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The Bubble

  • 1966
  • PG
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
584
YOUR RATING
The Bubble (1966)
Sci-Fi

Pregnant woman and husband's plane lands in strange town due to atmospheric disturbance. Townspeople act zombie-like, repeating same actions. Couple trapped, seeking escape as they unravel t... Read allPregnant woman and husband's plane lands in strange town due to atmospheric disturbance. Townspeople act zombie-like, repeating same actions. Couple trapped, seeking escape as they unravel the mystery behind the eerie phenomenon.Pregnant woman and husband's plane lands in strange town due to atmospheric disturbance. Townspeople act zombie-like, repeating same actions. Couple trapped, seeking escape as they unravel the mystery behind the eerie phenomenon.

  • Director
    • Arch Oboler
  • Writer
    • Arch Oboler
  • Stars
    • Michael Cole
    • Deborah Walley
    • Johnny Desmond
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    584
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arch Oboler
    • Writer
      • Arch Oboler
    • Stars
      • Michael Cole
      • Deborah Walley
      • Johnny Desmond
    • 23User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast10

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    Michael Cole
    Michael Cole
    • Mark
    Deborah Walley
    Deborah Walley
    • Catherine
    Johnny Desmond
    Johnny Desmond
    • Tony Herric
    Kassie McMahon
    • Dancer
    Barbara Eiler
    Barbara Eiler
    • Ticket Cashier
    Virginia Gregg
    Virginia Gregg
    • Nurse
    Vic Perrin
    Vic Perrin
    • Taxi Driver
    • (as Victor Perrin)
    Olan Soule
    Olan Soule
    • Watch Repairman
    Chester Jones
    • Newspaper Vendor
    Warner Anderson
    Warner Anderson
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Arch Oboler
    • Writer
      • Arch Oboler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    4.7584
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    Featured reviews

    Bruce_Cook

    A movie you can't get into -- so IT comes out to YOU!

    [Also release as: "Fantastic Invasion of Planet Earth"]

    Director Arch Oboler ("The Twonky") pioneered a new 3-D process called "Spacevision" which used polarized glasses to separate the right-and-left images for the audience. The 3-D effect works remarkable well, especially in a scene involving a serving tray which floats out of the screen and (apparently) right up to the viewer's face.

    Oboler obviously made "The Bubble" just to show off "Spacevision"; the plot is practically nonexistent, and the film is littered with scenes that poke objects out of the screen at the audience. In Deborah Walley's first scene, she holds her arms out to the audience and exclaims "Darling!" to husband Michael Cole.

    The token plot is about a small town which alien invaders have isolated inside a spherical force field (the bubble of the title). A small plane piloted by Johnny Desmond and carrying newlyweds Michael and Deborah is forced to land during a storm, and the trio end up trapped in the town. The town's citizens act like broken robots, repeating routine tasks over and over, oblivious to everything around them. Olan Soule has a small role as one of the automaton Earthlings. The alleged alien invaders are never shown.

    Music by Paul Sawtell and Bert Schefter (the team which provided mucic for "It! The Terror from Beyond Space" and many other 1950s classics). Arch Oboler served as producer, screenwriter, and director -- so he has nobody to blame but himself.
    8billoneil2

    Tedious movie but great fun in 3D

    My beloved grandmother took me to see this movie at the theater. She was well into her 70s at the time and pretty fed up with movies but she (and I) had fun with this one.

    The movie is very slow paced and tedious. One early line from the male lead got a big laugh in the theater: When his wife is in labor (in a plane I think) and about to give birth, he desperately asks her, "can't you hold it in?" What I really remember is the 3D. Even Grandma was amazed, excited and laughing like a kid (along with everyone else in the theater) at the way things really came out of the screen at you. At one point, a tray of beer glasses floats off the bar and into the audience, very slowly. It gets closer and closer until it looks like you could touch it if you stood up and reached over. Many people in the theater did just that (myself included).

    What fun. Great memories of a very happy afternoon. Thanks, Grandma :-)
    6robfollower

    The Bubble 3D

    The film maybe would have been able to escape its B-movie limits if Oboler gave signs of being a really good filmmaker, but the film is still burdened with a weak cast, or at least one Oboler can't get much from, and not much creativity in making the limited effects budget stretch. It has a tremendously weak ending and while the 3-D camera work is decent (the restoration looks nice), the filmmakers don't do much other than push things at the audience's face or do a couple other trick shots. As someone who likes both 3D and weird sci-fi, I found myself wanting to like this a lot more than I actually did.
    4jack_north

    This was NOT first polarized 3D!

    I was a teen in the 60's and a big horror movie fan who saw and read anything I could get my hands on regarding horror films, and especially 3D horror films of the 50's. I distinctly remember reading the press releases in the Detroit newspapers that Arch Oboler, one of the technical pioneers of 3D films in the 50's, was in town to supervise the installation of special silver screens for his new 3D process.

    It was not new because it used polarized lenses...those had been used in the majority of the 3D films in the 50's. The new process related to the projection of the film. (I don't recall the articles going into much more detail about that process, but now I know it was apparently the first to combine both images on a single filmstrip.)

    I was so excited that Oboler himself was in my hometown to supervise the showing I made sure to go see it. I believe it was at the Adams in downtown Detroit.

    The 3D was mind-blowing! The beer tray floating out over the audience has still (this is mid 2013) not been topped for jaw-dropping 3D. I have thought of it many times since, and I think the reason it worked so well, and so much better than explosions or other fast-moving moves out of frame, is that the tray moved slow enough to follow and keep in focus by our eyes. (This is similar to holding one finger in front of your face and slowly moving it toward your nose. Your eyes cross slowly as your finger gets nearer.) I remember little else of the film, but I know that I walked out feeling I got my money's worth, just for the 3D alone.
    Otto_Partz_973

    Childhood trauma

    I have a real soft spot for this awful movie. I had nightmares for weeks after seeing it on its release; I was 6 years old. I remember ripping the 3D glasses off my face in abject terror. I would have run screaming from the theater if I had not been in the company of a large group of friends. Years later, I still had a rather vivid memory of the images that had terrified me and I searched high and low for this movie. When I finally found a VHS copy I was astounded at how cheesy and tame the whole thing was, though when I came to the part that had originally traumatized me, I still found it rather unnerving. I can't recommend it to the average viewer, but genre fans (that bad 60's horror genre) and 3D enthusiasts might want to take a look.

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    Related interests

    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally released with a running time of 112 minutes but several critics complained about the slow pacing so, in 1968, director Arch Oboler cut it to 91 minutes. Unfortunately, the edits were made directly to the original camera negative and the footage was discarded. It was thought to be lost until a personal copy of the original print belonging to Deborah Walley was located. The 2014 Kino Lorber blu-ray retains the original title & 3-D but is still the 91 minute edit of the film.
    • Goofs
      After Tony commandeered the taxi, he and the cabaret dancer are in the front seat while Mark and the driver are seen in the back, after a quick cut-scene of the road of statues, Mark and the dancer have switched seats.
    • Quotes

      Catherine: You're taking all of this too seriously. After all, what is childbirth? Just a sexy bellyache.

    • Alternate versions
      About ten years later, this film was re-released in a edited and re-titled version. Approximately two reels of footage was removed and it was re-titled "Fantastic Invasion of Planet Earth." In the early 1980s, this edited and re-titled version was released again during the brief 3-D revival of that period.
    • Connections
      Featured in Starfilm (2017)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 21, 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fantastic Invasion of Planet Earth
    • Production companies
      • Arch Oboler Productions
      • Midwestern MagicVuers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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