Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 1 | Page 57

Bombs Away and Smash Hits at Home 53 major studio backing, creative directorship, and the budget necessary to aim for something well above its formulaic counterparts that emerged contemporaneously from smaller studios. Thus it is a film which was especially subjected to the economic demands of the cinematic marketplace but which also enjoyed the national distribution and critical acclaim that mark it as an important comment on this era. The Martian invaders who terrorize the story’s little California town are the most vivid indicators of where the film is on this continuum at any one point. At its most metonymic, the Martian is completely alien and only Martian, as removed from us as the minuscule bacteria which play a significant part late in the film; and continuing the film in the tradition of its predecessors as science fiction, as the fantasy and escapism that enliven a restless pre-teen’s Saturday afternoon. Midway on this spectrum of associations, the Martian metaphorizes into the Russian enemy; we will see fairly obviously that the most interesting layer of stylization added to this mid-20th-century remake of a Victorian novel is the casting of the Martian as the other “red menace.”5 In its most metaphoric incarnation, the Martian is first and foremost not Russian but human, that is, as “just like us” as a film during this era dared suggest and therefore deserving of the same respect for its life as we hoped it would grant our own.6 The Martian depictions on this continuum are complemented or countered by various American-made efforts to combat the communist and nuclear threat posed by the Soviet Union in this period—science, in the figure of Doctor Clayton Forester; the military, figured in a host of generals, colonels and infantry men who turn the California town into a battle zone; and religion, here represented not by any particular sect or clerical figure but by “God, in his wisdom,” presumed to be on our side during all wars. Appropriately, the doctor and his camp of protagonists contend with the Martians in their ultra-metaphoric state (the state of illness as opposed to violence) and the military men with them in their middling, “red menace” state. In their most heinous and unknowable, ultra-metonymic state, the film surrenders the besieged town to the hand of God (as Wells did to his London setting in the original text), saving a few Californians from horrible doom, yet, as I will argue later, losing much more than is gained in the metaphysical bargain. As I inquire here into the nature and meaning of the alien presence in mid-century Martian films, so too has this alien’s enigmatic “vehicle”—not its spaceship but its cinematic package—been pondered and discussed by critics who would know and love it better. The Martian movie has been described as a child of the horror films of the 1930s and 1940s (vampire, mummy, and wolfm