Space Invasion of Lapland

Last updated
Space Invasion of Lapland
Invasionoftheanimalpeople.jpg
U.S. theatrical release half-sheet display poster
Co-feature: Terror of the Bloodhunters
Directed by Virgil W. Vogel
Written by Arthur C. Pierce (screenplay and story)
Produced byBertil Jernberg
Gustaf Unger
StarringBarbara Wilson
Stan Gester
Robert Burton
John Carradine
Cinematography Hilding Bladh
Edited byShirley Citron
Tom Rolf
Music by Harry Arnold
Allan Johansson
Release dates
  • 19 August 1959 (1959-08-19)(Sweden) [1]
  • 3 May 1962 (1962-05-03)(U.S.)
Running time
73 minutes (Sweden)
55 minutes (US)
80 minutes (US TV) [2]
CountriesUnited States
Sweden
LanguagesEnglish
Swedish

Space Invasion of Lapland (Rymdinvasion i Lappland in Sweden and Terror in the Midnight Sun [3] internationally) is a 1959 Swedish-American black-and-white science fiction-monster film released to Swedish cinemas on August 19, 1959. [4] The film was produced by Bertil Jernberg and Gustaf Unger, directed by American Virgil W. Vogel, [5] and stars Barbara Wilson, Robert Burton, and Stan Gester. Written by Arthur C. Pierce, the film had most of its dialogue in English. [6]

Contents

Space Invasion of Lapland was heavily re-edited by American producer Jerry Warren and had newly filmed American sequences added. The film had its U.S. release in 1962 under the title Invasion of the Animal People [7] as a double feature with Warren's Terror of the Bloodhunters .

Plot

While traveling in Sweden, Olympic skater Diane Wilson meets up with her uncle, famous geologist Dr. Vance Wilson (Robert Burton), who has come there to help investigate the recent landing of what appears to be a large meteorite. Diane is courted by her uncle's associate, Dr. Erik Engstrom (Sten Gester), though she aggressively plays hard-to-get while they are skiing, at one point grabbing his skis and leaving him to walk back all the way to the hotel. A romance slowly begins, and eventually they are interrupted by the news of a large herd of mutilated reindeer in Lapland. Both scientists immediately fly there, far north in the Arctic mountains of Lapland, near the site of the meteorite crash. To the irritation of both scientists, they discover Diane has stowed away aboard their aircraft. When they arrive, the meteorite is actually determined to be a round alien spaceship, and she suddenly realizes just how dangerous a decision she has made.

An enormously tall, hairy biped creature, with powerful jaws, tusks, and large round feet, under the control of three humanoid aliens in the spaceship, comes out of nowhere and begins menacing the scientists and the native Laplanders. The tall beast destroys the scientists' aircraft, killing the soldier guarding it, and begins tearing apart Laplander houses with its bare hands. As Dr. Engstrom and Diane are trying to ski away to safety, the hairy monster attacks again and is able to capture Diane. She screams and faints.

Meanwhile, a search party has been formed, now carrying torches as night begins to fall. They hear Diane's screams and go toward the sound. Dr. Engstrom arrives and watches as the hairy monster carries her off. He hurries toward the torch-carrying Laplanders and tries to alert Dr. Wilson, who is with them, that the creature now has Diane. Carrying her to the snow-buried alien spaceship, the extraterrestrial monster suddenly begins displaying tenderness toward his captive, a result of mind control exerted over the creature by the humanoid aliens. She runs into an adjoining ice cave and screams and faints again when the aliens come near. The aliens leave the cave and see the mass of lighted torches coming their way. The hairy monster picks up Diane and heads away from the buried spaceship.

The Laplanders give chase and are finally able to confront the huge creature, who is now standing with its back to the edge of a deep snow cliff. Angry villagers begin throwing their fire torches, and the tall monster carefully places Diane on the ground, where she is able to roll several feet away. More torches are thrown and the hairy creature catches on fire, falling backward fully engulfed over the cliff to a fiery death down below. The aliens take off in their spaceship, returning the very way they came. Diane and Erik walk off into the midnight sun together.

