Invasion (2007) -vs- Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
Review by Mark Sanchez
The Smackdown. Nothing persists like a good idea. Its power and elegance hold up no matter how it is reinterpreted in movie sequels, prequels and remakes. "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" became a surprise science fiction hit in 1956 and remains a popular model for imitation. You can trace elements of the basic storyline on film and TV today: Bad things happen when you fall asleep. This sturdy premise spawned well-made remakes in 1978 and 1994. Now, a new version of Jack Finney's tale of alien takeover steps up, "Invasion." This remake arrives with plenty of drama behind the camera. It offers an otherworldly Smackdown: Does "Invasion" snatch a good idea from the original movie, or lose its identity?

"After years of telling him to go to bed earlier, he's probably going to think I'm an alien."
The Challenger. Psychiatrist Carol Bennell (Nicole Kidman) begins hearing odd things from her patients shortly after a space shuttle crash lands. Patients no longer recognize their spouses, the kids say daddy is... well, different. They've been infected by Spores from Space. Elements surrounding the story are new (video phones, references to Iraq on TV) but the dramatic conflict is familiar: They're coming...and they want Carol's son, Oliver (Jackson Bond). Together with colleague/love interest Ben Driscoll (Daniel Craig) and scientist Stephen Galeano (Jeffrey Wright) they evade latter-day pod people while trying to defeat the malevolent microbes and save the world. David Kajganich has screenplay credit and Oliver Hirschbiegel is the director of record, although substantial portions of those tasks were performed by others.

"I'd enter this in the County Fair in the jumbo vegetable category if I could just figure out what it is."
The Defending Champion. "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" has small town doctor Miles Bennell (Kevin McCarthy) returning from a business trip to find big changes. Locals complain about friends and relatives who just don't seem the same. Suspicion and paranoia build as mysterious pods appear and replace the residents while they sleep. The dramatic stakes go up when Bennell's girlfriend Becky Driscoll (Dana Wynter) is lost to the pod people. Daniel Mainwaring's screenplay delivers a straightforward story that is also a timely Cold War allegory about being "one of them" in Joe McCarthy's America. "Body Snatchers" still has special meaning for viewers at either end of the political spectrum. Don Siegel crisply directed this low-budget ($417,000) horror project now widely considered a classic.
The Scorecard. Both films faced real obstacles in reaching the screen. The original "Body Snatchers" made a virtue of economy and simple smarts. The tiny budget allowed a shooting schedule of 23 days. The filmmakers could not lean on special effects, monsters or staged violence. Instead, they gained mileage on Kevin McCarthy's face, effective storytelling and Carmen Dragon's dramatic musical score. Even after 50 years, the film plays well, if a little hokey in spots. You never lose sight of the good idea propelling this small-dollar production.
By contrast, money wasn't the problem with "Invasion." Nicole Kidman's salary was forty times larger than the entire production budget of the original film. The new film had creative troubles. It went through several name changes. Producer Joel Silver didn't like the completed film Oliver Hirschbiegel turned in early last year. This led to a partial rewrite by the Wachowski Brothers ("The Matrix") and new scenes directed by James McTeigue. It may be impossible to reliably know just who did what. The resulting film is more action oriented, less psychological than the original film that inspired it. Kidman and Daniel Craig breathe life into a script that relies on special effects, slam-bam editing and car chases. In fact, Nicole Kidman broke several ribs filming a chase sequence that knocked her unconscious.
Both "Invasion" films create distinct signatures. They reflect the cultural context of their times and both movies are highly enjoyable. Now, then: Does one take a good idea and carry it farther? Yup.
And the winner is...
The Decision. The winner takes it on points. "Invasion" greatly
benefits from having Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig. Composer John
Ottman produced a score that is note-perfect for the material. It will
satisfy audiences accustomed to action, special effects and nonlinear
structure. "Invasion's" big achievement may be that it reached
the screen at all. The producers attacked their creative problems with
lots of money. I don't know whether they solved them.
Some fans want something else and here is where "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" stands
out. I wonder what could have been done with the millions spent and
respent on the remake. Economic necessity forged a production that
stressed storyline and effective staging while adding a political
subtext that gave it a life well beyond the "B-movie" existence
intended for it. Producer Walter Wanger found a good idea and ran with
it. Fifty years from now, you won't watch remakes of "Invasion"--only the ones of our resilient winner, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers."



Editor's choice. I've seen all FOUR versions of this film. The 1978 Donald Sutherland-Brooke Adams version was well-made, better than okay; same verdict on the 1994 effort with Gabrielle Anwar. I said that and moved on. I decided integrating them into this SMACKDOWN! would decaffeinate the comparison I intended to make. It would not affect the outcome. Sometimes more is just more, not better.
Posted by: Mark Sanchez | August 23, 2007 at 02:29 PM
Why no mention of the 80's version? It was an okay drive inn affair (could have used more cowbell). A three way cage fight smackdown where three films enter, one walks out could be entertaining.
Posted by: Philip J | August 23, 2007 at 02:08 PM
Sanchez is my movie guide. He got this one DEAD BANG RIGHT ON.
Too bad Nicole looked like an angry Lucy Ball in this one.
Posted by: Rob San Diego | August 20, 2007 at 07:15 PM
And...fifty years from now, I may expect those aliens to rule the earth. The story is repeated, and perhaps for good reason. Do they know something that we don't?
Posted by: Merilee Sommers | August 20, 2007 at 09:02 AM
The original rules....a reflection of its time and historical context. Party on and don't think about Berkowitz, Gacy, Rader, or Dahmer.
Posted by: Jack August | August 19, 2007 at 09:27 PM