The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951 film)

The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951 film)

Infobox Film
name = The Day the Earth Stood Still


caption = Color-enhanced reprint of the 1951 Film Poster
director = Robert Wise
producer = Julian Blaustein
writer = Edmund H. North
Harry Bates (story)
starring = Michael Rennie
Patricia Neal
Hugh Marlowe
Sam Jaffe
music = Bernard Herrmann
cinematography = Leo Tover
editing = William H. Reynolds
distributor = 20th Century Fox
released = September 28, 1951
runtime = 92 minutes
language = English
budget =
amg_id = 1:12638
imdb_id = 0043456

"The Day the Earth Stood Still" is a 1951 black-and-white science fiction film that tells the story of a humanoid alien visitor who comes to Earth to warn its leaders to curtail their conflicts or face devastating consequences. The film stars Michael Rennie, Patricia Neal, Sam Jaffe and Hugh Marlowe, under the direction of Robert Wise. Screenwriter Edmund H. North adapted Harry Bates's short story "Farewell to the Master". The score was composed by Bernard Herrmann and is notable for its use of two theremin electronic instruments.

A remake starring Keanu Reeves is scheduled for release in December 2008.

Plot

A flying saucer lands in Washington, DC. Klaatu (Michael Rennie) emerges and declares he has come on a mission of goodwill. However, when he opens a small device with a snap, he is shot and wounded by a nervous soldier who mistakes it for a weapon. In response, a large robot called Gort steps out of the ship and melts all weapons present without harming the soldiers. Klaatu orders him to stop and explains the "weapon" was a gift to the President and could have been used to study life on other planets.

He is taken to Walter Reed Hospital, where he quickly recovers. While there, Klaatu meets the President's secretary, Mr. Harley, but is unable to convince him to gather the world's leaders. Klaatu suggests the United Nations, but is told it does not represent all countries, and later, that world leaders cannot even agree on a meeting place for such a momentous occasion. When Klaatu suggests he live among ordinary people to get to know them better, Harley rebuffs him and implies that he is a prisoner. Klaatu escapes into the night.

He goes to a boarding house, assuming the alias "Mr. Carpenter", the name on the laundry label of a suit he has taken. Among the residents are Helen Benson (Patricia Neal), a government employee, and her son Bobby (Billy Gray). Helen is a widow, her husband had been killed in World War II. The next morning, Klaatu listens to a radio commentator and to the boarders' speculation over the breakfast table; one suggests that it may be the work of the Soviets. When Helen's boyfriend, Tom Stephens (Hugh Marlowe), plans a day-trip getaway for the two of them, Klaatu offers to take care of Bobby.

Bobby takes Klaatu on a tour of the city, including a visit to his father's grave in Arlington National Cemetery, where Klaatu learns with dismay that most of those buried there were killed in wars. The two next visit the Lincoln Memorial and the heavily-guarded spaceship, where Gort stands motionlessly on guard. Klaatu, impressed by the inscription of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, is hopeful that Earth may harbor people wise enough to understand his message. When he asks Bobby to name the greatest person in the world today, Bobby mentions a leading American scientist, Professor Barnhardt (Sam Jaffe), who lives nearby.

Bobby takes Klaatu to Barnhardt's home. The professor is absent; Klaatu goes into his study and helps solve an advanced mathematical n-body problem written on a blackboard, before leaving his address with the housekeeper. Later, government agents escort Klaatu to see Barnhardt, who has seen the correction to his work as a calling card which could not have been faked.

Klaatu warns the professor that the peoples of the other planets are concerned for their safety because human beings have developed atomic power. Barnhardt offers Klaatu the opportunity to speak at an upcoming meeting of scientists he is organizing; Klaatu accepts. Barnhardt is stunned when Klaatu declares that, if his message is rejected by Earth's leaders, "Planet Earth will be eliminated". The professor pleads for Klaatu to first provide a minor demonstration of his power as a warning.

Klaatu returns to his spaceship that night to implement the professor's suggestion. Bobby trails him and is amazed to see his new friend enter the ship. When Tom Stephens and Helen Benson return from their evening out, Bobby tells them that Mr. Carpenter is the "spaceman". They do not believe him at first, but when Bobby goes upstairs to bed, Helen notices that his shoes are soaking wet. Their suspicions grow when Tom finds a diamond in Carpenter's room.

