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One thing Rod Serling understood about science fiction in the 1950s
was that it was a suitable genre for subversive thinking; it had yet to gain any
respectability and was therefore considered unworthy of close scrutiny. Tired of network
interference with his teleplays, Serling developed The
Twilight Zone as a method of hiding issues from cowardly sponsors and timid
programmers.
Despite the outrageous B-movie title, I Married a Monster
from Outer Space is another example of social critique masquerading as science
fiction. Its plot is straight out of Invasion
of the Body Snatchers and It
Came from Outer Space: aliens take over human bodies (though in this case, only
males). What is surprising is its critical tone toward marriage, at a time when the
country was still very protective of its traditions and established institutions.
The movie opens with groom-to be Bill Farrell (Tom Tryon) out drinking
with his male friends. Its a typical scene of men joking around about the loss of
freedom that marriage entails. And that mocking tone surfaces later in the film as well.
But these male bonding cliches are misdirection. What quickly becomes clear is that
its the women who give up so much when they get married. Considering the time
period, its a far more daring claim.
After leaving the bar, Bills body is taken over by an alien and
its this loss of control that causes him to act differently toward his new bride,
Marge (Gloria Talbott). But much of the films first half plays out as a man who,
having secured his homemaker, loses his sense of romance and compassion, the traits that
had landed him a wife in the first place. On the night of their honeymoon, Bill is already
snapping at his wife. He forgets to open the door for her a real faux pas in the
more etiquette-conscious 1950s and, in the most telling scene, he responds to her
desire to make small talk with Why do we have to talk?
The film jumps ahead a year, and in a letter Marge is describing her
first year of marriage as horrible. She complains that Bill isnt
the man I fell in love with; hes the type of male who, after having got what
he wants, becomes cold and distant. But like a dutiful wife for whom divorce is not an
option, Marge crumples up the letter and continues to suffer quietly. Her sense of
isolation is further enhanced later when, aware of the alien plot to take over the men of
the town, she is stymied in her attempts to phone Washington, send a telegram to the FBI,
and drive out of town. The message is clear: shes trapped in a marriage she no
longer wants. (Its no wonder that earlier in the film, Marge described the
Wedding March as a dirge.)
This subtext is especially chilling when Marge tries to explain to the
police chief whats going on. In the end, he sends her home to her husband. Marge
exclaims, you're sending me home to a ... As the line is never finished, it
becomes more universal in its implications. Its made all the more disturbing when
one considers how often this scenario has played out in real life: a wife is sent home by
an indifferent police force not willing to get involved in domestic disputes.
(Tellingly, Marge always refers to the invaders as monsters; the words
alien or extraterrestrial or spaceman are never used
in the film.)
Its ironic that Marges friend Helen (Jean Carson) is both
happy and relieved that shes convinced Sam (Alan Dexter), to marry her. In fact,
shes anxious to do it quickly, before Sam changes his mind. Helen doesnt want
to share the same fate as Florence Nightingale and Joan of Arc, whom she refers to as
career women. When Marge tries to warn Helen not to get married, she attempts
to do it without mentioning an alien that most likely has taken over Sam. Without the
science fiction context present in the scene, it becomes one woman warning another of the
trap that marriage is for them.
This less than romantic attitude toward matrimony is made more
prominent by the death of two minor characters. One is a man who is rejected by the aliens
and then killed, execution style, by two cops. He was stalking Gloria, in the hopes of
catching the woman on a night when her dissatisfaction with married life became too much
for her. The other is a woman, whom grandpa would have referred to as the town
floozy. She is zapped by an alien when she tries to pick him up. Such is the fate of
those who, in the parlance of the time, were home wreckers, who didnt respect the
presumed sanctity of marriage.
I Married a Monster from Outer Space lacks
the polish of the science fiction classics of that era -- like Forbidden
Planet, The
Day the Earth Stood Still, and War
of The Worlds -- as its low budget is evident in many scenes. But it shares the
sincerity and appealing earnestness of those other films (things missing from many of the
lower budget films, like the crud Roger
Corman churned out). The actors are likable and convincing, as there is, for the most
part, a lack of histrionics, and the obvious day-for-night scenes actually add to the
films atmosphere. Some people may dismiss I Married a Monster from Outer Space
as camp, but well leave those people to wallow in their own self-conscious hipness.
- Paul De Angelis