IMDb RATING
5.6/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
While mainland Britain shivers in deepest winter, the northern island of Fara bakes in extreme heat.While mainland Britain shivers in deepest winter, the northern island of Fara bakes in extreme heat.While mainland Britain shivers in deepest winter, the northern island of Fara bakes in extreme heat.
Percy Herbert
- Gerald Foster
- (as Percy Hurbert)
Thomas Heathcote
- Bob Hayward
- (as Tom Heathcote)
Sydney Bromley
- Old Tramp
- (as Sidney Bromley)
Jack Hetherington
- Man Buying Pint in Pub
- (uncredited)
Charles Rayford
- Card Player in Pub
- (uncredited)
Jack Sharp
- Card Player in Pub
- (uncredited)
5.62.6K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Island of the Burning Doomed is effective
This was only one of three films that Planet Film Productions made and I have always thought it was an eerie and effective film. It's definitely low budget but I'm not sure a bigger budget would have helped this film. Story takes place on an island off of England and the temperature has been rising steadily for the last few days. A writer named Jeff Callum (Patrick Allen) and his wife Frankie (Sarah Lawson) own and run the local Inn and pub and one of the tenants renting a room upstairs is a mysterious and unsociable man named Godfrey Hanson (Christopher Lee). Along with Dr. Vernon Stone (Peter Cushing), Jeff and Frankie sit around the pub trying to figure out why its so hot on the island but not on the mainland. Jeff has requested the help of a secretary to help him on his new novel and a woman named Angela Roberts (Jane Merrow) has come for the job. Unknown to Frankie, Angela and Jeff know each other and had an affair some time earlier. Angela keeps prancing about in a two piece bathing suit and putting the moves on Jeff who only replies with kissing when Frankie is not looking. Then one day a local sheep farmer stumbles into the Inn and mumbles something about his sheep being dead. Hanson is very interested and goes to check it out. He finds the sheep dead and takes samples. When he gets back he learns that Frankie has seen something come down out of the sky and land behind the hill. Jeff demands that Hanson tell him who he is and what he is doing. Hanson tells him that he is a scientist sent to check out what things have been coming from the sky and the reason for the heat. He tells Jeff that they are aliens from a hot planet and they generate heat which is why it is so hot. Meanwhile, the temperature keeps rising and all the bottles at the pub start to explode. They all figure that within a few hours the heat will be unbearable, if the aliens don't get them first. The aliens make this loud whirring sound and they consume energy like batteries and generators and can burn humans up completely. This film was directed by Terence Fisher who specialized in science fiction and horror. He became the premier horror film director in England and he knew exactly what to do with a limited budget. Fisher knew how to create great atmosphere and this film has plenty of it. If you notice in certain scenes when the actors are outside you can actually see their breath! Obviously it wasn't hot like the story of the film wanted you to believe. Fisher had his actors smear glycerine on themselves to help create that sweaty effect and then they had to wear damp shirts. I couldn't help but notice that Cushing's character keeps his suit and jacket on even though it suppose to be about 100 degrees! Its okay, Peter! Take off your jacket! And how about Patrick Allen's response when his wife asks him about Angela. "She was a slut and I wanted her"!! I'm sure she felt relieved to know that its not real love. For you trivia buffs out there, Patrick Allen and Sarah Lawson are married in real life. Along with the great atmosphere I liked the deliberate pace that the film set and it was in no hurry to allow viewers to see what the aliens look like. Yeah okay, they look like fried eggs but I always thought they looked liked that rock creature "Ahorta" from that Star Trek episode. Another thing I noticed was that this was one of the few Cushing/Lee films where both of them don't make it through the end. Fisher also directed "Island of Terror" which this is reminiscent of. It would make a good double bill on a rainy night. I think true lovers of older science fiction and horror can appreciate this film more than casual viewers. I've always found it to be an enjoyable film and I hope it comes out on DVD soon!
Ending comes out of left field
This is one of those films where it seems they wrote themselves into a corner & didn't know how to resolve it so they pulled something out of their ass at the last minute.
Viewer: Why should rain destroy the creatures? Writer: I dunno. Viewer: And where did the rain come from anyway? Writer: Don't ask. Viewer: Why did they think dynamite would destroy them when they didn't even know what they looked like until the final 2 minutes? Writer: Well...uh... Viewer: And if Fara Island was the only place in the UK experiencing unusual weather why didn't the government send someone to investigate? Writer: Look if you think you can do better then go ahead. Director: You tell 'em. We ran out of film & had to end it somehow.
Viewer: Why should rain destroy the creatures? Writer: I dunno. Viewer: And where did the rain come from anyway? Writer: Don't ask. Viewer: Why did they think dynamite would destroy them when they didn't even know what they looked like until the final 2 minutes? Writer: Well...uh... Viewer: And if Fara Island was the only place in the UK experiencing unusual weather why didn't the government send someone to investigate? Writer: Look if you think you can do better then go ahead. Director: You tell 'em. We ran out of film & had to end it somehow.
Night of the Big Heat....No Need For the Cold Shoulder!
Night of the Big Heat may not rank among the best sci-fi efforts by critics, but for this fan, it really does deliver the goods. Locals on the Island of Fera find themselves in the midst of a searing heat wave while the rest of the mainland of the UK is in the middle of a normal cold snap in November. As bodies begin to pile up, found burnt to a crisp, a scientist struggles to convince the locals that they may be the victims of an invasion from space.
