1898 UK First Edition
1953
The first film version of this classic science fiction work was by producer,
George Pal. It was
released on August 26, 1953, in glorious
Technicolor (
technicolor projector) with completely saturated colors that made your eyes pop out. I had just turned thirteen that year; I was
no longer an in-between, a belong-no-where kid. I was a
TEENager!
Also, I had just discovered the world of
Si-Fi through novels . . . and I remember being completely scared out of
my wits! What fun!
He! He!

The film starred
Gene Barry with
Ann Robinson and was narrated by
Sir Cedric Hardwicke, a brilliant
Shakespearean actor whose voice perfectly suited the sinister mood of the story. There are fascinating stories about the
special effects by the actors and crew members on YouTube (
link below).
The War of the Worlds won an
Oscar for its special effects (
which were pretty cool by those days standards) and was later selected for inclusion in the
National Film Registry of the
Library of Congress (
links to the film on YouTube below).
The score was by
Leith Stevens,
whose brilliant music added to the eerie feeling of the film. Stevens
also composed two other Si-Fi scores for Pal productions:
Destination Moon and
When Worlds Collide, as well as the groundbreaking jazz score for
The Wild One (
link below) which starred Marlon Brando. All of them totally awesome!
The film transposed the original novel in time from the late Victorian era to
the mid-fifties and in location from England to the U. S.; Southern
California to be exact (
where else?).
Corona was used as the shooting location of the fictitious town of Linda Rosa.
The War of the Worlds opens with a
black-and-white prologue featuring
newsreel war footage and a
voice-over describing the destructive technological advancements of Earthly warfare from
World War I through
World War II. The image then
smash cuts to vivid
Technicolor
and the dramatic opening title card and credits follow. It's really
terrific! The hair on my arms stood on end when I saw it the first time;
I still get
goose bumps when I watch it again.
The War of the Worlds had its official Hollywood
premiere on February 20, 1953, although it did not go into
general theatrical release until the autumn of that year. The film was both a critical and
box office
success. It accrued $2,000,000 in distributors' domestic (U.S. and
Canada) rentals, making it the year's biggest science fiction film hit.
The New York Times review of
The War of the Worlds
by Armond White, noted, "[The film is] an imaginatively conceived,
professionally turned adventure, which makes excellent use of
Technicolor, special effects by a crew of experts, and impressively
drawn backgrounds ... Director Byron Haskin, working from a tight script
by Barré Lyndon, has made this excursion suspenseful, fast and, on
occasion, properly chilling." "Brog" in
Variety felt, "[It is] a socko science-fiction feature, as fearsome as a film as was the
Orson Welles
1938 radio interpretation...what starring honors there are go strictly
to the special effects, which create an atmosphere of soul-chilling
apprehension so effectively [that] audiences will actually take alarm at
the danger posed in the picture. It can't be recommended for the
weak-hearted, but to the many who delight in an occasional good scare,
it's socko entertainment of hackle-raising quality."
1957
The Night America Trembled 1957 was a Studio One, live production/performance for television (
everything was live in those days before the advent of video tape).
promotional photo still
It
is a documentary style re-enactment of the original Orson Wells
broadcast on October 30, 1938. I remember seeing it. We had a used, beat-up TV with a picture that flipped up and down (
ugh!). But by that time, I was so hooked on Si-Fi from all the novels I was soaking up, I didn't care.
The Night America Trembled 1957
studio photo
The
production had a behind-the-scenes look so you got to see how they did
stuff, sound effects, etc. There are also appearances by young actors who were
to become major names in entertainment. It's a lot of fun to check out
when you want to chill out (
link to the complete film on YouTube below).
1978
It is not really a film but it has been performed in concert and I'm amazed there hasn't been a film made of it by now.
Jeff Wayne wrote a
rock concept album that was a version of the Wells novel. Its local is England, as in the original novel, and it is narrated by
Richard Burton (
link to info about it below).