Cast

U.S. release

According to Swedish producer Bertil Jernberg, his partner co-producer Gustaf Unger was entrusted to act as their American agent. After telling Jernberg that "Paramount is going to buy it", Unger promptly sold the film to American producer Jerry Warren and kept all of the money he received from the transaction for himself. [8]

For its U.S. theatrical release on May 3, 1962, [9] the 73 minute Swedish cut of the film was shortened by distributor Jerry Warren to 55 minutes. Warren gave the film an entirely new beginning, adding an on-screen narrator (John Carradine), who opens and closes the film, bookending its revised storyline. New footage, set in the United States, was also shot with star Barbara Wilson for her "Diane Wilson" character that involved an earlier, traumatic UFO incident that was not in the original Swedish version. Another new scene, set in Sweden, has Wilson's character receiving a lengthy phone call. Additional scenes were also added of two ham radio operators in a wilderness Lapp cabin trying to communicate by shortwave radio with the outside world. Both characters never turn up again in the story. [10] After other Swedish plot details were re-edited or cut entirely from the original (including a nude shower scene featuring Barbara Wilson), [11] this new version was distributed in United States under Jerry Warren's title Invasion of the Animal People. It appeared as a 1962 double feature with Warren's original feature Terror of the Bloodhunters . [12]

When Invasion of the Animal People went into U.S. television syndication, some extra footage was added, increasing the film's running time to 80 minutes (Warren's theatrical release cut was apparently too short for television syndication). The extra footage involved a group of doctors sitting in an office discussing the Diane Wilson character's various psychiatric problems. [13]

The film's U.S. version tagline was "Monsters Walk the Earth in Ravishing Rampage of Clawing Fury! Could It Happen? See and Decide for Yourself!" [14]

Added prologue

The U.S. cut of the film opens with narration by John Carradine, informing the audience why scientific knowledge is necessary and a good thing. The scene switches to two doctors discussing the strange case of a patient named Diane Wilson (Barbara Wilson). A third doctor comes into the office holding a skull and proceeds to lecture the other two on how the human ear functions.

A flashback sequence begins by showing the audience Diane Wilson's earlier UFO incident: While asleep in her bed, the young woman experiences an extraterrestrial visit, awakening to a horrible, ear-splitting sound that only she can hear. Overcome by confusion, panic, and pain, she runs outside in her nightgown and sees a weird round light in the sky. By the time paramedics arrive and take her to the hospital, she is in a catatonic state and no longer able to explain what she has experienced. Local newspaper headlines wonder if what happened has something to do with a reported UFO sighting in the same area that night. Before this can be determined, she recovers completely, leaves the hospital, and flies to Sweden. At this point, the storyline of the original film begins, but with expository narration by Carradine added over various scenes throughout the rest of the film. [15]

Soundtrack

The Swedish film's original ballad, "Midnight Sun Lament", is based on the old Swedish folk melody popularized as "Värmlandsvisan" and had music and Swedish lyrics written by Gustaf Unger, and English lyrics by Frederick Herbert.

Home media

A Special Edition DVD of the original 1959 Swedish theatrical release, under the film's international title Terror in the Midnight Sun, was released by Something Weird Video on July 10, 2001. The DVD also includes Jerry Warren's heavily re-edited 1962 US release, Invasion of the Animal People, and a selection of short Swedish films and Swedish movie trailers from the same period, rounding out the package.

Controversy

After the filming concluded, the director asked Barbara Wilson's stand-in to do a nude shower scene that would later be added to the reel. This wasn’t in the script and Barbara wasn't notified about it until after returning to the United States. Hertz-Lion Pictures refused to remove the footage, so she sued them for $150,000. She later dropped the lawsuit. [16]

Related Research Articles

<i>Archies Weird Mysteries</i> Television series

Archie's Weird Mysteries is an animated television series based on the characters by Archie Comics. The series premise revolves around a Riverdale High physics lab gone awry, making the town of Riverdale a "magnet" for B movie-style monsters. All the main characters solve strange mysteries in a format similar to both Scooby-Doo and The X-Files.

<i>This Island Earth</i> 1955 film by Jack Arnold, Joseph M. Newman

This Island Earth is a 1955 American science fiction film from Universal-International, produced by William Alland, directed by Joseph M. Newman and Jack Arnold, starring Jeff Morrow, Faith Domergue and Rex Reason. It is based on the eponymous 1952 novel by Raymond F. Jones, which was originally published in the magazine Thrilling Wonder Stories as three related novelettes: "The Alien Machine" in the June 1949 issue, "The Shroud of Secrecy" in December 1949, and "The Greater Conflict" in February 1950. Jones had taken his title from a line in Robert Graves' poem, "Darien" The film was released in 1955 as a double feature with Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy.

