Battle Beneath the Earth
Battle Beneath the Earth | |
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Directed by | Montgomery Tully |
Written by | Charles F. Vetter |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Kenneth Talbot |
Edited by | Sidney Stone |
Music by | Ken Jones |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £156,307[1] |
Battle Beneath the Earth is a 1967 British sci-fi thriller film directed by Montgomery Tully and starring Kerwin Mathews. It was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Plot
Scientist Arnold Kramer believes that rogue elements of the communist Chinese Army headed by fanatic General Chan Lu are using advanced burrowing machines in an effort to conquer the U.S. by placing atomic bombs under major cities. In the opening, Las Vegas police are called for a report that Dr. Kramer is prone on a sidewalk telling people he hears movement underneath.
The bombs are in tunnels dug from China through the Hawaiian islands to the United States. In the expected war 100 million people are forecast to die. Kramer is committed to an asylum, but when he is visited by U.S. Navy Commander Jonathan Shaw, what he tells him lines up with observations Shaw has made himself. Shaw gets Kramer released and produces enough evidence to convince his superiors that the story is truel, and he is ordered to lead troops underground to defeat the red army and defuse the bombs.
The U.S. Army detonates nuclear bombs in the tunnel in Hawaii. The detonations are reported to have stopped all activity in the tunnels.
Cast
- Kerwin Mathews as Cmdr. Jonathan Shaw
- Viviane Ventura as Tila Yung
- Robert Ayres as Adm. Felix Hillebrand
- Peter Arne as Arnold Kramer
- Al Mulock as Sgt. Marvin Mulberry
- Martin Benson as Gen. Chan Lu
- Peter Elliott as Dr. Kengh Lee
- Earl Cameron as Sgt. Seth Hawkins
- John Brandon as Maj. Frank Cannon
- Ed Bishop as Lt. Cmdr. Vance Cassidy
- Carl Jaffe as Dr. Galissi
- Garrick Hobson as Professor Blackthorne
- Sarah Brackett as Meg Webson
- Bee Duffell as Matron's Friend
- Chela Matthison as Nurse
Music
The film features a fast-paced "crime-jazz" / jazz-noir musical score by Ken Jones.
Release
The film released to DVD by Warner Home Video on 29 July 2008.[2]
Critical reception
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Schoolboy comic-strip capers, involving subterranean constructions, hydroponic farms ("enforced growth under solaric light" the Chinese scientist explains), laser beams, nuclear bombs and sinister Oriental villains. Nothing is quite so fanciful, though, as the finale, in which hero and heroine, with only ten minutes to run to safety after setting off an atom bomb, emerge in a volcano and stand looking at the glare of the nuclear explosion with not even a blink of their unshielded eyes. Delightfully nonsensical, the film is at least a variation on the usual SF themes, and very properly everyone acts with deadpan solemnity."[3]
Kine Weekly wrote: "Schoolboy adventure material, this will pass with all but stuffy audiences. Reliable half of a double programme."[4]
The film has been described as "deliriously paranoid".[5]
References
- ^ Chapman, J. (2022). The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945-1985. Edinburgh University Press p 360
- ^ Battle Beneath the Earth (DVD), ISBN 978-1-4198-6943-3
- ^ "Battle Beneath the Earth". Monthly Film Bulletin. 36 (420): 30. 1 January 1967.
- ^ "Battle Beneath the Earth". Kine Weekly. 618 (3193): 19. 21 December 1968.
- ^ Chapman, James (2006) [2002]. Saints & Avengers: British Adventure Series of the 1960s. Popular Television Genres. London: I. B.Tauris. p. 124. ISBN 978-1-86064-754-3.
… most notably the deliriously paranoid science-fiction film Battle Beneath the Earth (1967) in which the Chinese attempt to invade America by burrowing under the ocean.
External links
- Battle Beneath the Earth at IMDb
- Battle Beneath the Earth at AllMovie
- Battle Beneath the Earth at the TCM Movie Database
- Battle Beneath the Earth at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films