The storyline of the 1958
sci-fi classic Invasion of the Body
Snatchers is so tethered to the historical moment in which the film was
made—a period of anti-Communist paranoia and rampant conformity—that it seemed
unlikely a remake could update the storyline’s themes in a meaningful way. And
yet that’s just what director Philip Kaufman and screenwriter W.D. Richter
accomplished with their 1978 version of Invasion
of the Body Snatchers, which equals the original film in terms of
intelligence, social commentary, and terror. The premise, taken from Jack
Finney’s 1955 novel The Body Snatchers,
is the same in each movie: An alien race arrives on earth, gestates copies of
human beings in plant-like pods, and kills the human beings in order to replace
them with the “pod people” who serve the alien race’s hive-mind. In the ’50s,
the plot distilled the clash between jingoistic postwar Americans and the
supposed radical element of domestic communists. In the ’70s, the plot
crystallizes divisions between lockstep consumers and counterculture
freethinkers.
The hero of the 1978 version is Matthew Bennell (Donald
Sutherland), a San Francisco health-department inspector who loves his
co-worker, Elizabeth Driscoll (Brooke Adams), even though she’s romantically
involved with an uptight businessman named Geoffrey Howell (Art Hindle).
Geoffrey is among the aliens’ first victims, but since Elizabeth has no idea
what’s really happened, she’s unable to explain disturbing changes in his personality.
Concerned for Elizabeth’s emotional welfare, Matthew introduces her to
his pal David Kibner (Leonard Nimoy), a pop psychologist with a predilection
for catch phrases and turtlenecks. The Kibner angle is one of many clever
flourishes in the 1978 version, because the film’s tuned-in characters initially
believe they can solve their problems with talking-and-listening therapy—the
very sort of human contact threatened by the aliens’ nefarious scheme. Yet
Kaufman’s movie isn’t entirely preoccupied by sly observations of modern life,
because the director is just as adept at generating excitement.
The picture has
a menacing atmosphere right from the first frames, with everything from shadowy
photography to the weird look of the pods contributing to a frightful
aesthetic. Kaufman stages a number of effective suspense scenes, like the scary
bit at a mud bath run by Matthew’s friends Jack (Jeff Goldblum) and Nancy
(Veronica Cartwright). Richter’s witty dialogue and Kaufman’s preference for
naturalistic acting allow the actors to sketch individualistic characterizations,
and Nimoy, in particular, benefits from the sophisticated storytelling—this is
probably his best work outside the Star
Trek universe. Watch out, too, for a just-right cameo by Kevin McCarthy,
the star of the 1958 version—and do yourself a favor by ignoring the
underwhelming later versions of this story, which include the Abel
Ferrara-directed dud Body Snatchers
(1993) and the Nicole Kidman-starring disaster The Invasion (2007).
Invasion of the Body Snatchers: GROOVY
I entirely agree with you about the artistic success of this movie, even though I also love the original, and I always enjoy seeing it. One of my fave sci-fi movies. For my money, it gets top marks in every department, but I think what really draws me in every time is the subtly drawn relationships between the characters.
ReplyDeleteGreat review by the way.
One of the few remakes I have any respect for.
ReplyDeleteAnother great review, as always. Just a friendly correction: the original was released in 1956 rather than 1958.
ReplyDeleteSpot-on review. Everything about this film is cleverly done, with a budget the original could only dream of. In many ways, this is the better film. My favourite scene is at the docks when the bagpipe music plays in all its glory, only for us to realise...
ReplyDeleteI saw this at the theatre and that moment was spine-tingling.