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THE INVISIBLE ENEMY
Adam West, Rudy Solari, Ted Knight, Joe Maross, Chris
Alcaide,
Anthony Costello, Bob DeQui, Peter Marko, and Mike Mikler.
An expedition to Mars must cope with a deadly, and apparently invisible,
enemy.
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QUICK SCAN...
Fans of TV's, "Batman," will enjoy seeing Adam
West as a Mars going astronaut. Scenes which involve using an
atomic bazooka against Martians monsrters are fun.
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SYNOPSIS...
The first manned mission to Mars arrives. Soon, both crew members
disappear mysteriously.
Three years later, another manned expedition lands. Before long, two
more astronauts disappear. The surviving astronauts discover that
Mars has large, man eating "sharks" which live in the sand.
The astronauts fire an atomic bazooka shell at the Martian sand sharks.
More of them appear. The surviving astronauts blast off safely, heading
for Earth.
REVIEW...
Director Byron Haskin's, THE INVISIBLE ENEMY,
is an exciting tale of manned Mars exploration.
Two astronauts land on Mars. Shortly after that, they scream and disappear.
Three years later another earth expedition lands on Mars.
Adam West, TV's "Batman", does a fine job as Major Merrit,
the head of the second Martian expedition. Seeing his "straight"
performance, however, its' a bit hard to believe he went on to such
fame as a campy TV super hero.
Rudy Solari ("The Boss' Son") as Captain Buckley, lends
solid support. He brings enthusiasm and gusto to the fairly standard
role of an impulsive astronaut under West's command.
Unfortunately, the dialogue in this episode, written by Jerry Soul,
is occasionally wince inducing. When astronaut Solari spots the Martian
sand shark for the first time he yells, "Thar she blows!"
The Martian sand shark, with a dragon-like head and huge crab claws,
is not very convincing. Oddly enough, the close-ups of the alien work
better than the long and medium shots. The Martian shark was designed
and photographed by Project Unlimited, Inc.
My favorite scene is when the astronauts try to blow up a sand shark
with a bazooka, firing an nuclear tipped shell. The resulting explosion,
courtesy of Special Effects person, Pat Dinga, is impressive. The
fact that the U.S. Army actually had such a device, in the 1950's
and 1960's, enhanced my enjoyment of the scene.
Director of Photography Kenneth Peach's screen images are striking
and imaginative. Particularly good is a shot on the Martian surface,
at the edge of a sand pit. As mist blows around, we see the discarded
atomic bazooka laying on the ground, as something disappears into
the sand. It's a classic Sci-Fi image.
The music in this episode is ominous, along the lines of a haunted
house movie soundtrack. Harry Lubin is the responsible party.
THE INVISIBLE ENEMY should be highly watchable for most Sci-Fi viewers.
Adam West fans will dig this one. THE INVISIBLE ENEMY is worth seeing!

 
 
 
 
 

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