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Quatermass and the Pit

Quatermass and the Pit

  • Status: Released
  • 09-11-1967
  • Runtime: 97 min
  • Score: 6.641
  • Vote count: 255

A mysterious artifact unearthed below a London subway station proves to have powerful psychic effects on the people around.

Andrew Keir

Prof. Bernard Quatermass

James Donald

Dr. Mathew Roney

Barbara Shelley

Barbara Judd

Julian Glover

Colonel Breen

Bryan Marshall

Captain Potter

Maurice Good

Sergeant Cleghorn

Duncan Lamont

Sladden

Peter Copley

Howell

Edwin Richfield

Minister

Grant Taylor

Police Sergeant Ellis

Noel Howlett

Abbey Librarian

Thomas Heathcote

Vicar

Robert Morris

Jerry Watson

Bee Duffell

Miss Dobson

Sheila Steafel

Journalist

Hugh Futcher

Sapper West

Hugh Morton

Elderly Journalist

Hugh Manning

Pub Customer

June Ellis

Blonde

Keith Marsh

Johnson

James Culliford

Corporal Gibson

Roger Avon

Electrician

Brian Peck

Technical Officer

John Graham

Inspector

Charles Lamb

Newsvendor

David Savile

Army Officer

William Ellis

Journalist

Gareth Thomas

Workman (uncredited)

Elroy Josephs

Black Workman (uncredited)

Michael Poole

Older Workman (uncredited)

Albert Shepherd

Loader (uncredited)

Roy Beck

Student Archeologist (uncredited)

John Chard

Creepy, interesting, above all else...intelligent. Whilst excavating at the site of a new underground tube station, workers unearth a mysterious object. On to the case comes Professor Quatermass who deduces that the object is Martian in origin. Initially viewed with scorn and disbelief, it becomes apparent that the Martian race have been involved in the human race before, and now they have been awoken again. This was the third Hammer film adaptation of Nigel Kneale's BBC-TV Quatermass serial, with previous entries being The Quatermass Experiment & Quatermass 2. This to me, tho, is undoubtedly the shining light of the bunch. Chiefly what works the best in this one is the wonderful fusion of mystery and intelligence, the eerie sense of dread only off set by a yearning to find out just what has happened? And more crucially, what will happen? Building up perfectly, courtesy of Roy Ward Baker's astutely paced direction, Quatermass And The Pit is a film that just begs you to pay attention to every little detail, each conversation is fully fleshing out this most intriguing story. Then there is the finale that pays off handsomely, to hint at what is involved would result in a spoiler of sorts, and really it would be stupid of me to prepare you for the film's closure. See it because it's one of the best genre entries of the 60s, a must for sci-fi enthusiasts that like a bit of brains to go with their genre persuasion. 8.5/10