Attention earthlings! Ha ha, Burl here, with a review of
another spaceman picture for you! This one is called Strange Invaders, and in my own personal taxonomy it fits in with
other movies I find it difficult to believe I saw in the theater! Ha ha, I’m
talking about pictures like Time Walker,
Witchboard, Deadtime Stories and Sasquatch:
The Legend of Bigfoot! It’s hard now to remember a time when pictures like
that actually got any big-screen exposure at all, let alone in my neck of the
woods, but they did, and I have to admit there’s something genuinely thrilling
about the idea of (and the memory of) seeing a cheap and resolutely B picture
at the cinema!
Ha ha, clearly I’m easily thrilled—but remember: I’m Burl!
Anyway, Strange Invaders! Yes, this
comes from the director of Strange
Behavior, and I guess being the director of movies about strange things is
as good a trademark as any! Behavior
is probably the better of the two pictures, but this one has its charms –
charms I would put into the same category as, and assign roughly the same value
to, the ones in Remote Control!
We have a pretty game cast though! Paul LeMat, whom we know
so well from Death Valley, plays a
professor of entomology whose ex-wife disappears when she returns to her
hometown of Centerville, Illinois, leaving the couple’s daughter behind! We
know there’s something screwy about the town, because we were shown as much in
a 1958-set prefatory sequence! LeMat and his woofing dog follow her trail, but
soon Le Mat’s investigation becomes a catalogue of bizarre happenstances!
Everyone in town acts weird; the woofing dog disappears and woofs up and down
the street several times as an ether; his car is zapped by horizontal lightning
and explodes; he sees a weird-looking man; is zapped again, blowing the doors
and trunk off his stolen car! Ha ha, and I started laughing to myself most
heartily at this point, imagining him telling people about his trip!
Of course it’s all about alien takeover! Le Mat takes his
bewildering tale to different people, hoping they can help! But Louise
Fletcher, who runs a UFO drop-in center which turns out to be a government
front, can do nothing for him; and when he goes to a tabloid editor played by
Nancy Allen from Robocop and Poltergeist III, he receives only
mocking! But the bizarre happenings continue, and Nancy’s building
superintendent, played by none other than Wallace Shawn from My Dinner With André and The Princess Bride, is zapped too, and
apparently killed! Michael Lerner from Class Reunion shows up and tells the tale of woe that betided him when his family
was shriveled before his eyes and transformed into glowing blue balls that fly
away from him! This triumvirate return to Centerville and face off against the
aliens!
You can see what I mean about the cast! Ha ha, and there’s
more – we get appearances from such familiar faces as Kenneth Tobey from Innerspace and The Long Ride Home, June Lockhart from Curse of the Black Widow and Charles Lane from Twentieth Century and a few other movies besides, ha ha! It really
is a marvelous group! It’s got some dodgy acting at the same time, though –
both Nancy Allen and Diana “Psycho III”
Scarwid, who plays the ex-wife with a secret, are pretty bad!
But the movie itself is very endearingly goofy! There are
some good trick effects – the alien masks and the shriveling is all done
nicely, and there’s a shot of a hovering alien craft which, in both design and
execution, hits some kind of rare sweet spot; and at the same time, as with Deep Star Six, I’m astonished that I’m
of an age to have witnessed something like this, with its 1950s-level model spaceships!
I found it pretty entertaining despite and also from its
vast panoply of flaws! It’s crazy nonsense, but it looks nice and has that
terrific cast, so why not have a look yourself? I give Strange Invaders two and a half disembodied woofs!
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