, "5 Million Years to Earth" (1967). About 40 years ago I had the good fortune to see a multi-episode presentation of "The Quatermass Conclusion", about aliens bent on des for now destroying humanity. Well, I've rambled on enough for now (another age thing!).

  • @paulroberts7561
    @paulroberts7561 Год назад +2

    They used to say at the start that "it is unsuitable for children and those of a nervous disposition" I was about 10, my dad asked "does it scare you" I replied "noo" I lied.

  • @walterkazban1819
    @walterkazban1819 5 месяцев назад +1

    I seen this movie years ago like it then ...still like it today..they did a good job making this movie so long ago

  • @vincentanguoni8938
    @vincentanguoni8938 Год назад +10

    The scene with the little girl and her doll is straight out of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein!!!!

  • @jlvfr
    @jlvfr Год назад +3

    Diverted the power supply of the entire city of London, and neither cables or scafold melted. They sure built them well back then! :D

  • @jerryrichardson2799
    @jerryrichardson2799 Год назад +4

    Thanks so much, a classic I've wanted to watch again.

  • @anth5189
    @anth5189 6 месяцев назад +1

    At least we still have these wonderful movies. The art of making decent Sci-Fi movies has definitely been lost.

  • @cathydonnellan9174
    @cathydonnellan9174 Год назад +3

    Never heard of this one,but have seen Quartermass and the Pit,a brilliant early sci fi,along with Forbidden Planet!

  • @pendragon4905
    @pendragon4905 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's haunting performance from Richard Wordsworth enhanced by his skeletal face and physique. Incredibly powerful even today. Val Guest's direction gives it an almost newsreal/documentary reality making it truly terrifying. And it was made in 1955!! When I saw it as a lad on TV (late 60s) it scared the living daylights out of me. Once seen, never forgotten. A great start to Hammer's golden age.

  • @SciHeartJourney
    @SciHeartJourney Год назад +7

    You can't even buy this movie. I have Quatermass and the Pit on DVD, but it frustrates me that I can't find all of these movies.

  • @jessfrankel5212
    @jessfrankel5212 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nigel Kneale wrote a lot of the BBC's stuff. Always rather wordy, but none of it was wasted. This was an excellent adaption. Even though Brian Donlevy seems an odd choice for Quatermass, he does well in his role. Excellent performances all around. Always worth watching.

  • @billsmith2696
    @billsmith2696 Год назад +4

    Brilliant stuff! It scared me witless as a nipper, loved seeing it again thanks for the download.

    • @stephenlevant4033
      @stephenlevant4033 Год назад

      Ah, Quatermass. The original TV serials were excellent. Was Andre Morel quintessential Quatermass in the third serial? Rather!

    • @abaddonbolero9605
      @abaddonbolero9605 7 месяцев назад

      HAHA

  • @GeraldWalker-pg3vr
    @GeraldWalker-pg3vr 2 месяца назад +3

    The Quatermass films were sci gold !!!!

  • @tedsmith6137
    @tedsmith6137 Год назад +9

    Interesting that they keep the radio panel in the engine compartment of a VW Kombi van.

    • @sunbeam8866
      @sunbeam8866 Год назад +2

      VW engines were smaller then! 🙂

    • @collinhunter9792
      @collinhunter9792 Год назад

      i was thinkin that too. but thought mabye it had been rejigged for the special duties it had(in make believe life of course), lol

    • @kallikantzaros4444
      @kallikantzaros4444 Год назад +1

      It would be more natural to put communication devices into the van but who knows what they were thinking back then!

  • @ianmcsherry5254
    @ianmcsherry5254 Год назад +2

    They did a good job of restoring and remastering "Quatermass and the pit", the film version, a few years ago. It looks great on blu ray.

    • @wendybutler1681
      @wendybutler1681 Год назад

      Wondering why I've never been aware of Quatermass anything until I spotted it here. Born in 57, a fan of the genre always.

  • @astrinymris9953
    @astrinymris9953 Год назад +6

    I watched this as a small child in the 1970s on a TV series called 'Sci Fi Flicks'. I was horrified for poor Vic, who never asked to be transformed into a monster.

  • @sas2300
    @sas2300 Год назад +11

    They had some strange ideas about space back in the day. Interesting film

    • @l337pwnage
      @l337pwnage Год назад +8

      True. At least now people realize that the Earth is Flat and space isn't real...

    • @kimba381
      @kimba381 Год назад +1

      @@l337pwnage You funny.

