There are certain films that could ostensibly be classified as part of
the science-fiction genre and yet cross over full-blown into the horror
department — ALIEN (1979) being a textbook example — and the original
VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED sure as hell fits the criteria. For sixteen years
before THE OMEN pretty much cornered the market when it came to the
"creepy kids" sub-genre, VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED stood as the ne plus
ultra of the form and if you ask me, it still has yet to be bested.
Based on legendary British horror/sci-fi author John Wyndham's novel THE
MIDWICH CUCKOOS (1957), the film matter-of-factly chronicles the events
spiraling outward from a day when several locations on the Earth are
suddenly cut off by an invisible field that renders living beings
unconscious for several hours, after which all wake up, apparently none
the worse for the experience. Fine, whatever. But things take a very
disturbing and dark turn when every woman in town who's capable of
bearing children inexplicably turns up pregnant, and the story proper
follows how this scenario plays out in the rural British village of
Midwich. While there are cases where the unexpected pregnancies are
treated as nothing out of the ordinary in the case of married couples,
it's another matter entirely for wives who have been separated from
their husbands for long stretches of time (one such case involves a
husband who's been away at sea) and the poor young teenage girls who
have never known the grownup pleasures to be had with boys their own
age, let alone grown men. While such a situation may have worked out
well for the Virgin Mary, it holds an horrific power that's the polar
opposite of the miraculous when it happens en masse in the mid-20th
century.
All of this leads to considerable misery and suspicion, but it's soon
determined that all of the pregnancies can be tracked to having been
conceived during the time of the village's unexplained
mass-unconsciousness. The sole couple who are shown to be at first
overjoyed by this happenstance is comprised of late-middle-aged
professorial type Gordon Zellaby (George Sanders) and his much younger
wife, Anthea (Barbara Shelley), who had both given up hope of ever
having a child due to Gordon's age, but that elation soon turns to a
growing sense of dread once their child and all of the others are born
on the same day, after developing much more rapidly than average
embryos. The children all possess a disturbing uniform look, each having
"striking" eyes, "unusual" fingernails, and nearly-white blonde hair,
but the most disturbing thing about them is that they manifest powerful
telepathic abilities and the ability to control the minds and actions of
those who displease them (which is an incredibly dangerous trait for
infants to wield). The emotionless kids also share a hive mind that
allows what one learns to be absorbed by all. Needless to say, that's
all pretty fucking creepy, and as the children grow to the physical
equivalent of perhaps age seven or eight, virtually the entire town is
understandably terrified of them. Only professor Zellaby wants anything
to do with them, motivated by his "parental" connection to his eerie son
and leader of the kids, David (Martin Stephens), and by his
overwhelming scientific curiosity. As the children's powers escalate, so
does their detachment from and disregard for the lives of those around
them, and their mind-controlling abilities lead to a number of
horrifying, decidedly one-sided confrontations with the village's
adults. But when faced with a gaggle of kids who can literally make you
blow your own head off with a double-barreled shotgun, a "time out" just
isn't gonna do it...
So where did these cold, creepy children come from? Why are they here?
What in god's name will happen to the world when they are fully grown?
And don't forget that they are just one of a number of groups of these
kids born around the world...
A solid, taut winner from start to finish, VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED has
been one of my all-time favorites since I was a kid, and I'm happy to
say that it holds up perfectly well. (I just watched it again four
nights ago.) The 1995 American-set remake is okay for what it is, but
the black and white look of the original and its remote, rustic British
location make for a timeless shocker that also depicts its events with
great, almost clinical intelligence. If you only see one "creepy kids"
movie in your lifetime, this is the one I most heartily recommend.



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