The following day, Tom takes the diamond to a jeweler, who claims that he has never seen the like before. Meeting Helen at work, Klaatu insists on speaking to her. While riding in an elevator, it stops. A montage sequence shows that Klaatu has suppressed electric power all over the world, though critical systems such as hospitals and planes in flight have been spared. This brings the entire world to a standstill. During the blackout, Klaatu confirms Helen's suspicions and enlists her aid. She urgently searches for Tom to stop him from telling the authorities, but he tells her that he intends to expose Klaatu and thereby become rich and famous. Helen rushes home to warn Klaatu. They take a taxi to wait at Barnhardt's home until the meeting with the scientists. On the way, Klaatu tells Helen that if anything should happen to him, she must go to Gort and say, "Klaatu barada nikto." They are spotted; when Klaatu tries to flee, he is shot dead.

Overcoming her fear, Helen does as Klaatu asked. Gort gently carries her into the spaceship, retrieves Klaatu's corpse, and temporarily revives him. Klaatu steps out of the spaceship and addresses the assembled scientists, explaining that humanity's penchant for violence and first steps into space have caused concern among the other spacefaring worlds, who have created a race of robot enforcers like Gort and given them absolute power to deal with any violence. He warns that the people of Earth can either abandon warfare and peacefully join these other nations or be destroyed, adding that "The decision rests with you." He then enters the spaceship and departs.

Cast

*Michael Rennie as Klaatu / Mr. Carpenter. Spencer Tracy and Claude Rains were originally considered for the part.Fact|date=September 2008
*Patricia Neal as Helen Benson
*Hugh Marlowe as Tom Stevens
*Sam Jaffe as Professor Jacob Barnhardt
*Billy Gray as Bobby Benson
*Frances Bavier as Mrs. Barley
*Lock Martin as Gort
*H. V. Kaltenborn*, Elmer Davis*, Drew Pearson*, and Gabriel Heatter,* well-known broadcast journalists of that time, appeared as themselves

* Not credited on-screen.

Critical reaction

The film was attacked from some quarters, due to actor Sam Jaffe's politics. cite video
people =Julian Blaustein, Robert Wise, Patricia Neal, Billy Gray
year = 1995
title =Making the Earth Stand Still
url =http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0345616/
format =
accessdate =2007-07-22
medium =LaserDisc; DVD
location =
publisher =Fox Video; Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
] Jaffe, a liberal, was listed on the Red Channels pamphlet, a self-described listing of performers sympathetic to communism. [ [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0415488/bio Internet Movie Database] Jaffe experienced first hand the destructive potential latent in the anti-communist furor at the beginning of the decade. His name was included on a listing of performers sympathetic to communism called the Red Channels pamphlet and like many was repudiated by the big Hollywood studios. In reality Jaffe was in fact a rather benign liberal without radical views] The film's explicit message of peace, in combination with its dark outlook regarding human society, struck a chord with audiences, earning it lasting acclaim. The movie is ranked seventh in "Arthur C. Clarke's List of the Best Science-Fiction Films of All Time", just above Stanley Kubrick's "", for which Clarke himself wrote the screenplay. In 1995, "The Day the Earth Stood Still" was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant". In 2008, it was voted as the fifth best science-fiction ever made as part of the AFI's 10 Top 10. [cite news | author = American Film Institute | title = AFI Crowns Top 10 Films in 10 Classic Genres | work = ComingSoon.net | date = 2008-06-17 | url = http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=46072 | accessdate=2008-06-18]

Differences from the short story

In the short story "Farewell to the Master", the ship appears on Earth instantaneously rather than being tracked during approach and landing. Klaatu is killed after emerging from his ship and greeting those present. Professor Barnhardt and Helen Benson – and, with them, the phrase "Klaatu barada nikto" – are not in the story. Instead, a newspaper photojournalist named Sutherland deals with the robot, which is named Gnut, not Gort (the name was changed for ease of pronunciation). Unlike Gort, Gnut can speak.

The relationship between Klaatu and Gnut is much different from that between Klaatu and Gort. In the surprise ending, when Gnut prepares to leave, Sutherland insists that it tell its master that Klaatu's killing was accidental. Gnut responds, "You misunderstand. "I" am the master."

