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Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1978) Certificate 15

Invasion Of The Body Snatchers
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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(65%)
 
Starring: Donald Sutherland | Brooke Adams | Leonard Nimoy | Jeff Goldblum | Veronica Cartwright | Art Hindle | Kevin McCarthy
Director: Philip Kaufman
Studio: MGM ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 114 mins
Collections: 100 Horror Films
Genres: Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Languages: English
Dubbed: French, German, Italian, Spanish
Hearing-impaired: English, German
Subtitles: Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish
Released: June 19, 2000

This remake of the 1956 horror classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers moves the action from small-town USA to 1970s San Francisco and replaces at least part of the original's psychological horror with special effects. Spores rain forth, unseen, from outer space, and soon strange flowers begin popping up all over the city. After bringing one of these hybrid specimens home with her one night, biologist Elizabeth Driscoll (Brooke Adams) notices that her live-in boyfriend, Geoffrey (Art Hindle), doesn't seem like himself; he's cold and distant and somehow just not quite there. When she turns to her friend Matthew Bennell (Donald Sutherland), a colleague at the Department of Public Health, he convinces her to see his friend Dr. Kibner (Leonard Nimoy), a pop psychologist who argues that the problem is all in Elizabeth's head. Soon, though, Matthew and Elizabeth begin to notice that people all over the city are changing subtly and inexplicably. When their friend Jack Bellicec (Jeff Goldblum) and his wife Nancy (Veronica Cartwright) find a lifeless, half-formed doppelganger covered with plant fibers in the mud baths they own and operate, the group of friends finally begins to understand that a sinister transformation is sweeping their city. Kevin McCarthy and Don Siegel, respectively the star and director of the original film, have small roles in the new version, as does an unbilled Robert Duvall.~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide

Halliwell's Film Guide

Flashy updating of the 1956 classic, mistakenly set in a big city and confusingly unravelled, with nobody for the audience to empathize with. Its nicest effect is to have Kevin McCarthy appear in a cameo.

Highest rated reviews

9 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
Don't Look Now!

A Customer from South Wales, 17th September, 2004

Great film, even better than the original (even features cameos from those involved with that version).

Be warned though, the pesky DVD menus give the (superb) ending away so if you haven't seen the film try and put the disc in the your player with your eyes closed, or stay out of the room while a friend loads it up for you!

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5 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5 stars
Halliwell's Film Guide is wrong

Matzy from , 22nd May, 2007

Ignore Halliwell's Film Guide. They havent a clue. Setting it in San Fransisco was a stroke of genius. Its a big city, but not so you would notice, if you have spent any time there - which suits this film very well. I mean, if it was New York no one would notice people were being taken over at all! hehehe This film is one of those very few that manage to redo a classic and arguably improve in it. Sure, its a bit 70s hehehe but come on, what do you expect?? Check out the Transamerican Pyramid building which seems to be somewhere in the background of most external shots in this film. Oooo creepy ...

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5 stars
Customer Review

A Customer from UK, 23rd June, 2008

I recently saw the re-make of this film starring Nicole Kidman, which was not as bad as reviewers would have you believe, but in comparison to this masterpeice of horror, starring Donald Sutherland, really is trash.

The paranoia and suspension in the film are captured particularly well. The horror is created, not by gore and sharp shocks, but by the constant atmosphere of things going wrong and the sense of impending doom. Donald Sutherland acts particularly well and you feel his struggle to escape to the bitter end.

The final scene is probably one of the finest ever captured by film, but be warned, it will not make you feel good.

Absolutely wonderful. A cinematic masterpiece

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
Invasion Of The Body Snatchers

Jugulum from from Up my own passage!, 23rd October, 2005

I don't think this film has dated much, apart from the fashions that is. Its War of the worlds without the cold virus. The ending works, and is not a normal hollywood ending. Donald Sutherland is good as the Dept of Health guy and with or without the ears Leonard Nimoy will always be spock.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 3 stars
Interesting remake

VIDEOMONSTER from , 7th June, 2009

This remake of the cult classic, is very interersting in its execution, with fine performances from main set of actors. The end twist might leave some people confused, but on the whole a fairly enjoyable experience, even if it did drag on occasion.

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Rated 2 stars
An emotionless coffin of a film.

Crispin from , 25th March, 2009

Some alien hair gel floats on the solar currents and ends up on earth, snatching the bodies from their former owners making them become an emotionless walking coffin. There is nothing really to hold you in this film. The set up seems to continue on and on into the film until it becomes a zombie film without the zombies or brain sucking. As the script is pretty hallow, the characters feel hallow and two dimensional too; if, as a health inspector, getting excited about finding a rat dropping in a restaurant and making the woman you are attempting to woo come in at seven thirty in the morning to confirm it is rocks your boat, then that is a pretty sorry life. The attempt at the love story is very weak, despite every effort Donald Sutherland puts into making his rat poo loving character exciting. After the continuous build up, the ending seems rushed. There isn't really anything that will send shivers down the spine so when the ending comes, the film seems flat and devoid of any point. Modern audiences will find the special effects farcical but back in the day, they would have had audiences hiding behind their hands or sofa. On a positive note, the sound track adds a very needed eary quality that offers the film a very much needed depth. Overall, this was a highly disappointing choice that lacked pace or energy so once the end credits roll, you yourself will feel like an emotionless walking coffin.

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Rated 1 stars
Hated it

A Customer from BRISTOL, 17th March, 2009

I'd wanted to see this version of 'Invasion' for a long time so I was twitching with anticipation of being scared silly. The trouble is it was so ludicrous that it was not at all scary and it was so dated that it wasn't even funny. Sometimes things aren't worth waiting for.

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*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 4 stars
Underrated brilliance :-)

A Customer from Manchester, 10th March, 2009

As a rule, I am sceptical of remakes. After seeing so many, I find that even they try (and fail) to match up to the original but are still watchable OR they become a huge insult to the original. This film is neither. At some level, it even surpasses the original (although the original is still brilliant!) This film keeps to the paranoias of the original and is supported by the surperb cast of Donald Sutherland, Jeff Goldblum (can this guy do no wrong in his acting?), Leonard Nimoy (yes THE Spock and he actually plays a damn good role in this!) and Veronica Cartwright (in 'Alien') although in my opinion, I am not totally warmed up to Brooke Adams' performance. Although the script does sometimes reads like a typical 1950s sci-fi movie, the film is not dull and doesn't seem to have aged much in the last 30 years except for perhaps the dress sense. Of course, the twist is absolutely brilliant and, after seeing all the remakes of the films and reading the book, I found this ending to be the most realistic and most effective in terms of the direction of the film. The 1950s is a good one but I just loved the realism of this one. I'm not saying anymore on that. Go on and watch it! Seriously! And while you're at it, watch the original (but my advice is keep away from the 1990s and recent version, The Invasion) Here's a wee bit of trivia: The recent film 'The Invasion' had a budget of $65 million but only brought in $40 million in the cinema. This verison however had a budget of $3.5 million and brought in $24,446,533 in the USA box office (Goddess knows how much it brought in worldwide) Moral: Great films focus on plot, not just effects. Just something to think about.

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