The Cape Canaveral Monsters
The Cape Canaveral Monsters | |
---|---|
Directed by | Phil Tucker |
Written by | Phil Tucker |
Produced by | Richard Greer |
Starring | Jason Johnson, Katherine Victor, Scott Peters, Linda Connell |
Cinematography | W. Merle Connell |
Edited by | Richard Greer |
Music by | Gene Kauer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 68 Minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Cape Canaveral Monsters is a 1960
Plot
Two mysterious white circles move about on a solid black background. As they move, a woman's voice says they must obtain human bodies to carry out their mission.
Meanwhile, a man and woman leave a beach near Cape Canaveral, Florida. The circles descend on them, causing their car to crash. Both are killed. But their bodies jerk back to life as they are taken over by the white circles, which are actually extraterrestrials. The woman's face is badly cut from smashing into the windshield and the man's left arm has been torn off. When they exit the wrecked car, the male alien, Hauron, leaves his severed arm behind. The woman alien, Nadja, retrieves it and tells him that she will sew it back on at the laboratory, in an artificial cave they have built as their headquarters.
When Hauron reconnoiters Cape Canaveral one night, an MP's guard dogs attack him and tear off his recently reattached arm. Nonetheless, he uses his "disruptor ray" to shoot down the rockets as soon as they are launched. The rocket scientists, who do not know about the extraterrestrials, work diligently to try to understand why their rockets are exploding.
Meanwhile, Tom Wright and Sally Markham, who both work at the launch site, go on a double-date with their friends Bob and Shirley. Tom says that the static coming in over a transistor radio means that an illegal transmitter is operating nearby and theorizes that it may have something to do with the launch failures. He and Sally search for the transmitter but are unable to find it.
The four go back another night to look again, but while Tom and Sally are searching, Bob and Shirley are kidnapped by Hauron and Nadja. Bob dies during his capture, so Nadja removes his arm and grafts it onto Hauron. She says Bob had a handsome chin and replaces Hauron's scarred chin with it. Shirley and Bob are both transmitted to the aliens' planet, even though Bob is dead and the aliens have been admonished about sending dead or otherwise damaged specimens.
Not knowing that Shirley and Bob have already been transmitted, Tom and Sally find the cave and are captured. They are kept intact, although held in place by an electronic device. Tom frees himself after discovering he can disable the device by waving his wristwatch's radium dial at it. He goes for help, but leaves Sally behind, forcing him to return because she is still a captive.
Help arrives in the form of sheriff's deputies, Army personnel and rocket scientists. They demand that Nadja and Hauron surrender themselves, but they're captured en masse. Hauron and Nadja incapacitate them, then revert to circle form to transmit themselves home. But before they are able to, the captives awaken. Tom, and Sally's father, the head rocket scientist, concoct a method to prevent the extraterrestrials from transmitting themselves. The humans escape from the cave just before a powerful explosion destroys it. They congratulate each other because Sally and Tom have been rescued and now the space program is safe.
But just as it appears that all is well, Sally and the chief deputy get into his patrol car. As they drive out of there, the tires screech, there are sounds of a crash and Sally screams.
Cast
The credits at the end of the film list the cast in the following order of appearance:[1]
- Jason Johnson as Hauron
- Katherine Victor as Nadja
- Harriet Dichter as Woman Scientist
- Chuck Howard as Maj. Gen. Hollister
- Bill Vess as Capt. Martin
- Joe Chester as Dr. Meister
- Gary Travis as Bob Hardin
- Billy Greene as Dr. Heinrich von Hofften
- Scott Peters as Tom Wright
- Linda Connell as Sally Markham
- Tom Allen as Cpl. Williams
- Tony Soler as Newsboy
- Thelaine Williams as Shirley
- Brian F. Wood as Elmer Wesson
- Flori Jo Johnson as Police Dispatcher
- Lyle Felisse as Chief Deputy
- Matt Shaw as Deputy
- David King as Detective Allen
Production
The film was shot in
The Cape Canaveral Monsters was apparently the only movie in which Linda Connell, the daughter of the film's cinematographer, W. Merle Connell, appeared.[3] Despite the similarity of last name, it is not known if Harriet Dichter, credited as "Woman Scientist," is or was related to Lionel Dichter, the film's executive producer. It appears to have been the only film Lionel Dichter produced and Harriet Dichter, like Linda Connell, seems to have had no other film or television roles.[4]
