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It Came from Outer Space Poster

It Came from Outer Space

Fantastic sights leap out at you!
1953 | 81m | English

(12469 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

Author & amateur astronomer John Putnam and schoolteacher Ellen Fields witness an enormous meteorite come down near a small town in Arizona, but Putnam becomes a local object of scorn when, after examining the object up close, he announces that it is a spacecraft, and that it is inhabited...
Release Date: Jun 05, 1953
Director: Jack Arnold
Writer: Ray Bradbury, Harry Essex
Genres: Science Fiction, Horror
Keywords small town, spacecraft, arizona, alien life-form, meteorite, astronomer, black and white, school teacher, angry mob, crash landing, xenophobia, small town sheriff, mine shaft, crater, abandoned mine, alien doppelganger, one-eyed monster, assumed human form, nuclear engine, unknown intent, desert southwest
Production Companies Universal Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $1,600,000
Budget: $800,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Richard Carlson John Putnam
Barbara Rush Ellen Fields
Charles Drake Sheriff Matt Warren
Joe Sawyer Frank Daylon
Russell Johnson George
Kathleen Hughes Jane Dean
Dave Willock Pete Davis (uncredited)
Alan Dexter Dave Loring (uncredited)
George Eldredge Dr. Snell (uncredited)
Edgar Dearing Sam, a hobo (uncredited)
George Selk Tom, a hobo (uncredited)
Bradford Jackson Bob, Snell's assistant (uncredited)
Robert Carson Dugan, reporter (uncredited)
Whitey Haupt Perry, a boy (uncredited)
Virginia Mullen Mrs. Daylon (uncredited)
William Pullen Deputy Reed (uncredited)
Richard H. Cutting Radio Announcer (uncredited)
Ralph Brooks Unidentified Posse Man (unconfirmed)
Ned Davenport Man Outside Newspaper Office (unconfirmed)
Dick Pinner Reporter with Dugan (extra) (uncredited)
Casey MacGregor Toby, a Hobo (uncredited)
Name Job
Irving Gertz Original Music Composer
Herman Stein Original Music Composer
Robert F. Boyle Art Direction
Henry Mancini Original Music Composer
Bud Westmore Makeup Artist
Ray Bradbury Story
Milicent Patrick Special Effects
Clifford Stine Director of Photography
Bernard Herzbrun Art Direction
Rosemary Odell Costume Design
Glenn E. Anderson Sound
Joan St. Oegger Hairstylist
David S. Horsley Special Effects
Harry Essex Screenplay
Paul Weatherwax Editor
Russell A. Gausman Set Decoration
Joseph Gershenson Music Director
Joseph E. Kenney Assistant Director
Jack Kevan Special Effects
Ruby R. Levitt Set Decoration
Leslie I. Carey Sound
Roswell A. Hoffmann Visual Effects
Jack Arnold Director
Name Title
William Alland Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Because you don't understand it, you want to kill it. An alien ship crashes into the desert, at first it's thought to only be a meteorite, but small time scientist Richard Carlson gets to view the stricken ship before it is totally buried beneath the collapsing crater it created upon its crash l ... anding. Nobody believes Carlson, but soon the aliens start taking on human form and it's then that everyone else must sit up and take notice before it's deemed too late. It Came From Outer Space stands as one of the better sci-fi pictures to come out of the Cold War 1950s. Based on the Ray Bradbury story "The Meteor", the story leans heavily on anti-conformist themes and confidently trumpets something different to ourselves actually having the damn right to be different, and that is something I can personally truck with. As with most of the other films from the sci-fi/alien genre, "it" perfectly captures the paranoia of the people, the sense of mistrust befitting the atomic age, the fear of the desert never more evident than it is here. Directed with some style from genre guru "Jack Arnold" ("This Island Earth"/"The Incredible Shrinking Man"), the film was originally shot in 3D, and though sadly I have never been able to see the picture in that format, I can certainly imagine greatly the impact that certain scenes would have had. The picture is also notable for the use of POV shooting from the alien perspective, all fuzzy focus from a spherical single eye, it works real well and would be something that many other film makers would use from here on in. This is not a film that relies on creatures to see it home safely, in fact we barely glimpse the creatures here, but we don't need that to be the case, for they make their mark regardless, all of which leaves It Came From Outer Space as a very knowing and quite often intelligent piece of work. 8/10

May 16, 2024