1983

The story is used as a witty
commentary on the political situation of Poland in the period of the
Polish People's Republic. The film starts with the arrival of a more advanced civilization from
Mars which purports to have a friendly attitude towards Earthlings. The place visited by the
Martians resembles a
police state in which a huge role is played by television, which is used as a propaganda tool. - from
Wikipedia
The film opens on December 18, 1999, just a few days before the dawn of the
new century. A local reporter, Iron Idem, announces that the Martians
have landed. Shortly after that his program loses its independence: he
is given the script telling the crowds how to welcome the invaders. Then
the chaos breaks out: the Martians and police mistreat the populace;
things become violent. Idem's own wife is kidnapped and it seems
somebody is trying to reduce his effectiveness as a reporter. Idem
decides to fight back: he illegally broadcasts a message during the rock
concert, but nobody believes him anymore. - from
IMDb
There is a video of the complete film, in Polish with no subtitles, on YouTube and the full cast on IMDb (
links to both below).
The soundtrack for the film, composed by
Jerzy Maksymiuk, is terrific! It is performed by
Józef Skrzek and emsemble.
Skrzek was originally from the Polish
progressive rock group,
SBB (
link to more info below).
1988 - 1990
War of the Worlds is a Canadian/American
science-fiction television series that ran for two seasons, from October
10, 1988 to May 14, 1990. The series is an extension of the original
1953 film
The War of the Worlds, using the same War Machine, often incorporating aspects from the film,
radio adaptation, and
original novel into its mythology.
The original film's producer,
George Pal, conceived of a TV series from the same film sometime in the 1970s but
it was not until the late 1980s that a series was finally realized,
this time by television producer Greg Strangis. The series was filmed in
Los Angeles, California and
Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
According to the series, rather than being killed outright by
germs at the end of the 1953 film, the aliens had all slipped into a state of
suspended animation.
Their bodies were stored away in toxic waste drums and shipped to
various disposal sites within the United States (ten such sites are
known to exist in the country), and a widespread government
cover-up combined with a condition dubbed “selective amnesia” has convinced most people that the invasion had never happened.
Thirty-five years later, in 1988 (modern day when the series began), a
terrorist group calling itself the People's Liberation Party
accidentally irradiates the drums containing the aliens while raiding
dumpsite Fort Jericho. The radiation destroys the bacteria that are
keeping the aliens unconscious. Once free, the aliens take possession of
the bodies of the six terrorists who overran the site. From there they
use a series of human bodies and crudely adapted Earth technology to
find means of appropriating the planet, both in purging the plague that
is humanity and developing a permanent means to inoculate themselves
against the planet's indigenous bacteria. Their attempt to successfully
make Earth into their new homeworld is imperative for in roughly five
years, three million colonists from Mor-Tax are expected to arrive. Complete info on
Wikipedia.
2005
2005 proved to be a boon year for the
The War of the Worlds novel; three films based on it hit the screen. The earliest one was released on June 14, 2005, and went by the names (
that's right plural; guess they couldn't decide on one)
H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds,
The Classic War of the Worlds or simply as
War of the Worlds.

This version is noted for its "extreme faithfulness" to Wells' novel, produced by the
independent film production company,
Pendragon Pictures. Unlike the other film adaptations set in current day
United States, it was the first adaptation set in the novel's original 1898
Victorian era England.
It starred Anthony Piana with a score by Jamie Hall.
Although the film score by Hall was well received, reviewers invoked the films of
Ed Wood and the worst of
Mystery Science Theater 3000.
One reviewer, however, suggested the performances were like that in
British period melodramas, and favorably likened the work to that of
Karel Zeman.
But the film as a whole received very mixed reviews by critics, who,
while often praising the good intentions behind the project and its
faithfulness to the source material, variously described the result as
"unendurable" and "terrible in almost every way a movie can be", with
"awful" effects.
Hines himself said of his film: "I wanted to make
War of the Worlds.
But what I made was something that has a macabre cult following, like
an Ed Wood movie. [...] I’ve learned a lot since my first outing. My
heart is really in the new
War of the Worlds – The True Story." (
See below).
I never saw this one.
June 28, 2005
The
next version moved back to the United States. It was released on, June 28, 2005, however, it was never
released to theaters. As with the
previous outing in 2005, this one couldn't make up it's mind what it
wanted to be called.