The movie was to be filmed in color on a two-week shooting schedule, with time for multiple takes, and with financing provided by "group of dentists or doctors," according to Victor in an interview she gave to critic Tom Weaver .She was paid, she says, $420 or $450 for her role.[5] However, the movie ended up being shot in black-and-white and in single takes because of budget cuts.[6] Nothing about the full production cost of the film has surfaced, although Warren wrote several years after the fact that the "budget must have been minuscule to begin with" and that the movie "does look cheap indeed."[3]
The Cape Canaveral Monsters was produced by CCM Productions Inc. and it was the only film CCM made.[7] (Raw claimed that CCM is the abbreviation of Compagna Cinematographer Mantoro which produced a number of films in Europe in the 1960s, and credits the movie to it.)[8]
The movie was apparently intended to be distributed through states' rights film distributors.[9] However, film historian
Nothing has been found about why the film eventually went to TV instead of theaters, although television had a ravenous appetite for movies at the time. For example, more than a hundred "classic"
The Cape Canaveral Monsters was sold to television in early 1964 by the distribution company M and A Alexander. It was part of the "Chiller Science Fiction Package" of four movies. The other three were Flight of the Lost Balloon (1961), The Hideous Sun Demon (1959) and The Monster of Piedras Blancas (1961).[12]
Soundtrack
Four songs played during The Cape Canaveral Monsters can be heard coming from the characters' transistor radio. The songs are listed in the opening credits as "Please Somebody," written by Jerry Coates and performed by Terry Miller; "Love is the Thing," written by John Nieel Jr. and performed by Skip Shane; and "Think of Me" and "I'll Find a Way," written by Morey Bernstein and performed by Jerry Savoy.[13] "Please Somebody" was released in February 1960 on Lute Records (no. L-5903) as the B-side of a 45 rpm single by Terry Miller, with "I'm Available" on the A-side.[14]
Reception
No reviews from the time the movie was completed are known to exist.[15]
Several years later, though, British critic Phil Hardy called The Cape Canaveral Monsters a "belated entry in the
The few other reviewers of The Cape Canaveral Monsters, also writing long after the film was completed, have not been kind to it. Warren called it a "stilted, limited disaster"
Several authors have noted that the movie has sexual and gender undertones. Nadja and Hauron "seem to enjoy an active sex life, probably a first for invading aliens." After a hard day's work, "'Let's get some rest,' Hauron suggests, lifting [Nadja's] head with a finger," writes Warren.[10] Bruce Eder says that a greater emphasis on the extraterrestrial's "strange focus on the lusty side of being human" might have "made for a more interesting movie."[22] And the treatment of women in general in Tucker's two sci-fi films has been noted to be sexist by David Elroy Goldweber. "Also like Robot Monster, The Cape Canaveral Monsters verges on the prurient or perverse in its treatment of helpless Earthwomen (in bondage, undressed, and generally useless)."[23]
Pop culture
Although numerous blogs and websites that deal with movies contain commentary on The Cape Canaveral Monsters, only one reference to it in the traditional mass media has been found. The movie was mentioned in dialogue and a poster of it was shown on the Robot Monster episode of the TV program I Hate Everything: The Search for the Worst in 2015.[24]
Ownership
Exactly who owns the rights to The Cape Canaveral Monsters is difficult to determine. Two sources agree that the movie, although made in 1960, was not copyrighted until 1988. However, while
References
- ^ "The Cape Canaveral Monsters".
- ^ "The Cape Canaveral Monsters". Sci-Fi Movies.
- ^ ISBN 9781476666181.
- ^ "The Cape Canaveral Monsters". American Film Institute.
- ISBN 9780786407552.
- ISBN 0025081705.
- ^ "Robot Monster". B-Movie Central.
- ISBN 9780786444748.
- ^ "Abbreviated View, The Cape Canaveral Monsters". American Film Institute.
- ^ ISBN 9781476666181.
- ^ "Movies on Television". Museum of Television and Radio.
- ISBN 0822385554.
- ^ "The Cape Canaveral Monsters". Archive.org.
- ^ "Terry Miller discography". 45Catcom.
- ^ "The Cape Canaveral Monsters Notes". Turner Classic Movies.
- ISBN 0879516267.
- ^ ISBN 0879516267.
- ISBN 0879516267.
- ISBN 9781613744222.
- ISBN 9780786431960.
- ^ Internet Movie Database
- ^ Eder, Bruce. "Review of The Cape Canaveral Monsters". Allmovie.com.
- ISBN 978-1312288034.
- ^ "Connections". Internet Movie Database.
- ^ "Notes". Turner Classic Movies.
- ^ "Paramount Pictures". Bloomberg Inc.
- ^ "Detail View". American Film Institute.
- ^ "Stocks Research". Bloomberg Inc.
- ^ "Details". Archive.org.