    • @l337pwnage
      @l337pwnage Год назад +2

      @@kimba381 I try. I'll be performing here all week. :)

  • @sbarr10
    @sbarr10 Год назад +12

    One of my all-time fave sci-fi movies. I'm convinced it inspired Stephen King's "I Am the Doorway" ...
    They don't make them like this anymore...

    • @atilax6452
      @atilax6452 Год назад +2

      Stephen King stole a lot of material from 50's and 60's sci-fi and horror.
      The Tommyknockers totally rips off The Pit.

  • @scorpoi1911
    @scorpoi1911 Год назад +2

    So good , no big budget special effects just the human story to concentrate on.

  • @robertstewart9658
    @robertstewart9658 Год назад +7

    This one scared me so bad as a kid I couldn't finish it. Soon as he absorbed that cactus I was out of there. Stood in the hallway reminding Mom that she promised we would go Christmas shopping but she wanted to finish the movie first.

    • @wendybutler1681
      @wendybutler1681 Год назад +3

      My son bailed halfway thru The Exorcist. He was 12. He loved horror but that one got to him. He never had bad dreams from scary movies and he was pretty mature as 12 year olds go but he'd had enough. Only film he ever did that with. I don't think he ever saw the rest of it. Rest in peace, my Ryan.

    • @robertstewart9658
      @robertstewart9658 Год назад

      @@wendybutler1681 I actually laughed at the Exorcist, but I was grown. It can be disturbing for a youth. When she twisted her head around completely I burst out laughing. I have no problem with a demon doing that, but you are pretty well useless after that. You cannot defy the laws of nature just for effect. The facehugger egg hatching in Alien got me too. And I was an adult by then. And I had already seen a graphic novel. Viewing it years later I realized there is really nothing to see; it's a combination of the rising music and the quick cuts. Being able to scare someone senseless without really showing it is true genius.

    • @stevenshadbolt2366
      @stevenshadbolt2366 Год назад +1

      I'm with you there, wendy--received wisdom seems to rate the exorcist as the scariest ever but I found the whole thing hilarious-perhaps if you're deeply religious it's more believeable-me being a total atheist just sniggered the whole way through!
      Perhaps that says more about me than the film, though!
      Btw no offence intended towards anyone's religious beliefs, simply I don't subscribe to any faith!

    • @egverlander
      @egverlander 10 месяцев назад

      @@wendybutler1681 Showing a 12-year-old boy "The Exorcist" is child abuse. You should be ashamed of yourself.

  • @ktmstardis6946
    @ktmstardis6946 Год назад +1

    Fantastic Film, love the characters & story line & like all the Quatermass Films

  • @georgeknox1822
    @georgeknox1822 Год назад +4

    We need to make a modern quatermass series. I do love the old movies though

  • @cindydott452
    @cindydott452 Год назад +2

    Do you also have "Quatermass and the Pit"? I both loved, and was scared of that movie when I was little!

  • @joz6683
    @joz6683 Год назад +2

    Thanks for posting this. Is there any chance of posting Quatermass and the Pit?

  • @tomhaskett5161
    @tomhaskett5161 Год назад +1

    7:20 love the old VW bus! Notice the trafficator style arm on the side. Funny idea to pretend that the transmitter was located in the engine bay.

    • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
      @Woodman-Spare-that-tree Год назад

      I remember those. Weren’t they fun? I never knew that what they were called. We used to call them the car’s “ears” because they moved up and down like a dog’s ears.

  • @rossmeldrum3346
    @rossmeldrum3346 Год назад +5

    Alien: Boy, did I pick the wrong planet to visit for holiday. "What a world, what a world" MAN

  • @haydenbretton2990
    @haydenbretton2990 Год назад +4

    The days of "Sam Kidd" in every British movie, he was a National Treasure.

  • @melherd4672
    @melherd4672 5 месяцев назад

    A masterpiece of horror. Watched it one saturday afternoon when I was 8, glad it wasnt night! Better than current movies, thanks for posting it!

  • @davidbowman271
    @davidbowman271 Год назад +7

    A lot of people do not know that Quatermass is mentioned in Dr Who.

  • @andyrowlands50029
    @andyrowlands50029 Год назад +1

    In the original 1953 BBC tv series, Carroon was played by Duncan Lamont, who would later play the civilian drill operator Sladden in the 1967 film Quatermass and The Pit.

  • @arniewilliamson1767
    @arniewilliamson1767 Год назад +1

    Truly a classic British Sci Fi. Sci Fi movies had to excel in plot and acting as there were no CGI and in many cases no colour.

  • @jessiedoggie1
    @jessiedoggie1 10 месяцев назад +1

    Britain's excellent version of The Blob.