<i>It! The Terror from Beyond Space</i> 1958 film by Edward L. Cahn

It! The Terror from Beyond Space is an independently made 1958 American science fiction horror film, produced by Robert Kent, directed by Edward L. Cahn, that stars Marshall Thompson, Shawn Smith, and Kim Spalding. The film was distributed by United Artists as a double feature with Curse of the Faceless Man.

<i>Teenagers from Outer Space</i> 1959 film by Tom Graeff

Teenagers from Outer Space is a 1959 American independent black-and-white science fiction cult film released by Warner Bros. The film was produced, written, and directed by Tom Graeff and stars David Love, Dawn Bender, Bryan Grant, Harvey B. Dunn, Tom Graeff, and King Moody. Teenagers from Outer Space was distributed theatrically by Warner Bros. on a double feature with Gigantis the Fire Monster, the English-dubbed version of the 1955 Japanese giant monster film Godzilla Raids Again.

Terror of the Zygons is the first serial of the 13th season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts on BBC1 from 30 August to 20 September 1975. It was the last regular appearance by Ian Marter as companion Harry Sullivan and Nicholas Courtney as Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.

<i>TerrorVision</i> 1986 film by Ted Nicolaou

TerrorVision is a 1986 American science fiction horror comedy film directed by Ted Nicolaou, produced and written by Albert and Charles Band and composed by Richard Band, all of whom would go on to found and work with Full Moon Features in 1989. TerrorVision was made by Empire International Pictures, the production company owned by Charles Band prior to Full Moon, and was released in February 1986.

<i>Basket Case</i> (film) 1982 horror film by Frank Henenlotter

Basket Case is a 1982 American horror film written and directed by Frank Henenlotter, and produced by Edgar Ievins. Kevin Van Hentenryck stars as a normal-looking person who seeks vengeance for the unwanted surgery that separated him from his deformed conjoined twin brother, who he now hides in a basket.

<i>I Married a Monster from Outer Space</i> 1958 film by Gene Fowler Jr.

I Married a Monster from Outer Space is a 1958 American horror science fiction film from Paramount Pictures, produced and directed by Gene Fowler Jr., that stars Tom Tryon and Gloria Talbott. Paramount released the film as a double feature with The Blob.

<i>Gamera vs. Zigra</i> 1971 film by Noriaki Yuasa

Gamera vs. Zigra is a 1971 Japanese kaiju film directed by Noriaki Yuasa, written by Niisan Takahashi, and produced by Yoshihiko Manabe and Hidemasa Nagata. It is the seventh entry in the Gamera film series, after Gamera vs. Jiger, which was released the previous year. Gamera vs. Zigra stars Eiko Yanami, Reiko Kasahara, Mikiko Tsubouchi, and Kōji Fujiyama, and features the fictional giant monsters Gamera and Zigra.

<i>Planet of the Vampires</i> 1965 Italian film

Planet of the Vampires is a 1965 Italian-Spanish science fiction horror film, produced by Fulvio Lucisano, directed by Mario Bava, that stars Barry Sullivan and Norma Bengell. The screenplay, by Bava, Alberto Bevilacqua, Callisto Cosulich, Antonio Roman and Rafael J. Salvia, was based on an Italian-language science fiction short story, Renato Pestriniero's "One Night of 21 Hours". American International Pictures released the film as the supporting film on a double feature with Daniel Haller's Die, Monster, Die! (1965).

<i>The Strange World of Planet X</i> (film) 1958 film by Gilbert Gunn

The Strange World of Planet X is an independently made 1958 British science fiction horror film, produced by George Maynard and John Bash, directed by Gilbert Gunn, that stars Forrest Tucker and Gaby André. The film was distributed in the UK in February, 1958 by Eros Films. It was released in the US on July 7, 1958 by Distributors Corporation of America as a double feature with The Crawling Eye, also starring Tucker.

<i>The Incredible Petrified World</i> 1957 film by Jerry Warren

The Incredible Petrified World is a 1959 science fiction film produced and directed by Jerry Warren, and starring John Carradine and Robert Clarke. The film follows four explorers who travel down into the depths of the sea and get stranded in an underwater cavern.

