An alien life form that is a huge ball of living matter invades earth, and replenishes itself by absorbing people.An alien life form that is a huge ball of living matter invades earth, and replenishes itself by absorbing people.An alien life form that is a huge ball of living matter invades earth, and replenishes itself by absorbing people.
Maria De Aragon
- Jeanne
- (as Maria de Aragon)
Eric Sinclair
- Dr. Willy Seppel
- (as Eric Allison)
Cecil Reddick
- Medical Examiner
- (as Cecil Redick)
John Barnum
- Merv
- (as Barney Bossick)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
... great balls of crap!
A burning alien sphere crashes to Earth, the only witnesses an Indian and a fish: the Indian was engulfed by the ball and turned to ash; the fish swam away. So begins this utterly atrocious low-budget sci-fi oddity from director Harry Essex, who is perhaps best known for writing '50s sci-fi classic It Came from Outer Space.
The story kicks off proper three centuries after the arrival of the flaming globe, at the lake into which it sank. It is there that entomologist Dr. Iane Thorne (Marvin Howard) discovers strange minerals that glow and make weird beeping sounds; he shows these to his friend and fellow scientist Dr. Willy Seppel (Eric Allison), but neither can figure out what it is they have found. Further samples are found inside the body of the cat belonging to Thorne's long-haired draft dodger pal Mason (Mason Caulfield). Meanwhile, the alien sphere has been emerging from the lake and attacking people, reducing them to cinders. Can Thorne work out what the hell is going on before the viewer falls asleep?
Essex's direction is lifeless, Howard makes for a bland protagonist, and the film's visual effects are far from special (especially considering the man responsible, Doug Beswick, would go on to much better things). Countless cutaways to the bleeping stones pad out the runtime, and there's a dull romance between Thorne and Seppel's niece Jeanne (aria De Aragon) for good measure. The drawn-out finale, which sees Thorne laying a trap for the glowing orange orb, is completely bereft of tension and excitement.
1/10. If you should happen across this film, be like the fish and swim away.
A burning alien sphere crashes to Earth, the only witnesses an Indian and a fish: the Indian was engulfed by the ball and turned to ash; the fish swam away. So begins this utterly atrocious low-budget sci-fi oddity from director Harry Essex, who is perhaps best known for writing '50s sci-fi classic It Came from Outer Space.
The story kicks off proper three centuries after the arrival of the flaming globe, at the lake into which it sank. It is there that entomologist Dr. Iane Thorne (Marvin Howard) discovers strange minerals that glow and make weird beeping sounds; he shows these to his friend and fellow scientist Dr. Willy Seppel (Eric Allison), but neither can figure out what it is they have found. Further samples are found inside the body of the cat belonging to Thorne's long-haired draft dodger pal Mason (Mason Caulfield). Meanwhile, the alien sphere has been emerging from the lake and attacking people, reducing them to cinders. Can Thorne work out what the hell is going on before the viewer falls asleep?
Essex's direction is lifeless, Howard makes for a bland protagonist, and the film's visual effects are far from special (especially considering the man responsible, Doug Beswick, would go on to much better things). Countless cutaways to the bleeping stones pad out the runtime, and there's a dull romance between Thorne and Seppel's niece Jeanne (aria De Aragon) for good measure. The drawn-out finale, which sees Thorne laying a trap for the glowing orange orb, is completely bereft of tension and excitement.
1/10. If you should happen across this film, be like the fish and swim away.
- BA_Harrison
- Feb 7, 2019
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJudy Dikty (misspelled in the credits as "Ditky") is the real name of author Julian C. May, by which she is better known and credited elsewhere.
- GoofsThe poster promises "Fire_People" "from the sun", but there are no fire-people among the cast of characters, only a rolling fireball effect.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Some Say: The World Will End in Fire
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $50,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Sound mix
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