Biblical references

In a 1995 interview, producer Julian Blaustein explained that Joseph I. Breen, the film censor installed by the Motion Picture Association of America at the 20th Century Fox studios, balked at the portrayal of Klaatu's resurrection and limitless power. At the behest of the MPPDA, a line was inserted into the film: When Helen asks Klaatu if Gort has unlimited power over life and death, Klaatu explains that he has only been revived temporarily by advanced medical science and states that the power of resurrection is "reserved to the Almighty Spirit".cite book
last = Shermer
first = Michael
authorlink = Michael Shermer
title = The Borderlands of Science: Where Sense Meets Nonsense
publisher = Oxford University Press
date = 2001
pages = 74-75
isbn = 0195143264
] Of the elements in the film that he added to Klaatu's character, Screenwriter Edmund North said: "It was my private little joke. I never discussed this angle with Blaustein or Wise because I didn't want it expressed. I had originally hoped that the Christ comparison would be subliminal".Cite book
last = Matthews
first = Melvin E.
title = Hostile Aliens, Hollywood and Today's News: 1950s Science Fiction Films and 9/11
publisher = Algora Publishing
pages = 54
year = 2007
isbn = 087586497X
] The fact that the question even came up in an interview is proof enough that such comparisons did not remain subliminal, but they are subtle enough that it is not immediately obvious to all viewers which elements of the film were intended to make Klaatu comparable to Christ. And yet, North did endeavor to do so, and evidence exists for some elements:
*Klaatu brings a message of peace.Cite book
last = Holloway
first = David
coauthor = John Beck
title = American Visual Cultures
publisher = Continuum International Publishing Group
pages = 135
year = 2005
isbn = 0826464858
]
*Klaatu is revived from the dead for a short time by the robotic Gort, as Jesus is resurrected, and the resurrection was not temporary, originally.
*Klaatu gives a climactic statement of his mission, and then lifts off into space in his ship; Jesus gave a final address to his disciples before 'ascending into heaven' (New Testament, Acts Chapter 1).Cite book
last = Gianos
first = Phillip L.
title = Politics and Politicians in American Film
publisher = Greenwood Publishing Group
year = 1998
isbn = 0275960714
]

Speculations upon which elements were added by the screenwriter to make Klaatu's character Christlike, or occurrences included in the story which are comparable to the Bible story of Christ:
*He adopts the name John Carpenter. New Testament accounts sometimes call Jesus the "carpenter's [Joseph's] son".
*Klaatu declares the position of his people before of the powers of the world; although Jesus most commonly spoke before crowds of the common people, his character was also tested in confrontations with the powerful.
*Klaatu lecturing Professor Barnhardt (played by Jewish actor Sam Jaffe with Einstein's hairdo) on his own area of expertise, on his own blackboard, is a parallel to the young Jesus lecturing the rabbis in the temple.
*Klaatu escapes the government, believing the company and knowledge of the common people to be more valuable to his mission than that of the established order. Jesus repeatedly took it upon himself to point out the value of the poor, pariahs and outcasts, which even his followers questioned, and considered that his work with them was his most valuable.
*Klaatu gives Helen the famous phrase to be repeated to Gort in the event of Klaatu's death, and this soon transpires; Jesus actions at the Last Supper are repeated by his followers after his death, and he warns that his death will soon come both at the Last Supper, and at night in the Garden of Gethsemane, just before the apprehension by the Roman soldiers that leads to his death.
*Klaatu's death at the hands of soldiers echoes the death of Jesus; just as Jesus' crucifixion was carried out by soldiers, so also is Klaatu's killing.
*Gort removes the body of Klaatu from a locked jail cell; Jesus' body is removed from a sealed tomb by an angel.

Production

Principal outdoor photography for "The Day the Earth Stood Still" was shot on 20th Century Fox sound stages and its studio backlot (now Century City), with a second unit shooting background plates and other scenes in Washington, D.C. The film's stars never traveled to Washington for the making of the film.

In a DVD commentary track, interviewed by fellow director Nicholas Meyer, director Robert Wise stated that he wanted the film to appear as realistic and believable as possible, in order to drive home the work's core message against armed conflict in the real world. Also mentioned in the DVD's documentary interview was the original title for the movie, "The Day the World Stops".

Wise's background in directing horror (his solo directorial debut had come with producer Val Lewton some five years before) lent itself to a "haunted house" feel to the movie's spookier scenes, with a stark use of deep shadow, often patterned to resemble the bars of a cage (his hospital room, the wallpaper and balustrade of the boarding house, the elevator). This effect was heightened by the use of the eerie sounding theremin based sound track. High angle shots are often used to create a feeling of vulnerability or isolation; here, they are presumably used to augment Klaatu's separation from the people of Earth, whose warlike ways are alien to him. Low angle shots are believed to give the subject an aura of potency; it can be inferred that shooting Klaatu in low shot was intended to highlight the unlimited power he represents. Theories of cinematography such as the effect of camera angles were, at the time of the making of this film, an art not a science.

Producer Julian Blaustein set out to make a film that illustrated the fear and suspicion that characterized the early Cold War and Atomic Age. He reviewed over 200 science fiction short stories and novels in search of a storyline that could be used, as the genre was well suited for a metaphorical discussion of such grave issues. Studio head Darryl F. Zanuck green-lighted the project, and Blaustein contracted Edmund North to draft a screenplay based on elements from the Bates story.

