Invasion U.S.A.
73 min. / B&W / 1.37:1 / DTS HD-MA 2.0 MONO
Film Masters Blu-ray $31.99
Available from Movie Zyng
This is it - the BIG one! The Russkies - er, sorry, an "unnamed foreign power with a thick Slavic accent" launch an attack against Alaska, followed by an invasion of California. Nukes hit the Bay Bridge! A-Bombs rain down on Manhattan! Commies overrun the senate and shoot down our elected officials! And all this is told through the eyes of alarmed men and women watching a surprisingly large TV in a bar.
Ludicrous collection of WW2 stock footage, including the London blitz, to build a movie with a once-in-a-lifetime cast that includes Gerald Mohr as a very oily radio reporter, Peggy Castle as his adoring girlfriend, Tom Kennedy as the bartender who turns the sound off on the TV whenever there's news about the latest city to fall, TWO Lois Lanes: Noel Neill as an airport clerk who keeps telling people who want to buy tickets home, "Sorry, your hometown was wiped out this morning" and Phyllis Coates as a housewife who looks for shelter under the Hoover Dam, with William Schallert and Knox Manning as TV newscasters. And all this from the director of The Jolson Story and Baby Face! Wow!
Some of the Finest Dialog Ever Written for the Screen:
General #1: "Do you remember what Senator Baker said when the Military Appropriations bill came up for vote?"
General #2: "He said we could safely reduce our armed forces by half."
General #1: "He wasn't only wrong, he's DEAD."
Oily Radio Reporter to Girlfriend, as they watch the latest war news on TV and she expresses despair: "You still like to eat. Drink. Make love."
More Oily Radio Report talk: "This was a cinch to happen. The last time I met a girl I really liked, they bombed Pearl Harbor."
Professional Appreciation
"Shot in seven days on a budget of $127,000... as accurately as can be determined, 30% stock footage, 20% staged newscasts to explain the stock footage, 30% intense and mostly nonsensical propaganda and 20% inappropriate romantic melodrama... a Joseph McCarthy fever dream." - Bill Geerhart, CONELRAD.
"It will scare the pants off you!" - Hedda Hopper (and the thought of her without pants is scarier than the movie).
A classic of its kind, not to be missed, and if you could wear out DVDs, we would’ve worn out our old one years ago, this film is a party favorite. Thankfully, the new Blu-ray from Film Masters blows that one out of the skies above Nome, and the entire package is one of our favorites of the year to date, not least of all for….
Rocket Attack, U.S.A. (1958) Dir. Barry Mahon
68 min. / B&W / 1.37:1 / DTS HD-MA 2.0 MONO
A complete bonus film, produced in 1958 but not released for a couple of years after. A no-budget gem about an American secret agent sent behind the Iron Curtain to hook up with a beautiful double-agent to learn what they can about an impending Commie nuclear attack against America. Are we ready for it? Well, no, and the film ends badly for everybody and with a plea to do better in ensuring that America, too, has the ability to destroy the world to save it.
John McKay and Monica Davis star, and no, we don’t know who they are, either. Really, if the first feature is mainly composed of stock footage, this one is mainly composed of not much, but we enjoyed it for the ludicrous dialog and poor production values, although the story is actually interesting and shows a flair that they couldn’t duplicate with the $14.35 budgeted for this thing. From the director of Cuban Rebel Girls and Santa Claus and the Ice Cream Bunny!
And the BEST reason for enjoying this set…
The short subjects! We are suckers for these things, and we own many dozens of atomic-age scare films, but these were almost all new to us, and every single one of them is a gem. This Blu-ray set is going next to the TV, because we’re going to be dipping into its radioactive goodies often. A fair of fun documentaries is included, with Gerald Mohr’s son hosting a career retrospective of his father and Larry “Lost Skeleton” Blamire narrating a 40 min. featurette on the history of Red Scare films. The unfunny Mystery Science Theatre riff on Rocket Attack U.S.A. is included, and it has a brief intro that isn't part of the un-MSTK version, probably something that was added when the film was originally sold to television to pad the running time, and for the sake of full disclosure, we DID find the Bela Lugosi short subject that preceded the MSTK film to be hilarious.
All told, this set is cheap at twice the price. It's one of the best, most atomic releases of the year.