Unearthly Stranger
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''Unearthly Stranger'' (also known as ''Beyond the Stars'') is a 1963 British black-and-white 'B'
science fiction Science fiction (often shortened to sci-fi or abbreviated SF) is a genre of speculative fiction that deals with imaginative and futuristic concepts. These concepts may include information technology and robotics, biological manipulations, space ...
film directed by
John Krish John Jeffrey Krish (4 December 1923 – 7 May 2016) was a British film director and screenwriter. He directed and filmed much archive footage and in particular ''Our School'' in 1962, showing the changing ways of Britain's school and the last ...
and starring John Neville, Philip Stone,
Gabriella Licudi Gabriella Licudi (born Gabrielle Carmen Stuttard, 14 September 1941 – 18 September 2022) was a British actress. Biography Born in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, Licudi was the daughter of Northern Ireland-born naval engineer Wilfred James Stutta ...
and
Patrick Newell Patrick David Newell (27 March 1932 – 22 July 1988) was a British actor perhaps best known for playing Mother in '' The Avengers''. Early life and education The second son of Eric Llewellyn Newell, of High Lodge, Hadleigh, Suffolk, an Oxf ...
. It was written by Rex Carlton based on an idea by Jeffrey Stone. It was released in the UK by Independent Artists; its US release was in April 1964.


Plot

Dr Mark Davidson, the narrator, is in fear for his life. His predecessor died under mysterious circumstances just after making a major breakthrough. The cause of death ("an explosion inside his brain") is being withheld by Secret Service agent Major Clarke. The scientists are working on a project involving spaceflight by the power of mental concentration. Davidson has a new Swiss wife, Julie, in whom Clarke takes an interest. Julie has a number of unusual characteristics, such as sleeping with her eyes open, never blinking and having no pulse, which makes her husband suspect she is an alien. She also frightens children and can handle very hot objects with her bare hands. After frightening a whole schoolyard of children, though, it emerges she can cry, though the tears burn her cheeks. Clarke does a background check and finds she never existed before her life with the doctor. As a precaution, Davidson is relieved of his lab duties. With nothing else to do he works on the problem his predecessor had figured out. He is able to recover the lost formula. For security reasons, Clarke confiscates the notes but is struck dead in the same mysterious way. Eventually, Julie confesses that she is an alien sent to kill her husband and that she must leave because she has failed, as she has fallen in love with him. Despite his pleas, she vanishes, leaving only an empty dress. He rushes into his office and makes the tape which narrates the film, warning that aliens want to prevent the breakthrough. He is then interrupted by his secretary, who announces she is also an alien and she is there to finish the assignment. A scuffle ensues and, her concentration threatened, she falls backwards out of a window but only an empty dress lands on the pavement. The scientists rush downstairs and are quietly surrounded by a crowd of grim-visaged women, all of whom seem to be aliens.


Cast

* John Neville as Dr. Mark Davidson * Philip Stone as Professor John Lancaster *
Gabriella Licudi Gabriella Licudi (born Gabrielle Carmen Stuttard, 14 September 1941 – 18 September 2022) was a British actress. Biography Born in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, Licudi was the daughter of Northern Ireland-born naval engineer Wilfred James Stutta ...
as Julie Davidson *
Patrick Newell Patrick David Newell (27 March 1932 – 22 July 1988) was a British actor perhaps best known for playing Mother in '' The Avengers''. Early life and education The second son of Eric Llewellyn Newell, of High Lodge, Hadleigh, Suffolk, an Oxf ...
as Major Clarke *
Jean Marsh Jean Lyndsey Torren Marsh (1 July 1934 – 13 April 2025) was an English actress and writer. She co-created and starred in the ITV series '' Upstairs, Downstairs'' (1971–1975), for which she won the 1975 Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actr ...
as Miss Ballard *
Warren Mitchell Warren Mitchell (born Warren Misell; 14 January 1926 – 14 November 2015) was an English actor best known for playing bigoted cockney Alf Garnett in television, film and stage productions from the 1960s to the 1990s. He was a BAFTA TV A ...
as Professor Geoffrey D. Munro