Although the film contains its share of dramatic special effects scenes, such as the destruction of military hardware by the robot Gort, special effects were also used more subtly. For example, the aerial shots of crowd scenes surrounding Klaatu's spaceship were achieved with a combination of optical printing or matte work (to include the Washington D.C. skyline) and a "held take" approach, where the same film is run through the camera for multiple exposures of the same crowd standing in different locations on the studio backlot in order to give the appearance of a much larger crowd.

Other examples of special effects work include rear projection or "traveling matte" work in the scenes depicting Bobby and Klaatu's tour of the Arlington National Cemetery and Lincoln Memorial, and the taxi chase sequence at the film's climax when Helen and Klaatu are chased by the military. According to the DVD commentary, Wise carefully prepared his shooting list from storyboards so that his second unit would return with "background plate" footage with appropriate action (an MP calling on a radio, an increasing number of military vehicles) for each rapid cut in the complex finished sequence.

Many shots of the now defunct Peoples Drug Store in downtown Washington D.C. are seen in this film.

oundtrack

Infobox Album
Name = The Day the Earth Stood Still
Type = Film
Artist = Bernard Herrmann


Released = 1993
Recorded = August, 1951
Genre = Soundtracks, Film music
Length = 63:41
Label = Fox
Producer = Nick Redman
Reviews = * Allmusic Rating|4.5|5 [http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:o04tk6gxlkrk link]
Last album =
This album = "The Day the Earth Stood Still"
Next album =

The soundtrack was composed in August 1951 and was Bernard Herrmann's first soundtrack after he moved to Hollywood. Herrmann chose unusual instrumentation the film including violin, cello, and bass (all three electric), two theremin electronic instruments (played by Dr. Samuel Hoffman and Paul Shure), two Hammond organs, a large studio electric organ, three vibraphones, two glockenspiels, two pianos, two harps and three trumpets, three trombones, four tubas. [ [http://www.filmscorerundowns.net/herrmann/dess.pdf Score analysis by Bill Wrobel, on www.filmscorerundowns.net] ] Unusual overdubbing and tape-reversal techniques were used, as well. 20th Century Fox later re-used the Herrmann title theme in the original pilot episode for Irwin Allen's 1965 TV series Lost In Space.

Track listing

# "Twentieth Century Fox Fanfare" – 0:12
# "Prelude/Outer Space/Radar" – 3:45
# "Danger" – 0:24
# "Klaatu" – 2:15
# "Gort/The Visor/The Telescope" – 2:23
# "Escape" – 0:55
# "Solar Diamonds" – 1:04
# "Arlington" – 1:08
# "Lincoln Memorial" – 1:27
# "Nocturne/The Flashlight/The Robot/Space Control" – 5:58
# "Elevator/Magnetic Pull/The Study/The Conference/The Jewelry Store" – 4:32
# "Panic" – 0:42
# "Glowing/Alone/Gort's Rage/Nikto/The Captive/Terror" – 5:11
# "The Prison" – 1:42
# "Rebirth" – 1:38
# "Departure" – 0:52
# "Farewell" – 0:32
# "Finale" – 0:30

References

Further reading

* cite web
url=http://www.scifiscripts.com/scripts/TheDayTheEarthStoodSTill.html
title="The Day the Earth Stood Still"
first=Edmund H.
last=North
date=1951-02-21
work=Original Script
publisher=ScifiScripts.com
accessdate=2007-08-15

* cite book
title=Fantastic Voyages: Learning Science Through Science Fiction Films
author=Leroy W. Dubeck, Suzanne E. Moshier, and Judith E. Boss
pages=249–252
date=1994
publisher=Springer
isbn=1-56396-195-4
chapter=The Day the Earth Stood Still

See Also

The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008 film) The 2008 remake, starring Keannu Reaves.

External links

*imdb title|id=0043456|title=The Day the Earth Stood Still
*Rotten-tomatoes|id=1005371-day_the_earth_stood_still|title=The Day the Earth Stood Still
*cite web
url=http://thenostalgialeague.com/olmag/bates.html
title=Farewell to the Master (full text)
first=Harry
last=Bates
date=October 1940
authorlink=Harry Bates (author)
publisher=Astounding Stories, [http://www.thenostalgialeague.com/ The Nostalgia League]
accessdate=2007-08-11

* [http://www.scifiscripts.com/scripts/sequel_1.htm "The Evening of the Second Day"] Ray Bradbury's 1981 sequel outline


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