BURL HERE. WHAT IS YOUR LOCATION. Ha ha, yes, it’s me, Burl,
and that was me doing my impersonation of the alien voice heard over the ham
radio in the picture I’m reviewing for you today, Invasion From Inner Earth! It’s not likely that you’ve seen this
one, but it’s my hope that this review will be read by a certain sort of
person, that special sort of person, the kind of person who’ll be drawn to
tracking the picture down, and, upon watching it, declare it “really something
remarkable,” and themselves better for having seen it!
It’s a Bill Rebane picture, and for some folk that will be
all they need to know! (Ha ha, I know the opening credits say it was directed
by “Ito,” but trust me, this is a Rebane movie!) It was the first Rebane movie
I ever saw, and it really made a mark! I saw it way back when VCRs were
expensive and rare, and my pal Dave’s family had one, but nobody else in my
circle did! So it was Dave’s job to tape all the interesting-sounding movies
that played late at night, and then we would watch them the next day!
Invasion From Inner
Earth was such a title, ha ha! We watched the whole thing, waiting for the
part where the actual invasion would take place, but instead what we got was a
crushing disappointment! It was just a bunch of people stuck in the woods of
Northern Manitoba (though of course the picture was filmed in Wisconsin),
talking about their predicament! We thought it was the most boring thing ever
filmed, and the ending baffled us!
Recently I thought I ought to give the movie another chance!
I’d seen several Rebane pictures in the interim, movies like The Demons of Ludlow, The Alpha Incident, and of course The Capture of Bigfoot! (I’ve still
never made it all the way through The
Cold, ha ha!) I was especially looking forward to the moment I remember where
a drunken bearded fellow (played by Paul Bentzen from The Devonsville Terror) talks about “All the furry forest creatures” and then
does a crazy “thpthpthpthp” thing with his lips!
Well, that moment was certainly there! And the movie was
just as chat-heavy as I remember, but here’s the crucial difference: I wasn’t
bored! At least, not very! The plot goes like this: a sister and brother who
live way out in the snowy woods and run some sort of fishing lodge are hosting
three scientific type guys who are conducting some sort of research! Meanwhile,
panic has broken out in town, and drifts of red smoke are menacing the
population! We also see two UFOs, one which looks like it’s been sculpted out
of clay by Walter Paisley and another which appears to be two paper plates
stapled together!
Well, pretty quickly our characters are cut off from
civilization! They get warned away from landing their small plane by a lurching
individual who’s got some kind of alien sickness, ha ha! They fly back to the
lodge and talk about what might be going on, and occasionally a disaffected
voice will come on over the radio and ask them their location! Ha ha, it’s
clearly aliens! The aliens have some sort of red spotlight which can appear and
do anything from travel across the walls to blow up model planes! Eventually
the last two surviving people are transformed into loincloth-wearing children,
who scamper off across a field!
I’ll wrap this review up, as it’s already as long as the
movie itself! Invasion From Inner Earth
is occasionally tedious, poorly conceived and suffers from all the usual
low-budget pitfalls! On the other hand the snowy locations are great, some of
the acting is not bad, and the movie is generously sprinkled with touches of
the bizarre! I’m going to give Invasion
From Inner Earth two radio DJs driven mad from loneliness – even though
there’s only one in the movie, which is why he’s so lonely! Ha ha! And I give an extra ha ha to the VHS cover, which makes it look as though the U.S.S. Enterprise is behind it all!