Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978 film)

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Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Promotional poster for Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
Directed by Philip Kaufman
Written by Novel:
Jack Finney
Screenplay:
W.D. Richter
Starring Donald Sutherland
Brooke Adams
Jeff Goldblum
Veronica Cartwright
Leonard Nimoy
Release date(s) December 20, 1978
Language English
IMDb profile

Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a 1978 science fiction film based on the novel The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney. It was previously filmed in 1956.

This remake starred Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams, Jeff Goldblum, Veronica Cartwright, Leonard Nimoy and Jerry Walter. It was adapted by W. D. Richter and directed by Philip Kaufman. Unlike many remakes, it met a generally favorable critical response; The New Yorker's Pauline Kael, who said "it may be the best film of its kind ever made," was a particular fan.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The plot centers around Matthew Bennell, a stoic health inspector (Donald Sutherland) who discovers that the people of San Francisco, his home city are being replaced by simulations grown from plantlike pods, perfect physical duplicates who kill and dispose of their human victims. The "pod people" are indistinguishable from normal people except for their utter lack of emotion. The pod people work together to secretly spread more pods—which grew from "seeds drifting through space for years"—in order to replace the entire human race. With an increasing sense of paranoia, Matt and his friends are determined to save themselves and warn of impending doom. But the clock seems to be running out for the group as they quickly discover not everyone can be trusted with the truth.

[edit] 1978 changes

Kaufman moved the setting from small-town California to San Francisco, evoking a style of paranoia reflective of the mistrust and malaise pervasive in post-Vietnam, post-Watergate American films. In one scene, Sutherland's character--named Matthew Bennell--calls Washington for help, only to find his calls are being intercepted and his name is known to the person on the other line before he gives it. This scene summons up the sort of anti-government fears that were also manifested in conspiracy theories; there are distinct similarities between the 1978 film and the tone of the "mythology" episodes of the popular 1990s television series The X-Files.

The film is also seen as a satire on the "Me Decade," with the psychiatrist Dr. David Kibner (played by Nimoy) now a self-help guru who first dismisses and then endorses the pod invasion.

Donald Sutherland as Matthew Bennell
Enlarge
Donald Sutherland as Matthew Bennell

The 1978 remake also corrects a glaring error in the original film. Although the premise of the film is that the bodies of the pods' victims are destroyed upon the awakening of their alien duplicates, the original film depicts the replacement of Becky Driscoll, Bennell's love interest, as though she falls asleep human, but awakes as an alien. In the 1978 remake, Elizabeth Driscoll's body crumbles in Bennell's arms as her duplicate becomes conscious and arises behind him.

As Siegel originally intended with the first film, Kaufman's version lacks a happy ending. Sutherland's character appears to be successful in destroying the invasion's pod-growing facility, but this optimistic development is called into question by a twist ending in the film's final seconds.

There are a number of interesting cameo appearances in the film; the star of the original, Kevin McCarthy, appears briefly as a man on the street frantically screaming about aliens ("They're here!"), in a shot reminiscent of one of the final shots of the original. The original's director, Don Siegel, appears as a devious cab driver. Robert Duvall is also seen briefly, and Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia plays banjo on the soundtrack.

The film benefited from the late-1970s sci-fi boom following the release of Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind in 1977 and Battlestar Galactica earlier in 1978.

[edit] Cast (in credits order)

[edit] cast

  • Donald Sutherland (Matthew Bennell)
  • Brooke Adams (Elizabeth Driscoll)
  • Jeff Goldblum (Jack Bellicec)
  • Veronica Cartwright (Nancy Bellicec)
  • Leonard Nimoy (Dr. David Kibner)
  • Art Hindle (Dr. Geoffrey Howell)
  • Lelia Goldoni (Katherine Hendley)
  • Kevin McCarthy (Running man)
  • Don Siegel (Taxi driver)
  • Tom Luddy (Ted Hendley)
  • Stan Ritchie (Stan)
  • David Fisher (Mr. Gianni)
  • Tom Dahlgren (Detective)
  • Garry Goodrow (Dr. Boccardo)
  • Jerry Walter (Restaurant owner)
  • Maurice Argent (Chef)
  • Sam Conti (Street barker)
  • Wood Moy (Mr. Tong)
  • R. Wong (Mrs. Tong)
  • Rose Kaufman (Outraged woman)
  • Joe Bellan (Beggar)
  • Sam Hiona (Policeman #1)
  • Lee McVeigh (Policeman #2)
  • Al Nalbandian (Rodent man (as Albert Nalbandian))
  • Lee Mines (Schoolteacher)

[edit] rest of cast listed alphabetically

  • Misty (Begger's Boxer Dog)
  • Robert Duvall (Priest on swing (uncredited))
  • Philip Kaufman (City official (voice) (uncredited))
  • Al Perez (PG&E Man (uncredited))
  • Jeff Scheftel
  • Pod at party (uncredited)

[edit] External links

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