A great cast that includes, Patrick Allen, Jane Merrow, Sarah Lawson and in guest roles, Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. Directed by the great, Terence Fisher, this is another triumph in Fisher's library of films and to this viewer, ranks right up there with his Hammer horror films as well as the underrated, Island of Terror.
Certainly not as bad as some would have you believe and probably not as good as I think it is, it is definitely worth a look for fans of 60s British sci-fi films.
A great cast that includes, Patrick Allen, Jane Merrow, Sarah Lawson and in guest roles, Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. Directed by the great, Terence Fisher, this is another triumph in Fisher's library of films and to this viewer, ranks right up there with his Hammer horror films as well as the underrated, Island of Terror.
Certainly not as bad as some would have you believe and probably not as good as I think it is, it is definitely worth a look for fans of 60s British sci-fi films.
Christopher Lee & Peter Cushing are burning up off the coast of Britain
A sultry woman (Jane Merrow) travels to Fara, an Island in Northern UK, to work as the secretary of an author (Patrick Allen). The latter's naïve wife (Sarah Lawson) runs the Inn where everyone stays, including a polite man (Peter Cushing) and a standoffish scientist (Christopher Lee). It's the middle of the winter yet temperatures are rising to well over 100 degrees and people are turning up dead. What's going on?
"Island of the Burning Damned," aka "Night of the Big Heat" (1967) was made by the same short-lived company that released the similar "Island of Terror" a year earlier, both featuring Peter Cushing and director Terence Fisher. It walks the balance beam between sci-fi and horror and should be appreciated by fans of Lee, Cushing, Hammer, Amicus, Tigon and American International. It helps that some human interest is offered with a tense triangle. Interestingly, the secretary is overtly called a slur (for a loose woman) by the author, which is a little surprising for such seemingly "refined" people.
The story maintains your interest as suspense slowly builds, especially concerning what's causing the heat and the deaths. There's a deus ex machina but, hey, the story had to end. Merrow is pretty stunning, but her character needs slapped.
The film runs about 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot at The Swan Inn and Pinewood Studios, Buckinghamshire, England, as well as Dorset.
GRADE: B-/B
"Island of the Burning Damned," aka "Night of the Big Heat" (1967) was made by the same short-lived company that released the similar "Island of Terror" a year earlier, both featuring Peter Cushing and director Terence Fisher. It walks the balance beam between sci-fi and horror and should be appreciated by fans of Lee, Cushing, Hammer, Amicus, Tigon and American International. It helps that some human interest is offered with a tense triangle. Interestingly, the secretary is overtly called a slur (for a loose woman) by the author, which is a little surprising for such seemingly "refined" people.
The story maintains your interest as suspense slowly builds, especially concerning what's causing the heat and the deaths. There's a deus ex machina but, hey, the story had to end. Merrow is pretty stunning, but her character needs slapped.
The film runs about 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot at The Swan Inn and Pinewood Studios, Buckinghamshire, England, as well as Dorset.
GRADE: B-/B
Enough criticism already....OK, the film has a few little problems!
STILL you have the chance to see Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing together doing their respective things, and I for one value that above production quality, fx realism and other budgetry constraints. So what if the aliens ultimately look like fried eggs? and besides, they don't! Try mutated snails with an ammonite heritage? Its a Terence Fisher flick - perhaps not his best...its still way better than I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER...and PEARL HARBOR, come to that! I have a copy of this old faithful (known by the more widespread and infinitely better title of NIGHT OF THE BIG HEAT)and every now and then out she comes for another beloved squiz!
Continuity not the best for your tastes? Tad low on the production budget you think? Chris Lee just too insular and condescending by your standards? Boring love triangle? Well guys, I got a suggestion. DON'T WATCH THE DAMN THING - go rent 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU! (actually, I quite LIKED that too!)
Yeah NIGHT OF THE BIG HEAT isn't "Amicus" or "Hammer" at its peak, but it is STILL a worhwhile piece of british scifi from the 60's! Live with it!
Continuity not the best for your tastes? Tad low on the production budget you think? Chris Lee just too insular and condescending by your standards? Boring love triangle? Well guys, I got a suggestion. DON'T WATCH THE DAMN THING - go rent 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU! (actually, I quite LIKED that too!)
Yeah NIGHT OF THE BIG HEAT isn't "Amicus" or "Hammer" at its peak, but it is STILL a worhwhile piece of british scifi from the 60's! Live with it!
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Sir Christopher Lee, this movie, dealing with an uncommon heat wave, was shot in the middle of winter. The actors and actresses not only had to be covered with glycerin to create the illusion of heavy sweat, but also suffered from wearing very light clothes in a freezing season.
- GoofsThe doctor is burned up by the aliens but his walkie-talkie is undamaged. Also, the aliens supposedly drain every drop of energy but the walkie-talkie battery is still charged.
- Quotes
Godfrey Hanson: I have been convinced that this island has become the center of an invasion, the central landing point for beings from another planet.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Night of the Big Heat (1970)
- How long is Night of the Big Heat?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Island of the Burning Damned
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content