<i>The Man from Planet X</i> 1951 American science fiction film directed by Edgar George Ulmer

The Man from Planet X is a 1951 independently made American black-and-white science fiction horror film, produced by Jack Pollexfen and Aubrey Wisberg, directed by Edgar G. Ulmer, that stars Robert Clarke, Margaret Field, and William Schallert. The film was distributed by United Artists.

<i>Galaxy of Terror</i> 1981 film by Bruce D. Clark

Galaxy of Terror is a 1981 science fiction horror film produced by Roger Corman through New World Pictures and directed by Bruce D. Clark. It was distributed by United Artists. It stars Edward Albert, Erin Moran, Ray Walston and Taaffe O'Connell.

<i>Invasion of the Star Creatures</i> 1962 film by Bruno VeSota

Invasion of the Star Creatures is an independently made 1962 black-and-white science fiction/comedy film, produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff and Berj Hagopian, directed by Bruno VeSota, that stars Bob Ball and Frankie Ray. The film was theatrically released by American International Pictures as a double feature with The Brain That Wouldn't Die.

Jerry Warren was an American film director, producer, editor, screenwriter, cinematographer, and actor. Warren grew up wanting to get into the film business in Los Angeles, California. He appeared in small parts in a few 1940s films such as Ghost Catchers, Anchors Aweigh, and Unconquered.

<i>Terror Is a Man</i> 1959 Filipino/American horror film directed by Gerardo de León

Terror Is a Man is a 1959 black-and-white Filipino/American horror film directed by Gerardo de Leon.

<i>Brides of Blood</i> 1968 Filipino film

Brides of Blood is a 1968 Filipino horror film, co-directed by Eddie Romero and Gerardo de Leon, and starring John Ashley, Kent Taylor, Beverly Hills, Eva Darren and Mario Montenegro. It was the first movie that Ashley made in the Philippines, beginning a long association between Ashley and that country. Brides of Blood was the second in a series of four horror films produced by Romero and Kane W. Lynn known as the "Blood Island" series, which also included Terror Is a Man, The Mad Doctor of Blood Island and Beast of Blood. Brides of Blood was later released to television syndication in some areas as Island of Living Horror.

<i>Alien 2: On Earth</i> 1980 Italian-British-American science fiction film

Alien 2: On Earth, also known as Alien Terror, is a 1980 science fiction horror film, written and directed by Ciro Ippolito before the trademark Alien was registered. It was released following the success of the 1979 film Alien as an unofficial sequel, albeit having little connection to the film.

<i>She Demons</i> 1958 film by Richard E. Cunha

She Demons is a 1958 American independent black-and-white science fiction horror film, produced by Arthur A. Jacobs and Marc Frederic, directed and co-written by Richard E. Cunha, that stars Irish McCalla, Tod Griffin, and Victor Sen Yung. Made in the tongue-in-cheek style of Men's adventure magazines, Nazisploitation, and The Island of Lost Souls, the film was distributed by Astor Pictures in March, 1958 as a double feature with Cunha's Giant from the Unknown.

References

  1. Warren, Bill (1986). Keep Watching The Skies Volume 2. McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN   0-89950-170-2. Page 749
  2. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  3. Warren, Bill (1986). Keep Watching The Skies Volume 2. McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN   0-89950-170-2. Page 749
  4. "Rymdinvasion i Lappland" (in Swedish). Swedish Film Database. 19 August 1959. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
  5. Elin Fjellman Jaderup (22 April 2005). "Superobskyrt" (in Swedish). Sydsvenskan. Archived from the original on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  6. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  7. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  8. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  9. Warren, Bill (1986). Keep Watching The Skies Volume 2. McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN   0-89950-170-2. Page 749
  10. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  11. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  12. Weldon, Michael (1983). The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film. Ballantine Books. ISBN   0-345-34345-X. Page 701
  13. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  14. Ray, Fred Olen (1991). The New Poverty Row. McFarland and Co. Inc. ISBN   0-89950-628-3. Page 9
  15. Henenlotter, Frank (2001). Terror in the Midnight Sun (DVD liner notes). Something Weird Video Inc. ID9751SWDVD.
  16. Clemens, Samuel. "Good Girl", Classic Images. October 2022

Bibliography