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THE GUESTS
Geoffrey Horne, Gloria
Grahame, Nellie Burt, Vaughn Taylor, Luana Anders.
A young drifter happens onto a group of people, in an old mansion, being
held captive by an alien.
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QUICK SCAN...
Gloria Grahame's (Melvin and Howard) campy performance as
a former silent movie actress is worth noticing. Although the
alien here is nothing to write home about, other FX in the episode,
particularly, a huge alien brain turning into a mansion, are good.
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SYNOPSIS...
A young man, driving along, finds a dying man at the side of the
road. Seeking help, he enters an isolated mansion.
Inside he encounters four people. When he can't leave, he discovers
an alien controls the house. He falls in love with a young girl who
has been held captive in the mansion for many years.
The young man wants to stay with the young girl. She exits the mansion,
aging and turning to dust. The young man leaves the mansion, carrying
a watch with her picture inside.
REVIEW...
Director Paul Stanley's, THE GUESTS, is an
involving, dream-like Sci-Fi fable.
Geoffrey Horne is a young drifter who finds an old man dying in the
road. When he goes to an isolated mansion to get help, he ends up
being caught in an alien trap, with other people who have been trapped
there for decades.
Gloria Grahame ("In a Lonely Place") is impressive as a
silent movie star who never made the jump to talkies. Under Stanley's
confident direction, she gives entertainingly ego bloated readings
to lines like, "The legitimate stage is the only temple for a
legitimate actress."
Writer Donald S. Sanford's script has some good dialogue. When Grahame
asks Horne about the old man he encountered on the road, she inquires,
"Was he VERY old?" Horne replies, "Yes, he was the
oldest man I ever saw."
Early on we see a huge alien brain, or something, turn into a Victorian
mansion. The FX here, courtesy of Project Unlimited, Inc., are decent.
The episode's alien is a big blobby affair, that pulsates and quivers.
Not surprisingly, no one takes responsibility for it's creation.
Director of Photography, Kenneth Peach, makes good use of the mansion's
various hallways and corridors, courtesy of Set Decorator, Chester
Bayhi. A shot of the alien, against a background of whirling clouds
and sky, is quite striking.
The music is frequently pounding/pulsating, sounding like distant
heavy machinery. Dominic Frontiere, as usual, is the composer.
This episode has a great deal in common with the episode, "Do
Not Open Till Doomsday," including a blobby alien, isolated mansion,
and people held captive by aliens for many years. I guess in Sci-Fi
land, lightning does strike twice!
THE GUESTS will be fairly watchable for most Sci-Fi fans. Those who
don't dig silly alien monsters should steer clear.
 
 
 
 
 


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