The Eye Creatures
The Eye Creatures (a.k.a. Attack of the Eye Creatures [mistakenly stylised as Attack of the The Eye Creatures]) is a 1967 American made-for-television comedy horror science fiction film about an unnamed countryside that is invaded by a flying saucer and its silent, shambling alien occupants.[1]
The Eye Creatures | |
---|---|
VHS cover for the film (using a repurposed poster originally made for The Crawling Eye) | |
Genre | Comedy Horror Sci-fi |
Written by | Paul W. Fairman Robert J. Gurney Jr. Al Martin |
Directed by | Larry Buchanan |
Starring | John Ashley Cynthia Hull Warren Hammack Chet Davis Bill Peck Ethan Allen Charles McLine |
Music by | Les Baxter Ronald Stein |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Larry Buchanan |
Cinematography | Ralph K. Johnson |
Editor | S. F. Brownrigg |
Running time | 80 minutes |
Production company | Azalea Pictures |
Distributor | American International Television MGM Television |
Budget | $40,000 or less than $25,000 |
Release | |
Original release | October 20, 1967 |
The Eye Creatures, an Azalea Pictures film, was directed by B-movie director/producer/auteur Larry Buchanan and starred John Ashley. The screenplay was developed by uncredited writers Robert J. Gurney Jr. and Al Martin from the short story "The Cosmic Frame" by Paul W. Fairman (also uncredited). The film was a color remake of the 1957 black and white American International Pictures film Invasion of the Saucer Men, intended to fill out a package of AIP films released to television.
Plot
A military briefing film shows a hovering flying saucer resembling a domed yo-yo as the narrator (Peter Graves) describes how the military's "Project Visitor" has been tracking it and anticipates it will land in the central United States. After the briefing, Lt. Robertson reports to the base near the expected target where he berates his subordinates for their habit of using the monitoring equipment to spy on teenagers making out in the woods. One of the teens sees an object land nearby and tells his friends at a local bar, including Stan Kenyon. Stan and his girlfriend Susan Rogers later accidentally hit one of the multi-eyed, lumpy greyish-white aliens from the ship with his car, so they drive off to call the police. Out in the woods, they are forced to use the phone of a grumpy local codger who resents the "smoochers" who use his property as a lovers' lane, frequently threatening them with a shotgun.
Meanwhile, one of two drunken drifters new in town comes across the dead creature and decides to put it on exhibition as part of his latest get-rich-quick scheme. When he returns to the site after excitedly rushing home to tell his buddy Mike, other aliens arrive, scaring him and causing a deadly heart attack. When the police finally investigate, they assume that Stan has run over the drifter and arrest the young man, refusing to believe his crazy story.
Having overheard the bar conversation about the UFO, Lt. Robertson reports to his commander, who reluctantly authorizes a cordon around the saucer. They eventually accidentally blow up the spaceship and congratulate themselves for their effective defense, not realizing that the creatures were not in their craft and are still roaming the woods.
Easily escaping from the police, Stan and Susan meet up with the dead drifter's friend Mike and the three of them attempt to prove the alien danger to the community. Mike is cornered and attacked by the angry creatures, but Stan and Susan manage to flee and accidentally discover the monsters explode when exposed to bright light. Unfortunately, after the autopsy shows that the victim earlier died from an alcohol-induced heart attack and that Stan had not killed him, the police want nothing more to do with him and refuse to help. The teenagers then gather their friends together and drive out to the clearing where they left Mike. Surrounding the aliens with their cars, the teens use their headlights to evaporate the remaining creatures. Mike survives his attack, and Stan and Susan resume their interrupted plans to elope.
