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Doomwatch

  • 1972
  • PG
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Doomwatch (1972)
The waters surrounding an island become contaminated by chemical dumping, and people who eat fish caught in those waters become deformed and violent.
Play trailer2:37
1 Video
51 Photos
HorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

The waters surrounding an island become contaminated by chemical dumping, and people who eat fish caught in those waters become deformed and violent.The waters surrounding an island become contaminated by chemical dumping, and people who eat fish caught in those waters become deformed and violent.The waters surrounding an island become contaminated by chemical dumping, and people who eat fish caught in those waters become deformed and violent.

  • Director
    • Peter Sasdy
  • Writers
    • Kit Pedler
    • Gerry Davis
    • Clive Exton
  • Stars
    • Ian Bannen
    • Judy Geeson
    • John Paul
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Sasdy
    • Writers
      • Kit Pedler
      • Gerry Davis
      • Clive Exton
    • Stars
      • Ian Bannen
      • Judy Geeson
      • John Paul
    • 36User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:37
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    Photos51

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Ian Bannen
    Ian Bannen
    • Dr. Del Shaw
    Judy Geeson
    Judy Geeson
    • Victoria Brown
    John Paul
    • Dr. Quist
    Simon Oates
    Simon Oates
    • Dr. John Ridge
    Jean Trend
    Jean Trend
    • Dr. Fay Chantry
    Joby Blanshard
    Joby Blanshard
    • Bradley
    George Sanders
    George Sanders
    • The Admiral - Sir Geoffrey
    Percy Herbert
    Percy Herbert
    • Constable Hartwell
    Shelagh Fraser
    Shelagh Fraser
    • Mrs. Betty Straker
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • Sir Henry Leyton
    Joseph O'Conor
    Joseph O'Conor
    • Vicar
    Norman Bird
    Norman Bird
    • Brewer
    Constance Chapman
    Constance Chapman
    • Miss Johnson
    Michael Brennan
    • Tom Straker
    James Cosmo
    James Cosmo
    • Bob Gillette
    Cyril Cross
    • George
    Geoff L'Cise
    • Don
    George Woodbridge
    George Woodbridge
    • Ferry Skipper
    • Director
      • Peter Sasdy
    • Writers
      • Kit Pedler
      • Gerry Davis
      • Clive Exton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    5.51.3K
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    Featured reviews

    5Colbridge

    This big screen version is just as grim and downbeat as I remember the TV series to be

    I remember catching the original BBC TV series of Doomwatch as a kid and found it to be quite unsettling and grim although I didn't really know what was going on. The big screen version made in 1972 is just as grim and downbeat as I remember the series to be only this time with an over excitable Ian Bannen guest starring and it being more on location than confined to a studio.

    The producers obviously didn't think the series regulars had enough star power to pull in cinema goers as they get side-lined into supporting roles. It's left to Bannen and Judy Geeson to try to make sense of an uninspired script which takes itself far too seriously in an earnest attempt to raise questions about corporations damaging the environment.

    Whilst the film is often mistaken as a horror it is much more science fiction along the lines of Quatermass than horror as nothing horrific really happens, but it does unsettle being set on a remote island with strange locals who have something to hide.

    The finale is neither shocking nor unexpected and for a big screen outing it doesn't try hard enough to give the audience something to get their teeth intobut having said that it has just enough intrigue to make you stick with it thanks to a familiar crop of guest supporting actors like George Sanders and Geoffrey Keen. Hammer Films director Peter Sasdy keeps things plodding along whilst attempting to create a taut atmosphere out of a clunky script within the constraints of the low budget provided by Tony Tenser's Tigon films.

    No doubt fans of the original cult series will be curious enough to want to check this out.
    5mwilson1976

    Interesting but slow moving British Sci-Fi with a bit of an identity crisis

    In this big screen adaptation of the popular BBC TV series of the same name created by Gerry Davis and Kit Pedlar (the brains behind Dr Who's iconic Cybermen), Ian Bannen stars as an investigator working for the British ecological watchdog group nicknamed Doomwatch. He discovers that locals living on a remote Cornish island are becoming violent and hostile towards outsiders, as well as showing signs of physical deformity, after eating fish contaminated by drums of growth stimulants that have been dumped offshore by a shadowy government agency. Despite being released by Tigon Films (the people who brought us Witchfinder General and The Blood Beast Terror), and directed by Peter Sasdy fresh from completing work on Hammers 'Hands of the Ripper,' Doomwatch isn't really a horror movie at all, and genre fans may be put off by the talkative script and lack of action set pieces in this eco thriller which still seems strangely relevant in these modern times. It was released in the States as Island of the Ghouls.
    7tuikie

    Since when is this horror?

    Firstly, this is NOT a horror movie (And who thought up the cannibalistic islanders?). The film is about the devastation that comes from the pollution of one the islands beaches with synthetic hormones.