Critical reception

''
The Monthly Film Bulletin The ''Monthly Film Bulletin'' was a periodical of the British Film Institute published monthly from February 1934 until April 1991, when it merged with '' Sight & Sound''. It reviewed all films on release in the United Kingdom, including those wi ...
'' wrote: "Oddly unheralded by producers and distributors alike, ''Unearthly Stranger'' is in fact the best British SF-film since
Wolf Rilla Wolf Peter Rilla (16 March 1920 – 19 October 2005) was a film director and writer of German background, who worked mainly in the United Kingdom. Rilla is known for directing '' Village of the Damned'' (1960). He wrote many books for students, ...
's '' Village of the Damned''. One can pick holes in the script – the officially unqueried substitution of bricks for the corpse in Munro's coffin is one of them; but in the long run ingenuity and suspense pay off handsomely. The climax in particular is as satisfying as it is bleak. Julie's abnormality is eerily conveyed in shots of her tear-stained cheeks, furrowed as if by acid, and in little things like her imperviousness to heat as she lifts a red-hot casserole from the oven with her bare hands. An unfamiliar cast is distinguished by Patrick Newell's bluff and sinister callousness as Clarke, and by John Neville's meticulous and overwrought hero. John Krish whose first feature this is, directs with pace, flexibility and imagination." ''
Variety Variety may refer to: Arts and entertainment Entertainment formats * Variety (radio) * Variety show, in theater and television Films * ''Variety'' (1925 film), a German silent film directed by Ewald Andre Dupont * ''Variety'' (1935 film), ...
'' wrote: "Rex Carlton's screenplay takes place almost entirely within the confines of the offices of a space-connected research project. This presented some cinematic obstacles but director John Krish ... kept his small cast on the move within the limited area, cutting to occasional outside scenes for a change of pace. He is also helped tremendously by the ability of his three major actors to handle pseudoscientific dialogue in a manner that makes it both interesting and dramatic. ... Shakespearean actor John Neville, who could have understandably coasted through this admittedly negligible role, gives it his complete attention ... On a par with Neville is Patrick Newell, particularly, as a deceptively jovial but suspicious security chief ... and Philip Stone as Neville's fellow scientist in the project, treated as the cold-blooded, "no funny stuff" counterpart of Neville's imaginative and romantic part." In ''Offbeat: British Cinema's Curiosities, Obscurities and Forgotten Items'', Phll Tonge wrote: "''Unearthly Stranger'' is a very odd but rewarding experience. It's shot on tuppence ha'penny in a rather staid television style ... Of course this is nit-picking. John Krish knows how to do 'Dutch' angles for when Davidson (John Neville) is running through the streets of London, and he knows the best way to shoot a spiral staircase, looking down from on high to get that concentric effect. He also has a field day getting the lighting to turn the good-looking Neville into a pointy-faced freak ... Patrick Newell's performance as Major Clark is nothing short of outrageous. It's so fruity you could make jam out of it. ''Unearthly Stranger'' was selected by the film historians Steve Chibnall and
Brian McFarlane Brian McFarlane is a Canadian television sportscaster and author. He is best known as a broadcaster on Hockey Night In Canada and as an author of hockey books. He is also the honorary president of the Society for International Hockey Researc ...
as one of the 15 most meritorious British B films made between
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
and 1970. "Although ''Unearthly Stranger'' appears to draw attention to the performance of femininity, it is male society that is the real object of scrutiny," they say, describing it as "a highly effective fable" and praising its "unsettling atmosphere of dislocation and tension which disturbs our taken-for-granted assumptions about the worlds of office and home". In ''British Science Fiction Cinema'' Chibnall writes that the film "uses the skills of Jimmy Wilson">James Wilson (cinematographer)">Jimmy Wilsonto create an atmosphere of dislocation and tension which is unusually effective for a British low-budgeter. ''Unearthly Stranger'' is the most explicit treatment of the Otherness of women in all British SF films, a male-voiced ''
I Married a Monster from Outer Space ''I Married a Monster from Outer Space'' is a 1958 American horror science fiction film from Paramount Pictures Paramount Pictures Corporation, commonly known as Paramount Pictures or simply Paramount, is an American film production compa ...
'' (1958)".


References


External links

*
''Unearthly Stranger'' at British Horror Films

''Unearthly Stranger''
at
BFI Screenonline Screenonline is a website about the history of British film, television and social history as documented by film and television. The project has been developed by the British Film Institute The British Film Institute (BFI) is a film and tele ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Unearthly Stranger 1963 films 1960s science fiction films 1960s British films 1960s English-language films British science fiction films British black-and-white films Films directed by John Krish Films scored by Edward Williams (composer) English-language science fiction films