TARGET EARTH (1954) is another 1950s sci-fi flick that takes a novel premise and tries to dramatize it as cheaply as possible.
The movie starts out intriguingly, with a young woman waking up in her bedroom to the sound of a ticking clock. (A shot of a half-empty bottle of sleeping pills lets us know the woman has some issues.) The woman, Nora King (Kathleen Crowley) precedes to dress and walk about her boarding house searching for the other tenants, who are missing. Nora goes outside and quickly realizes her town is deserted. After a few minutes of her wandering around trying to find anyone, she stumbles upon a dead body, and a very live man named Frank Brooks (Richard Denning). Frank explains he was knocked out by muggers and left in an alley the night before, and he and Nora try to find out what has happened. The duo hear music from a bar, and they discover a wisecracking couple (Richard Reeves and Virginia Grey) who also have no idea what is going on. The four discover a jittery milquetoast and a strange shadow, and the group runs into a hotel, where from newspapers they are informed of an invasion of mysterious robots. This is why the town was evacuated, and now the group is in the crossfire between the military and the robots.
The main plot of TARGET EARTH--small group of people wandering around a deserted city trying to figure out what has happened--has been used for all sorts of science fiction movies and TV episodes, usually as a way to save on the budget. TARGET EARTH is one of the lesser examples of this genre element. Its group of survivors holes up in a generic hotel suite, debating the situation, while the story cutaways to scenes of military officers discussing how to defeat the robot threat. The military has discovered an inert robot, and it is examined at a lab that appears to be located in someone's basement (the main scientist is played by the ubiquitous Whit Bissell). Of course, the military figures out a way to overcome the robot army at the last minute, and the story comes to an abrupt end.
What hurts TARGET EARTH the most is the fact that we only see one of the robot "army" at a time--due to the fact that the production only had one robot to use. The robot itself is as clunky as it gets--I'm sure even back in the Fifties it got laughs. For some reason a number of characters believe that the robot army is from Venus, although there's no evidence presented to back this up. (it would have been much better if it had been revealed at the climax that the robots were created by a foreign power.) As expected, there's plenty of stock military footage, but even this is used in a lackadaisical manner.
What TARGET EARTH mostly consists of is a group of people with various personal issues sitting around a hotel suite. This static setup is helped greatly by true pros such as Richard Denning and Virginia Grey, but it isn't enough to make a viewer stop wishing a bunch of robots would show up. Near the climax an armed hoodlum appears to threaten the group, but this is just another distraction from the main story. This movie was directed by Sherman A. Rose and produced by Herman Cohen, whose later use of teenagers mixed up with mad middle-aged men would have been very welcome here.
While watching TARGET EARTH last night (for the very first time, I must point out), I came to the realization that the movie was sort-of remade as THE EARTH DIES SCREAMING in England in 1964. Both films deal with a small group of survivors trying to figure out why the local area is totally deserted, they both have an army of robots as antagonists, and even the method to defeat the invaders is very similar. The main difference is that THE EARTH DIES SCREAMING is set in an English village instead of a large American city, and that movie was directed by the much more capable Terence Fisher.
TARGET EARTH is very reminiscent of several other science fiction movies and TV episodes, but it isn't as good as the ones that come to mind. It also doesn't do justice to genre legend Richard Denning.





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