H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds, also known as
Invasion and
H. G. Wells' The Worlds in War internationally, or simply as
War of the Worlds, is a
direct-to-DVD science fiction horror film produced by
The Asylum and directed by David Michael Latt. It starred
C. Thomas Howell, Rhett Giles,
Tinarie Van Wyk-Loots,
Andy Lauer,
Peter Greene and
Jake Busey, with a score by Ralph Rieckermann.
The DVD was released on June 28, one day before the Spielberg/Dreamworks film, and stars
C. Thomas Howell,
Peter Greene, and
Jake Busey. The alternate title of
Invasion is likely for the film's overseas distribution since
Paramount claimed to own exclusive film rights to the
War of the Worlds title in the
European Union. The film is one of The Asylum's most successful, having sold over 100,000 copies from
Blockbuster upon its release.
The film has received mixed audience reception with a 45% on
Rotten Tomatoes and also only four known critic reviews which were mixed. I liked this one but wasn't knocked out by it.
June 29, 2005
War of the Worlds is an American
science fiction technology disaster thriller film by
Steven Spielberg and a loose adaptation of the novel by Wells. It was actually released a day earlier in
Kuwait.
Cruz was . . . well, Tom Cruz. The score was by
John Williams (
ho-hum, his one and only great score was Star Wars). I did love the special effects by
Industrial Light & Magic but that was the extent of my enjoyment of the film (
but then what do I know!). On June 29, 2005, the film grossed approximately US$81 million worldwide,
and earned the thirty-eighth biggest opening week gross with grossing
$98,826,764 in 3,908 theatres, averaging $95,288 in each theater. Meanwhile, on
Independence Day weekend,
War of the Worlds
grossed $64,878,725 in 3908 theatres also, giving an average of
$16,601. This is the third-biggest film opening on Independence Day
weekend. The film earned $200 million in 24 days, ranking thirty-seventh
place in the list of fastest films to gross $200 million. The film has
grossed $704,745,540 including DVD sales, making it the fourth
highest grossing film of 2005, and the 66th highest grossing film worldwide.
So, there,
Charlie the Tuna!
November 1, 2005
The Sky Is Falling: Making "War Of The Worlds" is a documentary about the making of the original 1953 film. It was produced by
Paramount Home Entertainment. The release dates were: in the USA, November 1, 2005, and in Finland, November 16, 2005.
The Sky Is Falling: Making "War Of The Worlds"
2008
Three years later,
War of the Worlds 2: The Next Wave hit the screens, well, the small ones. It also was a
direct-to-DVD issue. It starred and was directed by
C. Thomas Howell. The film was produced and distributed independently by
The Asylum.
It is a sequel to the 2005 film,
H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds (
see above). The film is set two years after the
extraterrestrial invasion of Earth, where America remains in a state of peaceful anarchy until a wave of
aliens attempt another insurrection of the planet. C. Thomas Howell reprises his role of George Herber. Others in the cast are
Christopher Reid,
Dashiell Howell and
Fred Griffith.
The
film's score was composed by Ralph Reickermann, who also did the 2005
original, a former composer for The Asylum. The film features the single
You Came into my Life which featured the vocals of singer John Brown Reese (
link to the song on YouTube below).
2012
Well, just when you thought we'd killed off all the Martians, here they came again! And they had three posters to boot:
War of the Worlds - The True Story is a documentary-style drama that flashes back to the original radio concept of the novel. It is directed by
Timothy Hines,
which revisits Wells' novel, portraying the events of the book as
historical, through the documented recollections of a survivor of the
war.
2012
movie poster
The film bases its documentary approach on the 1938
Orson Welles CBS radio broadcast of
War of the Worlds, by presenting itself as a true account of actual events. Director
Timothy Hines said, in reference to this technique, "When Orson Welles broadcast
War of the Worlds
on the radio in the 30s, he presented it in such a way as to not
clearly identify that it was a work of fiction. He did it for the drama.