Cast
- John Ashley as Stan Kenyon
- Cynthia Hull as Susan Rogers
- Warren Hammack as Lt. Robertson
- Chet Davis as Mike Lawrence
- Bill Peck as Carl Fenton
- Ethan Allen as General
- Charles McLine as Old Man Bailey
Production
Buchanan had made Free, White and 21 (1963), which was distributed by AIP. They hired the director to make a series of low-budget color remakes of old AIP films, of which this was the first. Buchanan later called them his "wretched remakes".[2]
The movie was shot in 16mm over several weeks in Dallas, on a budget of $40,000 (or less than $25,000).[3][4] Ashley was imported from Hollywood, but the rest of the cast were locals. Ashley has stated that his salary took up more than half the budget.[4]
Most of the film was shot just outside Dallas at Cielo, a ranch owned by wealthy businessman Gordon McLendon. Ashley was the only professional actor, with the rest of the cast coming from Dallas theater. Ashley claimed that the film ranks "with some of the worst all-time horror films ever made... the monster looked like something out of the Michelin tire ad", but said it was a professional operation and that Buchanan treated him very well.[5]
Larry Buchanan later recalled:
We got John Ashley on the weekend that his wife Deborah Walley said goodbye to him. And here lam with him on the set the next morning; he was in bad shape. Deborah had gone over to Arkansas on an AlP publicity junket for one of those "Beach Party" things, and John asked me ifhe could fly up and see her. I said, "John, we just started!" I sat down with him and worked it out, I shotaround him for two days while he tried to reconcile with her. It didn't work. But it did work for me in that when he came back, he worked his tail off. I told him . he had to make a break— he had a little money— and go as far away from Deborah as he could get. And we talked long into the night, about shooting, casting and making movies. I don't think we ever stopped on that picture. We would work all day and talk all night. And he went off to Manila and began making those Bamboo-girl pictures and made a fortune.[6]
Filming took two weeks. "Buchanan was a nice guy and it was a real 'at ease' pace," said Ashley. "We just kind of worked until we felt like, 'Okay, that's enough.' It was a very small crew and quite well organized - Buchanan had it together."[7]
The film's title screen contained a notable error. In keeping with a frequent practice of B-movie re-release retitling, the phrase "Attack of the" was superimposed on top of the original title, which already included "the", producing the redundant title Attack of the The Eye Creatures.[8]
Reception
Diabolique magazine said Ashley does "solid leading man work, grounding an outlandish premise, though by now he was far too old to play a teenager."[9]
Mystery Science Theater 3000
Film-mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000 featured the oddly-titled print of the film, Attack of the The Eye Creatures, in a 1992 season 4 episode. In the MST3K version Joel riffs Rick Astley's song "Never Gonna Give You Up". Years later, the snippet surfaced on YouTube as "The first Rickroll". In the Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode featuring this film, Joel Robinson sarcastically suggested that "some eye creatures […] are born with tight acrylic wool-blend turtleneck sweaters from Chess King". Crow T. Robot also mocked, "If you're ever in a fight with an eye creature, keep in mind that his head is simply draped casually over his shoulders and should be no trouble to knock off". [...] "Get ready to give chase to an injured eye creature; as you can see, he's wearing his Jack Purcell athletic shoes"! Crow even pointed out a shot featuring a common monster-film goof: "The eye creatures […] were also unfortunate enough to have evolved with heavy-duty zippers running up their backs". Their riffing produced the fan-favorite phrase "They just didn't care", which was later applied to other features viewed on the show.
See also
References
- Craig, Rob (2007). The Films of Larry Buchanan: A Critical Examination. McFarland & Company. pp. 84–95. ISBN 978-0786429820.
- Goodsell, Greg, "The Weird and Wacky World of Larry Buchanan", Filmfax, No. 38 April/May 1993 p 64
- Kelley, B. (1985, Mar 17). ASHLEY FINALLY MAKES THE TEAM. Sun Sentinel Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/389734195
- Mark McGee, Faster and Furiouser: The Revised and Fattened Fable of American International Pictures, McFarland, 1996 p237-238
- Tom Weaver, "Interview with John Ashley", Interviews with B Science Fiction and Horror Movie Makers: Writers, Producers, Directors, Actors, Moguls and Makeup, McFarland 1988 p 40
- Frentzen, Jeffrey (January 1985). "Buchanan the Unstoppable". Fangoria. p. 12.
- Weaver p 40
-
- Palmer, Randy (1997). Paul Blaisdell, Monster Maker. McFarland & Company. p. 244. ISBN 9780786440993. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
"The first of four remakes was The Eye Creatures, sometimes known as Attack of the Eye Creatures, with "the" appearing twice in the title.
- Palmer, Randy (1997). Paul Blaisdell, Monster Maker. McFarland & Company. p. 244. ISBN 9780786440993. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
- Vagg, Stephen (December 2019). "A Hell of a Life: The Nine Lives of John Ashley". Diabolique Magazine.
- Zontar the Thing from Venus/The Eye Creatures DVD, 2005, UPC 014381233025
- Mystery Science Theater 3000, episode #418 (Attack of the Eye Creatures)
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Mystery Science Theater 3000#Attack of the Eye Creatures |
- The Eye Creatures at IMDb
- The Eye Creatures is available for free download at the Internet Archive
- The Eye Creatures at Rotten Tomatoes