It Conquered the World

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It Conquered the World

Theatrical release poster.
Directed by Roger Corman
Produced by Roger Corman
Written by Lou Rusoff
Charles B. Griffith (uncredited)
Starring Peter Graves
Lee van Cleef
Beverly Garland
Sally Fraser
Music by Ronald Stein
Cinematography Fred E. West
Editing by Charles Gross
Distributed by American International Pictures
Release date(s) July 15, 1956
Running time 71 min.
Country Flag of United States United States
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

It Conquered the World is a 1956 science fiction film about an alien from Venus trying to take over the world with the help of a disillusioned human scientist. It was directed by Roger Corman, written by Lou Rusoff (with uncredited contributions by Charles B. Griffith), and starred Peter Graves, Lee van Cleef, Beverly Garland, and Sally Fraser. The film was the inspiration of a song by Frank Zappa, Cheepnis, and was later featured on an episode of the television series Mystery Science Theater 3000, which mocked the film.

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[edit] Plot synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Dr. Tom Anderson (Cleef), an embittered scientist, has picked up the voice of a Venusian alien in his radio transmitter. The alien wants to take over the world with its mind-control devices and thus make a new home for itself, but claims only to be bringing peace to the Earth through the elimination of emotions. Anderson agrees to help the creature in this ploy, even recommending that the creature assimilate his friend Dr. Nelson (Graves) and his wife (Fraser). The alien's first action is to suppress all electric power on Earth, including the ignition systems of motor vehicles, leaving Dr. Nelson resorting to riding around on a bicycle.

After killing a flying bat-like creature which carries the mind-control device, Dr. Nelson finally persuades the paranoid Anderson that he has been wrong about the alien's motives and that he has made a horrible mistake, allying himself with a creature bent on world domination. They hurriedly leave when they discover Tom's wife has picked up a rifle and gone to the alien's cave to try to kill it. The monster succeeds in taking the life of Mrs. Anderson before the two doctors make it to her rescue. Finally seeing his hubris and the loss of everything he holds dear, Dr. Anderson kills the monster, sustaining lethal wounds of his own in the confrontation.

[edit] Cast

  • Peter Graves .............. Dr. Paul Nelson
  • Lee Van Cleef .............. Dr. Tom Anderson
  • Beverly Garland .............. Claire Anderson
  • Sally Fraser .............. Joan Nelson
  • Russ Bender .............. General James Pattick
  • Taggart Casey .............. Sheriff N.J. Shallert
  • Karen Kadler .............. Dr. Ellen Peters
  • Jonathan Haze .............. Private Manuel Ortiz
  • Paul Harbor .............. Dr. Floyd Mason
  • Charles B. Griffith .............. Dr. Pete Shelton
  • Tomas E. Jackson .............. George Haskell

[edit] References in popular culture

The French two man electronic music group M83 samples dialogue from the film in their song "Facing That," from their self-titled 2001 debut album; most notably a conversation between Dr. Tom Anderson and the alien where the alien is speaking to Anderson (audible pauses denoted by ellipses):

"This is Anderson, acknowledge... Where are you? ... Yes, yes, it's true I am your only friend, no one else even knows you exist ... but they will, it'll be the greatest day in the history of mankind..." his wife: "Come to bed Tom."

On the album Roxy and Elsewhere, Frank Zappa performs an on-stage ad-lib about this and other cheap monster movies before performing the song "Cheepnis":

"...I'll tell you, a good one that I saw one time, I think the name of the film was It Conquered the World, and the... Did you ever see that one? The monster looks sort of like an inverted ice-cream cone with teeth around the bottom. It looks like a (phew!), like a teepee or... sort of a rounded off pup-tent affair, and, uh, it's got fangs on the base of it, I don't know why but it's a very threatening sight, and then he's got a frown and, you know, ugly mouth and everything, and there's this one scene where the, uh, monster is coming out of a cave, see? There's always a scene where they come out of a cave, at least once, and the rest of the cast... it must have been made around the 1950's, the lapels are about like that wide, the ties are about that wide and about this short, and they always have a little revolver that they're gonna shoot the monster with, and there is always a girl who falls down and twists her ankle... heh-hey! Of course there is! You know how they are, the weaker sex and everything, twisting their ankle on behalf of the little ice-cream cone. Well in this particular scene, in this scene, folks, they, uh, they didn't wanna re-take it 'cause it musta been so good they wanted to keep it, but they... when the monster came out of the cave, just over on the left hand side of the screen you can see about this much two-by-four attached to the bottom of the Thing as the guy is pushing it out, and then obviously off-camera somebody's goin': 'NO! GET IT BACK!' And they drag it back just a little bit as the guy is goin': 'KCH! KCH!' Now that's Cheepnis!"

Spoilers end here.

[edit] External links