And many people took the fictional news broadcast as a real news
broadcast. People believed they were hearing an actual invasion from
Mars that night. We are approaching the story in the same way, as if it
were an actual news documentary" (
See link below for original broadcast).
Gary Goldstein of the
Los Angeles Times described the film as
"clever like Wells" and "hugely inventive and ambitious," with an
"eye-popping variety of" original and archival footage", matched to the
period, adding, "
War of the Worlds: The True Story," a mock
sci-fi docudrama packed with a truly impressive —and clever —mix of
editing (a reported 3 1/2 years' worth), special effects, visual
artistry and offbeat storytelling. In closing, he wrote, "It's quite a
production."
Their interpretation of the Martian
vehicles are pretty good. There are links to a short from the film as
well as the makers of the film talking about this film on YouTube (
links to both below).
I've got to check this one out!
2013
Just
when you thought it was safe to go out, here we go again. This time it
is a recreation of the novel coupled with actual footage from
World War 1 and titled,
The Great Martian War.
The Great Martian War 1913 - 1917 is a 2013 mockumentary, in the style of an episode from the
History TV Channel,
directed by Mike Slee. The film is a fictional account of an alternate
history in which the world fought invaders from the planet Mars, rather
than the actual historical participants, during
World War 1.
The film is based on the 1898 science fiction novel The War of the
Worlds, by English author H.G. Wells, and includes actual film footage
from
World War I itself.
The reconstructions of the Martian machines are really quite interesting; there are three types of Martian machine, each of which is given a name by the Allied soldiers at the Martian Front.
Herons
These
are the largest of the three. They are up to 300 ft high, slow moving
but in the early stages of the war, invulnerable to human weapons. They
are armed with an energy shield, a devastating energy cannon, and
surrounded by clouds of poisonous gasses that mirror the atmosphere of
their pilots’ home world. What is inside each Heron is unknown at first,
but it’s clear that they can lay waste to the great cities of Europe in
a matter of days, and also that they act as the hub for battalions of
smaller tripod war-machines, that the troops have christened
'Spiders'.
The Heron
Spiders
These are the fast moving attack dogs of the
Martian
Invasion. 20ft high they wield a tentacle like weapon and are merciless
close-quarters killing machines. The 'Spiders' appear to be acting
under the command of their Heron masters, but as our story unfolds a
number of key events point to a very different dynamic. For contained
within the Spider machines is an important secret that will prove
pivotal to the course of the war and the future path humanity takes.
The Spider
Lice
These are the third type of machine, and they quickly spread a deep, penetrating terror among the men on the
Martian
Front. Moving only at night and in vast warming herds, these small,
ground-hugging crawlers appear to be harvesting the countless dead
bodies left out on the battlefield at the end of each day’s fighting.
Like the Spiders, the Lice are absolutely pivotal to the entire Alien
strategy - but the exact purpose of their nightly harvest out on No
Man’s Land is a gnawing mystery whose eventual unravelling will have
devastating effects on the common soldier and expose terrible flaws in
the Allied Generals’ leadership.
The Louse
These Martian 'machines' are woven into actual film footage from World War 1 which really gives the film the atmosphere of vintage newsreels. Very nicely done.
Starring:
Jock McLeod
Joan Gregson
Ian Downie
Thomas Gough
Narrated by Mark Strong
Country of origin: Canada, United Kingdom
Original language(s): English
Production Producer(s):
Michael Kot
Steve Maher
Mike Slee
Cinematography: Christopher Romeike
Running time 120 minutes
Release:
Original channel: History (European TV channel)
Original release: 8 December 2013
Viewfinder links:
Jerzy Maksymiuk & Józef Skrzek ~ The War of the Worlds: Next Century
Jeff Wayne ~ The War of the Worlds (rock drama)
The Wild One
Net links:
IMDb ~ The War of the Worlds: Next Century - full cast
Asylum ~ H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds official site
You Came into my Life (song)
War of the Worlds - The True Story
Moviemakers talk about War of the Worlds ~ The True Story
I can't wait
to see the next installment
of this unique classic;
it seems to have a life of its own!
Styrous© ~ Monday, March 23, 2015