  • @jimmorrisey7409
    @jimmorrisey7409 Год назад +5

    Calamari &Chips.All the Quattermass series(ThePit)were years ahead of their time Did i see a Facehugger?xx

  • @wtjl
    @wtjl Год назад +8

    the first one I seen was '' Five Million Miles to Earth (Quatermass and the Pit) ''

    • @sunbeam8866
      @sunbeam8866 Год назад +2

      Is that the 1967 color film? That one was very creepy too!

    • @felipecardoza9967
      @felipecardoza9967 Год назад +4

      5 million years to earth.

    • @sunbeam8866
      @sunbeam8866 Год назад +1

      @@felipecardoza9967 Unfortunately, neither version is available on RUclips.

    • @felipecardoza9967
      @felipecardoza9967 Год назад +1

      @Sunbeam I know; I've been wanting to rewatch it because the first time I saw it on TV I was too young to understand everything in it, like the whole cultural memory aspect.

  • @fayecox9401
    @fayecox9401 2 месяца назад

    Great film thankyou for up loading this ❤

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
    @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Год назад +1

    I had a Dinky toy of the second fire engine (3:45). I saved up for ages to buy it. It was a Commer. They were bright red.

  • @sheeplaughsrecords
    @sheeplaughsrecords Год назад +5

    They did the rotating ship interior well before 2001 for the wall-walking scene!

    • @stevenlagoe7808
      @stevenlagoe7808 Год назад

      I noticed that too! So that's where Kubrick got the idea from!

  • @GuyWynn-jones
    @GuyWynn-jones Год назад +3

    My father played sargeant best! Always enjoy watching this

  • @tomphillips2214
    @tomphillips2214 Год назад +1

    Good flick Thank you for this!

  • @muir8009
    @muir8009 Год назад +4

    That scene where they're viewing the spaceship event footage. That's just downright creepy.
    I'm genuinely made very uncomfortable watching that: I feel I'm watching a very real, terrifying, and incomprehensible fatal event.
    The rather scary sound accompanying the event doesn't lighten the mood at all either, presumably BBC radiophonic workshop.
    A genuinely frightening moment.

  • @davidbowman271
    @davidbowman271 Год назад +4

    Just shows what great writing and excellent performances with the Hitchcockian type of drama can do.

  • @davidarundel6187
    @davidarundel6187 Год назад

    Heard about this as a kid . Don't recall this on radio or tv where I live , (NZ ) at any time . This is a good introduction to the series .
    Thankyou for sharing . 👍💐🤔🙏

  • @cynthiaferguson-e9q
    @cynthiaferguson-e9q Год назад +1

    Really scary !😊 by today’s standards . Reminds me of The Blob !

  • @choc113
    @choc113 11 месяцев назад +1

    Shout out to Richard Curwen Wordsworth and his amazing performance as Victor Carroone.

  • @75cbraun
    @75cbraun Год назад +6

    the film that really scared the life out of me was 5 million years to earth a.k.a. quatermass and the pit.

  • @LeechwelGarden
    @LeechwelGarden 11 месяцев назад +1

    No, No, No! This is “The Quatermass Xperiment!, a 1955 Hammer Film loosely based on the 1953 BBC TV serial. The film starred Brian Donlevy as Quatermass and not Reginald Tate. I say loosely based because it twisted the story into Horror rather than SF. In the original, Carroon, the human component of the ‘monster’ kills himself to save humanity, rather than being electrocuted. As the critic David Sylvester said at the time
    “The film plays down some of Nigel Kneale's more outlandish ideas. The general tendency of the adaptation, in fact, is to build up human conflicts at the expense of the exposition of ideas. Thus, in the television serial, the main source of conflict was an intellectual disagreement - involving personal jealousies, it is true - between Quatermass and a member of his research staff who does not figure at all in the film, whereas in the film the principal conflict is between Quatermass, with his devotion to science, and Judith Carroon, with her devotion to her husband's well-being. One important consequence of this tendency in the adaptation is that the exposition of the scientific background of the story is fragmentary and confusing. The film, in fact, jettisons much of what is most curious in the television serial in favour of stock dramatic situations.”

  • @DalePotter-v7c
    @DalePotter-v7c Месяц назад

    These movies are in a class by themselves! i can remember searching the three channels we had hopeing to find a few of these gems playing on the weekend 😵‍💫😎🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @ftumptch86
    @ftumptch86 12 дней назад

    Stellar performance from Thora Hird, legend. Blimey the little girl is Jane Asher, talking about cakes and biscuits too 😂