X (1963 film)
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X | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Roger Corman |
Produced by | Roger Corman |
Written by | Robert Dillon Ray Russell |
Starring | Ray Milland Diana Van der Vlis Harold J. Stone John Hoyt Don Rickles |
Music by | Les Baxter |
Cinematography | Floyd Crosby |
Editing by | Anthony Carras |
Distributed by | American International Pictures Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (DVD release) |
Release date(s) | September 18, 1963 |
Running time | 79 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
X (also known as X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes) is a 1963 science fiction/horror film.
The film was directed by Roger Corman and stars Ray Milland as Dr. James Xavier. A world renowned scientist, Dr. Xavier experiments with X-ray vision and things go horribly wrong. Most of the cast are relative unknowns, but Don Rickles is notable in an uncharacteristically dramatic role, and veteran character actor Morris Ankrum makes an uncredited appearance, his last in the movie industry.
The movie was notable for its use of visual effects to portray Dr. Xavier's point of view. While crude by later standards, the visuals are still effective in impressing upon the audience the bizarre viewpoint of the protagonist.
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[edit] Plot Synopsis
Dr. Xavier develops eyedrops intended to increase the range of human vision, allowing one to see beyond the "visible" spectrum into the ultraviolet and x-ray wavelengths and beyond. Believing that testing on animals and volunteers will produce uselessly subjective observations, he begins testing the drops on himself.
Initially, Xavier discovers that he can see though people's clothing, and he uses his vision to save a young girl whose medical problem was misdiagnosed. Over time and with continued use of the drops, Xavier's visual capacity increases and his ability to control it decreases until he can no longer see the world in human terms, but only in forms of lights and textures that his brain is unable to fully comprehend. His behavior becomes increasingly erratic, and Xavier's associates assume that he is going insane.
After accidentally killing a friend, Xavier goes on the run, using his x-ray vision first to work in a carnival, and then to win at gambling in a casino. Xavier's eyes are altered along with his vision: first they become black and silver, and then entirely black. To hide his startling appearance, he wears dark wrap-around sunglasses at all times.
At the end of the movie, Xavier drives out to a desert and wanders into a religious tent revival. He tells the pastor that he is beginning to see things at the edges of the universe including an "eye that sees us all" in the center of the universe. The pastor replies that what he sees is "sin and the devil!" and declares the biblical quote of "If thine eye offends thee... pluck it out!" [1], and Xavier chooses to blind himself rather than to see anything more. The film ends just as Xavier seems to be about to say something more.
[edit] Production
Stephen King notes a strong H. P. Lovecraftian quality to X, based on Xavier's near-insanity when he cannot comprehend the god-like being he sees at the center of the universe.
Shot in a mere three weeks on an ultra-slim budget of three hundred thousand dollars, the film was often referred to by director Roger Corman as a complete "miracle!"
Rock band Pere Ubu composed an original underscore for the film in 2004, which they have performed live at various concerts and film festivals.
The film won the 1963 Best Film Award, The Silver Spaceship, at the First International Festival of Science Fiction Films.
[edit] About the Cast
In his 2007 memoirs, Don Rickles stated that he teased Milland about people possibly mistaking him for Ray Charles. Milland came back with, "They won't, when they hear me sing!"
Dick Miller, who plays the character John Trask, went on to direct several episodes of the hit TV series Miami Vice.
[edit] Alternate Ending
There have long been rumors about additional footage, shot for the final scene in the movie, in which Dr. Xavier, after removing his eyes, screams "I can still see!" Writer and horror film buff Stephen King related these rumors in the late 1970s in his book Danse Macabre. This footage has never turned up, but in the DVD audio commentary for X in the 2001 "Midnite Movies" series from MGM, Corman claims that he does recall shooting the scene on a whim (the "I can still see!" line was not in the script), but, being dissatisfied with the results, he retained the original script's ending.
[edit] External links
- X (1963) at the Internet Movie Database