Sunday, June 28, 2026

THE SPACE CHILDREN

 








The title of this film is somewhat of a misnomer--there are no space children in it, and no children in it actually go out in space. THE SPACE CHILDREN is a 1958 science-fiction tale produced by William Alland and directed by Jack Arnold. Alland and Arnold together made some of the most notable genre films in the 1950s for Universal, but on this one they were working under the auspices of Paramount. 

THE SPACE CHILDREN takes place at a top secret military base on the California coast. An important launch is being prepared there of a satellite that will be carrying advanced weaponry. During the run up to the launch, a number of strange occurrences take place. A being from outer space, a being that resembles a glowing, growing, pulsating brain, has been making contact with a group of children of the civilian workers on the base. The point of this contact is to stop the weapon from being launched into orbit. 

THE SPACE CHILDREN has a few things in common with another William Alland-Jack Arnold film, IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE, and it also calls to mind VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED, even though the children in that film are far more lethal. The 'being" is using innocent humans to achieve its goal, but it isn't overtly threatening or dangerous (except in one instance). There's very little FX in THE SPACE CHILDREN, and the expected clash between the military and the being never comes to pass. 

In the science-fiction films he directed Jack Arnold usually made much use of the terrain the stories were located in, and he does this plenty in THE SPACE CHILDREN. There's plenty of scenes showing characters going back and forth over the rocky shore, and the sound of the pounding surf is a constant throughout. Arnold even trots out one of his favorite tricks, the "character being unexpectedly grabbed from off-screen" jump scare. Arnold's use of the environment is rather pronounced here, probably due to the fact that there isn't much to the plot. The movie only lasts about 68 minutes, and it could have easily been turned into a half-hour TV show. 

Due to the short length of the film we never get to really know any of the kids--they're a generic group of bright-eyed youngsters, but none of them stands out. (Michel Ray as Bud, the sort-of-leader of the kids, does show an unusual maturity.) None of the adult characters stand out either--the parents of the kids are overly emotional and argumentative, another way of reminding us that only innocent children would be able to understand an alien force that just wants us to stop destroying ourselves. (It is mentioned that there are children all over the world who are in the same situation, but due to this film's low budget, we are never shown any of this.) 

The cast is notable for the presence of four performers best known for their roles in classic TV shows: Raymond Bailey (Mr. Drysdale on THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES), Russell Johnson (The Professor on GILLIGAN'S ISLAND), Jackie Coogan (Uncle Fester on THE ADDAMS FAMILY) and Johnny Crawford (the son of THE RIFLEMAN). Russell Johnson plays against type as the parent who is a drunken lout (he's also the only character killed by the being in order to stop him from beating his stepson). Johnson's part is such an obvious jerk that one wonders how in the heck he has a job at a top-secret military base. 

It's fairly accurate to say that William Alland and Jack Arnold were trying to make a gentler kind of 1950s sci-fi story, with an anti-nuclear weapons message. It's a decent effort, but it's not on the same level as the earlier sci-fi tales made by Alland and Arnold. The budget is too low, and there's just not enough going on in the story to make it memorable. 



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