Tag Archives: flying saucer

Nope (2022)

If you look at it, the thing'll eat you!
If you look at it, the thing’ll eat you!

Jordan Peele’s sci-fi-horror film stars Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, Steven Yeun, Michael Wincott and Brandon Perea.

Keke Palmer, Daniel Kaluuya and Steven Yeun
Keke Palmer, Daniel Kaluuya and Steven Yeun

The story centres on the Haywood siblings (Kaluuya & Palmer), who run a ranch that hires out horses for Hollywood productions. They discover that the area around their ranch has become the hunting ground of a UFO-like predatory creature… so they decide to try and capture evidence of this aerial beast…

Poster
Poster

NOPE has received mixed reviews, some very positive and others criticising Peele’s exotic plot, which not only involves this extraterrestrial critter but also includes a grisly backstory that features a chimp actor from a television show going on a bloody rampage!

Killer chimp flashback!
Killer chimp flashback!

I, thus, went into this movie expecting it to be potentially a mess, but I actually REALLY enjoyed it!

Michael Wincott screams!
Michael Wincott screams!
Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer and Brandon Perea
Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer and Brandon Perea

Peele uses the film’s locations well, shooting the vast, cloudy sky effectively, providing teasing glimpses of the ‘flying saucer’ whooshing behind the cloud cover. He also creates some tense scenes and a few jump scares, and also makes good use of imagery like lights going off and inflatable tube man figures deflating whenever the creature is near.

The monster itself is a fine creation: a beast that can take the shape of a smooth-skinned, fast-moving ‘UFO’ with a central ‘mouth’ that it uses the vacuum-up victims. This thing can also unravel itself, to become more like a vast mass of unfurled membranes.

A victim is swallowed by the living UFO-creature!
A victim is swallowed by the living UFO-creature!

When the film reaches its climax the score is amped up, imbuing the movie with a neo-Western vibe, as the siblings confront the creature on horseback and on an electric motorbike, trying to stay alive and also still endeavouring to get an elusive shot of the hungry, floating monster.

Well worth a watch.

Here’s a bunch of shots of the lovely critter…

Nope
Nope
Nope
Nope
Nope
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Nope
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Nope
Nope
Nope
Nope
Nope

Finally, here’s the Dolby Cinema poster for the film…

 This poster uses the design on the jacket worn by Steven Yeun's character for inspiration
This poster uses the design on the jacket worn by Steven Yeun’s character for inspiration
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The Thing From Another World (1951)

Here comes the Thing...
Here comes the Thing…

Based on the 1938 novella WHO GOES THERE? by John W Campbell, THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD tells the story of a U.S Air Force crew, plus some scientists, who discover an alien being in the ice near a crashed flying saucer in the Artic. The block of ice that encases the extraterrestrial melts (after an electric blanket is thrown over it) and everyone is forced to defend themselves against the single-mindedly vicious killer alien.

Poster
Poster
Some advice: don't put an electric blanket on this ice block...
Some advice: don’t put an electric blanket on this ice block…

This is an extremely good 50s sci-fi horror movie that will always remain one of my all-time favourite flicks.

The iconic moment the crew mark out the shape of the spacecraft buried beneath the ice
The iconic moment the crew mark out the shape of the spacecraft buried beneath the ice

I love this movie’s overlapping dialogue, the way characters don’t finish what they’re saying as someone else cuts in. The cast acts naturalistically, are likeable, and Kenneth Tobey, playing Captain Patrick Hendry, is such a cool bastard!

Tobey is a really cool character in this film. Fact.
Tobey is a really cool character in this film. Fact.
I love this movie's ensemble cast
This movie’s ensemble cast is ace!

The Thing itself is a memorable creation: it is a hairless, sentient vegetable-being that can regrow its limbs, has thorn-like spikes on its hands and can reproduce asexually via seeds that germinate when fed on blood. This otherworldly killer (played by James Arness) regards humans (and Huskies) simply as food and has a raw intellect that is without passion or empathy.

One of the standout sequences involves the characters fighting off the Thing by hurling kerosene at the creature and setting it alight. It’s very thrilling stuff!

Flaming thrills!
Flamingly good action!
Tom Steele did the full-body burn stunt
Tom Steele did the full-body burn stunt
The shutting-the-door-fast scene is another great moment!
The shutting-the-door-fast scene is another great moment!

Our level-headed heroes finally defeat the Thing, but will more be coming?

Zzzzzzzap!
Zzzzzzzap!

“Keep watching the skies!”

Italian poster
Italian poster
UK poster
UK poster
Love the colours used in this poster
Love the colours used in this poster
Tobey breathing...

Supersonic Saucer (1956)

Creepy Meba!
So creepy!

A group of boarding school kids encounter an alien from Venus and team up with the small extraterrestrial, which they name Meba, to catch a bunch of dastardly crooks.

This is a charming, odd, obscure low budget movie from the Children’s Film Foundation, which was a UK non-profit-making organisation that used to make cheap films for kids with pretty simple, straightforward stories. Other sci-fi/fantasy CFF productions include THE GLITTERBALL and THE MONSTER OF HIGHGATE PONDS.

Meba is meant to look cute, honest...
Meba is meant to look cute, honest…

In this movie the alien can transform into a little cartoon flying saucer (with eyes) that zips around the place. When not flying, Meba is a small puppet-creature that is basically a pair of googly eyes wrapped in a white yashmak. This alien is meant to be endearing… but Meba looks bloody creepy!

Meba is so... strange
Meba is so… strange

SUPERSONIC SAUCER features kids who sound so terribly old-school British (even the girl from South America does!), which is par for the course with a Children’s Film Foundation movie, and the plot is nothing special. So the main attraction is, of course, the alien Meba – who remains a bit freaky-looking throughout the movie!

Just look at its creepy stare...
Just don’t look at its creepy stare…

And this is what I want to know: is Meba a sentient flying saucer that can turn into a little creature with big eyes, or is Meba a little creature with big eyes that can turn into a flying saucer?

Meba's two distinct forms...
Meba’s two distinct forms…

With a story by Frank Wells, the son of H.G. Wells, I’ve read some claims that SUPERSONIC SAUCER was an influence on ET, but I’m sure it’s probably too obscure to ever have gotten onto Steven Spielberg’s radar.

Did Meba influence ET?
Did Meba influence ET?

SUPERSONIC SAUCER was released on DVD by the BFI as part of a triple bill of Children’s Film Foundation movies.

BFI DVD
BFI DVD
A bunch of these aliens on Venus...
A bunch of these aliens on Venus…
Go on, kids, throw it down the stairs!
Go on, kids, throw it down the stairs!
Creeeeeeeeepy
Creeeeeeeeepy