    The islanders, having been made to suspect that the physical and mental deformities they're suffering from are caused by generations of inbreeding, regard the coming of an environmentalist as a threat to their community. They hide the sick and try to make sure that nothing 'wrong' is found. The movie is about the struggle of an environmentalist to find out what's the matter with the island, and then the struggle to educate the population about the cause and possible solutions for the problems.

    All in all not a bad environmental drama, reminds me a bit of the Minimata disaster in Japan. I give it a 7 out of 10, mainly for the atmosphere on the island and the balls it must have taken to make this film in '72.
    junk-monkey

    This movie is nowhere near as good as it thinks it is.

    Sent to take some routine measurements and samples from a small island Dr. Del Shaw (a clunker of a name) finds himself surrounded by the stock British movie type locals who mutter lines like: "We Don't take too kindly to strangers pokin' their noses in other people's affairs in these parts" before going off to mutter ominously in small groups.

    The Villagers obviously Have Something To Hide. And, after a lot of shouting down the island's only telephone, and trips to London to offend stiff military types, Doctor Del and the Doomwatch team discover the seas around the island are teaming with huge fish stuffed to the gills with illegally dumped human Pituitary growth hormone which is causing the island's population to develop an unpronounceable disease.

    Medical help is sent to the island and (potentialy) destroys the very community it went there to help.

    The plot of this film is full of holes. No more so, maybe, than any other film. But because of the total lack of tension and interest developed in what should be a terrible and horrifying situation they stand out like sore thumbs.

    Are we expected to believe for instance that Geeson's character (the school mistress) hasn't noticed one of her pupils has vanished? What the hell kind of spooky radiation "makes gas" in sealed containers of growth hormone. Would Human hormones make zooplankton grow to unusually large size - I doubt it; I can buy it having an affect on mammals but not microscopic plankton. Why does the fisherman from the mainland only sell his fish to the islanders? etc. etc. I know these sound like little nit-picky questions but when you are trying to make a intelligent piece, like the makers of this film obviously tried to do, you need to fill these logical gaps. When the screen is full of Naked Flesh eating Vanpire Lesbian Zombies riding Harleys you can let the odd solecism go by but when you are watching one driven man trying to solve a scientific mystery you've got to expect the audience to be more critical.

    The ending of this film should have been heartbreaking as the islanders pack up and leave for the mainland, their way of life destroyed by uncaring corporations, and then by the people who try to clean up the mess. But it isn't. The fault lies I suspect with the direction. The script is not good - structurally it's a mess, with the 'mystery' solved half way through, the story has nowhere else to go and just flops about as Bannon tries to organise a town meeting.

    Ian Bannen is a useful actor but here he just gives a very one note performance alternating, for the most part, between 'Angry' and 'Very Angry'. Again I suspect shoddy direction.
    march9hare

    oh, mercy, mercy me

    An environmentalist group ( a la early 70s ) somewhat sensationally named "Doomwatch" takes an interest in some peculiar goings-on on a small island near the UK. As a disclaimer, we never saw the BBC series so we don't have any previous notions to compare this film against but, having said that, the film is an enjoyable, cautionary tale about pollution and official stonewalling. Some people have lamented over the film's obviously modest - read: small - budget, but in our opinion this does not handicap the effort. If anything, it serves to highlight what can be achieved by the use of good writing, good acting, and good directing. Though not a horror film per se, its moody atmosphere and imaginative makeup does blur the line between suspense and horror quite effectively, and does actually manage to make you care about the people in it, most notably the character of Dr. Shaw. It's been pointed out that this film does bear a certain resemblance to "The Wicker Man", but in our opinion this has been overstated; yes, in both films an investigating official is stranded on a small island with lots of local strangeness, but that's about the only common ground between the two. Both are enjoyable, but for totally different reasons. Bottom line: while "Doomwatch" may not be a great film, it is a pretty good one. Try it.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Based on a current BBC TV series in production, it uses four of the regulars from the show though largely sidelines them in featured rôles, favouring new character Del Shaw (played by Ian Bannen, whom director Peter Sasdy knew socially) as the lead alongside Judy Geeson's local schoolteacher, who aids him on Balfe Island.
    • Quotes

      Dr. John Ridge: Can we stop playing games? These cannisters were yours. They've been dumped in the sea. And something very like pituitary growth hormone is escaping from them.

      Sir Henry Leyton: It shouldn't do much harm. Be neutralised by the seawater in a couple of hours. Old Mother Nature has a way of dealing with these things, Dr. Ridge. That's what you doom and disaster fellas ought to realise!

      Dr. John Ridge: Unfortunately Old Mother Nature's been nobbled in this case, as you well know!

    • Connections
      Featured in Judy Geeson: Inseminoid Girl (2004)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Island of the Ghouls
    • Filming locations
      • Polperro, Cornwall, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Tigon British Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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