Tag Archives: Edward Judd

The First Men in the Moon (1964)

A lovely, rocky moon vista
A lovely, rocky moonscape

Directed by Nathan (THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD) Juran, starring Edward Judd, Lionel Jeffries, Martha Hyer, Miles Malleson and an uncredited cameo by Peter Finch.

US one sheet poster
US one sheet poster

When a team of astronauts land on the moon, they discover an old Union Jack flag and a document, which states that the moon has already been claimed… for Queen Victoria!

Cavor with his Cavorite
Cavor with his Cavorite

Back on Earth, an investigation team locates the last of the original Victorian crew, a very old Arnold Bedford (Judd), who tells them the story of how he and his girlfriend Katherine (Hyer) met up with an idiosyncratic inventor called Joseph Cavor (Jeffries).
As the story unfolds, we see that Cavor has invented a gravity-defying substance called Cavorite, which allows them to fly a sphere all the way to the moon. Once there, the intrepid trio discovers a lunar civilisation composed of various types of intelligent, insect-like beings, referred to as selenites…

A stop-motion selenite looks on
A stop-motion selenite looks on

This light, comedic slice of Victorian-era science fiction, shot in Panavision, features fine performances from Lionel Jeffries and Edward Judd. I think Jeffries is especially good as Cavor, who is the standout character in a script written by Nigel (THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT) Kneale. The story is, of course, an adaptation of the H.G. Wells novel.

Lionel Jeffries is wonderful as Cavor
Lionel Jeffries is wonderful as Cavor
Together with this film, Edward Judd was in several other sci-fi flicks that I like: THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE, INVASION and ISLAND OF TERROR
Together with this film, Edward Judd was in several other sci-fi flicks that I like: THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE, INVASION and ISLAND OF TERROR
Selenite versus human!
Selenite versus human!

The Grand Lunar and several higher-status selenites are stop-motion creations courtesy of Ray Harryhausen, while the worker selenites are children in costumes, which I think works okay as they aren’t focused on in detail.

Worker selenites (kids in costumes) dismantle the sphere
Worker selenites (kids in costumes) dismantle the sphere
A worker selenite
A worker selenite
The stop-motion Grand Lunar, leader of the selenites
The stop-motion Grand Lunar: leader of the selenites

The giant mooncalf is also created via stop-motion by Ray Harryhausen: its attack on the heroes is my favourite moment in the movie.

The giant, caterpillar-like mooncalf is ace!
The giant, caterpillar-like mooncalf is ace!
Bedford is attacked by the mooncalf!
Bedford is attacked by the mooncalf!

The movie boasts some pleasing moonscape sets, subterranean vistas, plus a clever modern day wraparound plot device, which all add to the enjoyment of the viewing experience.

One of the cool underground vistas
One of the cool underground vistas
One of Ray Harryhausen's stop-motion selenites
One of Ray Harryhausen’s stop-motion selenites
Cavor prepares to meet the Grand Lunar
Cavor prepares to meet the Grand Lunar

Some posters for the movie…

UK quad poster
UK quad poster
French poster
French poster
US one sheet poster
US one sheet poster
West German poster
West German poster
Turkish poster
Turkish poster

US insert poster
US insert poster
West German poster
West German poster
Italian poster
Italian poster
US half sheet poster
US half sheet poster

Here are some Italian Fotobustas (lobby cards)…

Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta
Fotobusta

Cover for the Gold Key comic adaptation…

Comic book cover
Comic book cover

Some colourful art…

Illustration by Daryl Joyce
Illustration by Daryl Joyce

Okay, let’s focus on the lovely mooncalf…

In the movie the mooncalf gets zapped!
In the movie the mooncalf gets zapped!
The selenites strip the mooncalf of its flesh, leaving a skeleton
The selenites strip the mooncalf of its flesh, leaving a skeleton

The special visual effects for the film were provided by Ray Harryhausen, who worked alongside British special effects expert Les Bowie at his Slough studio to produce the complicated travelling matte sequences that combined live action footage with the miniatures. Ian Scoones, who frequently collaborated with Bowie, drew the concept artwork for the mooncalf skeleton.
Here you can see Scoones’ skeleton drawing on the top right, next to Ray’s initial concepts for the look of the mooncalf stop-motion model’s face and body…

Cool concept work
Cool concept work

Finally, here’s a publicity shot of Martha Hyer…

publicity shot
Martha also appeared in the killer bear movie NIGHT OF THE GRIZZLY
Advertisement

Island of Terror (1966)

A silicate approaches
It wants to suck out your bones!
Poster
This film rocks!

