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Quatermass 2 
Reviews DVD Reviews
Written by Dave Anderson   
Monday, 24 January 2005


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Grade

Content Grade: B+
Sound Grade: D+
Extras Grade: B-
Picture Grade: C-

Specs

Fullscreen English mono 85 min., B&W, 1957

Review

The character of Professor Quatermass, in this writer's humble opinion, is England's greatest contribution to science fiction cinema of the 50s and 60s. What the Quatermass films may lack in Hollywood spectacle, they make up for with some of the more intelligent sci-fi/horror hybrids of the era. The movie cultist's best friend, Anchor Bay, now offers two of films from that series in a two-disc set. Not much has been done in the way of restoration, but it does provide a great opportunity to discover (or rediscover) a couple of influential classics.
Quatermass 2 (released in the U.S. as Enemy from Space), released a decade earlier, is Britain's answer to Invasion of the Body Snatchers. In this one, rocket expert Professor Quatermass and his colleagues discover mysterious asteroids have fallen all over the English countryside, as well as several people who've suffered hideous, oozing scars from coming in contact with them. Quatermass soon realizes these aren't asteroids at all, but projectiles containing intelligent spores from another world which infiltrate and control their hosts. Further investigation leads him to a heavily-guarded "food processing" factory, which the nearby townspeople are forbidden to talk about. With the exception of police inspector Lomax, Quatermass has equal trouble getting any help from British authorities. The two discover the nefarious plans of those in control of the factory, and are forced to team up with the townspeople in order to save the world. Quatermass 2 may seem a bit derivative in the wake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but it still manages to tell a compelling story, as well as including a few sly comments on British bureaucracy. Both films benefit from appropriately low-key performances, tight pacing and intelligent scripts, which help detract from the rather clumsy visual effects (though, in the case of Quatermass and the Pit, some of the imagery during the climax is admittedly unique and chilling). And, despite the fact that these films are technically sequels, both successfully stand on their own as individual stories.

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Picture and Sound

These movies have obviously been repackaged as a double feature, and no attempt has been made to clean them up. The video and audio presentation of Quatermass and the Pit is the superior of the two, but the picture contains some noticeable grain (especially during the opening shots), as well as some scratches. The sound isn't bad, though, offered in 5.1 Dolby Surround. The transfer for Quatermass 2, however, is awful. The picture is only offered in fullscreen, and the scratches, blemishes and artifacts are here in abundance. And for lack of a better word, the sound sucks. Annoying distortion is present throughout the entire film.

Extras

Each film is accompanied by full-length audio commentaries by screenwriter Nigel Kneale, as well as directors Roy Ward Baker and Val Guest, and an episode from the World of Hammer series. Quatermass and the Pit includes both the U.S. and U.K trailers, while Quatermass 2 only features the U.S. trailer. Similar films: The Quatermass Xperiment, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Prince of Darkness (1987), X the Unknown, War of the Worlds, Lifeforce, The Stuff, The Thing (1982), They Live, Screamers, 2001: A Space Odyssey Useless trivia: John Carpenter wrote the screenplay for Prince of Darkness under the pseudonym, Martin Quatermass...a fitting homage, since the film is conceptually similar to those in the Quatermass series.

Summary

Despite the relatively poor quality of the transfer for Quatermass 2, this is a great set of discs, featuring two classic and influential films no self-respecting sci-fi fans should pass up.

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