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Lt Col Timothy Cassidy-Curtis
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If you really want true horror, I recommend "When Worlds Collide." This truly frightened me. Imagine, the loss of the entire planet! And only a few hundred survive. (There's efforts to do a remake; I wish they would also do "After Worlds Collide".)
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LCDR Andy Hill
LCDR Andy Hill
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The origins of Deep Impact started in the late 1970s when producers Richard Zanuck and David Brown approached Paramount Studios proposing a remake of the 1951 film When Worlds Collide
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LCDR Andy Hill
LCDR Andy Hill
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Lt Col Timothy Cassidy-Curtis. Good recommend on the flick. Enjoyed watching it and would agree the horror of losing your home planet is at the top of the list of things you never want to happen.
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LCDR Andy Hill
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Jimmy Grimmaldi was right to be afraid.
American director Don Siegel, who directed the 1956 version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, stated he saw the film as a parable about the eroding sense of individualism in American life, stating:
"Many of my associates are certainly pods. They have no feelings. They exist, breathe, sleep. To be a pod means that you have no passion, no anger, the spark has left you...Of course, there's a very strong case for being a pod. These pods, who get rid of pain, ill health, and mental disturbances, are in a sense doing good. It happens to leave you in a very dull world, but that, by the way is the world most of us live in. It's the same as people who welcome going to prison. There's regimentment, a lack of having to make up your mind, face decisions...People are becoming vegetables. I don't know what the answer is except an awareness of it. That's what makes a picture like The Invasion of the Body Snatchers important".
"The pod people represent a completely regimented society. Metaphorically, they are so alike as "two peas in a pod" because they have been sapped of their emotional individuality. The vegetarian metaphor alliterizes Red scare rhetoric of the "growth" of Communism as well as the idea that revolutions are made by planting seeds.”

There is a scene where the pod people are assembled in the town square, where a loud speaker reads out the day's orders; it is the quintessential fifties image of socialism. And, of course, the simile that without freedom of thought people are...vegetables is a central theme of the narrative.
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