Dr Brian Stanley (Peter Cushing) and Dr David West (Edward Judd), along with his new girlfriend Toni Merrill (Carole Gray), travel to an island off the coast of Ireland to look into the case of a dead local man… who has been discovered with no bones in his body.

A boneless corpse
A boneless corpse

With the help of local doctor Reginald Landers (Eddie Byrne), they find out that a group of researchers, seeking a cure for cancer in a secluded laboratory on the island, have accidentally created creatures that absorb all the bones from their victims.

The researchers fall victim to their own experiment

As the island becomes infested by these ‘silicates’, the protagonists must try to discover a way to stop these starfish-blob-like creatures, which have hardened, knobbly skin carapaces and a single, central tentacle that they use to inject bone-dissolving enzymes into their victims.

A silicate
These critters are a favourite of mine

Axes, shotguns, petrol bombs and dynamite have no effect on these slow, slithering critters, but Stanley and West come up with a solution that involves poisoning the silicates with Strontium-90. As the islanders gather together in a building, with the monsters crawling all over it, the heroes wait to see if their plan will actually work…

A silcate
Another shot of a silicate because, well, why not?

I like this flick quite a bit!

The silicates make a very distinctive sound (I’m a sucker for creatures that make peculiar noises, such as the ants in THEM!), which imbues the scenes with a certain creepiness and adds tension too, because once you hear the sound you know a silicate is nearby!
Barry Gray, who did the scores for Gerry Anderson productions like STINGRAY, UFO, THUNDERBIRDS, JOURNEY TO THE FAR SIDE OF THE SUN and SPACE: 1999, provided the electronic sound effects.

A solicsate tentacle reaches out...
Don’t let the tentacle touch you!

The silicates are very slow moving, which I actually like, because – as with un-speedy Romero zombies – I think more anxiety is created when the heroes should be able to keep out of reach of the creatures but you just KNOW the critters are still going to sneak up on them somehow.

The local policeman becomes the next victim
The local policeman becomes the next victim

The silicates have an unusual way of multiplying, which involves each creature splitting into two every six hours or so. This adds a ticking clock element to the plot, as the protagonists need to deal with this threat before the silicates exponentially grow in number until there’s a million of them. A couple of the creatures are shown subdividing, which calls for the production of milky goo and what looks like tinned spaghetti!

This scene probably put some people off spaghetti for good!
This scene probably put some people off spaghetti for good!

Cushing, Judd and the rest of the cast, including Niall MacGinnis, treat their roles seriously, in a plot that is like a Hammer Films-style horror yarn mixed with a 1950s-era scientists-versus-an-experiment-gone-wrong story.

During the finale, with the besieged islanders seemingly doomed to be overwhelmed by the silicates, there’s a moment where Judd and Cushing decide that it’s best for Carole Gray’s character to be given a lethal injection, rather than risk death-by-silicate. Judd doesn’t inject her at the last moment, because the creatures start to die from radiation poisoning, but it was pretty presumptuous of him to decide to kill her without her consent!

An islander falls victim to the silicate
Gotcha!

Director Terence Fisher made another blob-monsters-on-an-island movie for Planet Film Productions, called NIGHT OF THE BIG HEAT (known as ISLAND OF THE BURNING DAMNED in the US). But ISLAND OF TERROR is the better film, with such fun moments as a silicate dropping onto an islander from a tree and some brief shots of rubbery, boneless victims, plus there’s a little bit of gore, as Edward Judd is forced to chop off Peter Cushing’s hand before a silicate can digest his bones.

Peter Cushing is grabbed by tentacle
Cushing gets nabbed by a tentacle…
Peter Cushing has his hand cut off!
…so his hand has to be chopped off!

To finish, here are a bunch of posters, some of which misleadingly suggest the movie will feature female nudity!

poster
poster
poster
poster
poster
This poster art is, erm, quite inaccurate…