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The Day the Earth Caught Fire

 
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The Day the Earth Caught Fire

  • Director: Val Guest
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Disaster Film
  • Themes: Experiments Gone Awry, End of the World
  • Main Cast: Janet Munro, Leo McKern, Edward Judd, Bernard Braden, Michael Goodliffe
  • Release Year: 1961
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 100 minutes

Plot

Despite its come-on title, The Day the Earth Caught Fire is an intelligent, disturbing piece of speculative fiction. Through the eyes of British reporter Peter Stenning (Edward Judd), we learn that both the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. have simultaneously set off nuclear explosions to test their efficiency. The twin blasts have caused the Earth to go off its axis. The result is a disastrous upheaval in the balance of nature; floods and fires being the principal plagues. With the end of the world staring everyone in the face, chaos reigns. The only hope lies in another massive nuclear explosion, which will hopefully rebalance the Earth. The film ends ambiguously, with viewers allowed to decide for themselves whether or not the world has been saved. In the original prints of The Day the Earth Caught Fire, the opening and closing reels were tinted yellow, representing the scorching heat beating down on the frightened populace. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

With no distracting special effects, no gigantic mutant creatures, no troublesome flying saucers, and not even a hideously charred body, The Day the Earth Caught Fire was certainly out of sync with the rest of late '50s and early '60s science fiction cinema. The straightforward story and hard-charging script were awarded with a British Academy Award for Best Screenplay, an indication that audiences didn't need visceral thrills to scare them -- thought-provoking dialogue could be just as chilling. Indeed, director/co-writer Val Guest lets speculation do the scaring in this one, and it works well thanks to the no-nonsense acting -- particularly by leads Leo McKern, Janet Munro, and Edward Judd -- and the realistic pace. The production does a superb job of conveying a sense of heat in every scene -- everyone sweats, everyone complains about the sweltering temperatures -- as the Earth heads for man-made disaster. There are a few scenes that are a bit arch (the whole rebellious beatnik sequence is rather camp), but the ideas imparted in the film stay with you long after you've hit "eject." ~ Buzz McClain, All Movie Guide

Cast

Reginald Beckwith - Harry; Peter Butterworth - 2nd Sub Editor; Gene Anderson - May; Arthur Christiansen - Editor; Austin Trevor - Sir John Kelly; Renée Ashershon - Angela; Charles Morgan - Foreign Editor; Edward Underdown - Sanderson; John Barron - Sub Editor; Geoffrey Chater - Holroyd; Ian Ellis - Michael; Jane Aird - Nanny; Robin Hawdon - Ronnie; Michael Caine - Policeman; Marianne Stone

Credit

Tony Masters - Art Director, Frank Sherwin Green - Associate Producer, Beatrice Dawson - Costume Designer, Val Guest - Director, Bill Lenny - Editor, Stanley Black - Composer (Music Score), Monty Norman - Composer (Music Score), Stanley Black - Musical Direction/Supervision, Tony Sforzini - Makeup, Moray Grant - Camera Operator, Harry Waxman - Cinematographer, Clifton Brandon - Production Manager, Val Guest - Producer, Scott Slimon - Set Designer, Les Bowie - Special Effects, Buster Ambler - Sound/Sound Designer, Val Guest - Screenwriter, Wolf Mankowitz - Screenwriter

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The Day After; Meteor; Miracle Mile; Testament; Threads; When Worlds Collide; Armageddon; Deep Impact; Last Night; Scorcher
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The Day the Earth Caught Fire

film poster
Directed by Val Guest
Produced by Val Guest
Frank Sherwin Green
Written by Wolf Mankowitz
Val Guest
Starring Janet Munro
Leo McKern
Edward Judd
Music by Stanley Black
Cinematography Harry Waxman
Distributed by Universal International Pictures
Release date(s) 1961
Running time 98 min
Country United Kingdom

The Day the Earth Caught Fire is an apocalyptic British science fiction film starring Edward Judd, Leo McKern and Janet Munro.[1] It was directed by Val Guest and released in 1961.

The movie, which was filmed on location in London and Brighton, also used matte painting to create images of abandoned cities and desolate landscapes. The production featured the Daily Express newspaper, using the paper's real headquarters, the Daily Express Building, in Fleet Street, London.

Contents

Plot

Title card from The Day the Earth Caught Fire, showing a London devastated by overheating.

The film opens at the end with the bulk of the story told in flashback. A lone man walks through the sweltering streets of a deserted London. The film then goes back several months. Peter Stenning (Judd) was an up-and-coming journalist with the Daily Express but a messy divorce has thrown his professional and private life into disarray. His Editor (Christiansen) no longer has time for him and has begun to give him lousy jobs. Stenning's only friend, Bill Maguire (McKern), is a veteran Fleet Street reporter, who offers him encouragement and has occasionally covered for him by writing his copy.

Meanwhile, after the Soviet Union and USA detonated nearly-simultaneous nuclear bomb tests, strange meteorological events begin to affect the globe. Due to his unpopularity in the newsroom, Stenning is sent to the British Met Office to get some facts and figures on mean temperatures. While there he meets Jeanie (Munro), a young telephonist who he chats up.

In the film's orange-infused opening sequence, Edward Judd walks through a devastated and deserted London.

Stenning then discovers that the Atomic Weapons tests have had grave consequences for the Earth. He asks Jeannie to obtain any information that could help him. It soon becomes clear that the earth has been shifted from its orbit and is moving closer to the sun; increasing heat has caused water to evaporate and mists to cover Britain.

The government implements martial law, evacuates the cities and starts rationing supplies. Scientists conclude that the only one way to bring the Earth back into a safer orbit is to detonate a series of nuclear bombs in the west of Siberia. Stenning, Maguire and Jeanie gather at a bar near the newspaper building and await the outcome. Two versions of the front page of the Daily Express are prepared for the presses: one reads "World Saved", the other "World Doomed". The staff of the paper anxiously waits to see which headline will be correct.

Stenning, who through his investigative journalism broke the story, has been given the job of writing the front pages. The film then ends as it began, with Stenning walking through the deserted London streets.

Production notes

The film was made in Black and White but in some original prints, the opening and closing sequences are tinted orange-yellow to suggest the heat of the sun. The film's pacing follows the 'newspaper investigative' genre. The 'delayed disaster' elements of the plot would be echoed in later landmark Doomsday films such as The China Syndrome and The Day After.

In his commentary track for the 2001 Anchor Bay DVD release, director Val Guest stated that the sound of church bells heard at the very end of the American version had been added by distributor American International Pictures, in order to suggest that the emergency detonation had succeeded and that the Earth had been saved.

Guest went on to speculate that this audio motif had been inspired by the 1953 film version of The War of the Worlds, which also ends with the joyous ringing of church bells after the emergency (and a nuclear explosion). However, Guest made it clear that his intention was to have an ambiguous ending to the film.

Casting

Arthur Christiansen, a former editor of the Daily Express, played himself as the editor of the newspaper. Michael Caine has a small part playing a police officer diverting traffic. He speaks one line. Three years later Caine was to take a starring role in the film Zulu.

See also

References

  1. ^ Dubeck, Leroy W.; Moshier, Suzanne E.; Boss, Judith E. (2004). Fantastic voyages: learning science through science fiction films (2nd ed.). Springer. p. 254. ISBN 0387004408. 

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