Thursday, October 26, 2023

Invasion of the Body Snatchers/"The Beautiful Stranger"

In a way, it's a nightmare as old as humanity: what if we, or the ones we love, turned out to be imposters? How would we know? What would we do? And who would believe us if we told them?

Although billed as science fiction, most of the real drama of 1953's Invasion of the Body Snatchers is psychological. It opens on an almost bucolic note, as suburban doctor Miles Bennell (Kevin McCarthy) returns from a medical conference and is picked up from the train station by his office nurse. Everything is fine, she says, except for a few strange complaints: Dr. Bennell's once and future flame Becky (Dana Wynter) has one. It seems her cousin Wilma Lentz is convinced that her Uncle Ira isn't really Uncle Ira. When the Doc visits, though, Ira seems his usual, pipe-smoking, grumbly self, by Wilma is unappeased; "There's something missing," she insists, "there's no emotion ... just the pretense of it." Miles does his best to reassure her, but between this and the rest of his patients -- many of whom, though seemingly anxious to see him while he was way, have cancelled their appointments.

Of course, it takes a while for him to realize that people are being replaced by pods placed by aliens in their basements, pods which -- as they mature -- take on the exact form and personality of the people they are to replace, only minus any genuine emotion or personality.

Dr. Bennell eventually regrets his initial failure to realize what's gone wrong -- in the frame narrative (added to the film after audiences found the original, uncertain ending too frustrating) he's explaining his story to an initially skeptical psychiatrist. At one point, in a voiceover, he muses that, as a doctor, he was quite used to people losing their individuality over time, just not so many or so quickly:
In my practice, I've seen how people have allowed their humanity to drain away. Only it happened slowly instead of all at once. They didn't seem to mind... All of us - a little bit - we harden our hearts, grow callous. Only when we have to fight to stay human do we realize how precious it is to us, how dear.
It's this prescient awareness of the 1950's unawareness of itself that has endeared the film to later fans, and has given rise to the phrase "pod people" being applied to social conformists. The 1978 remake with Donald Sutherland in the lead role (and in which McCarthy has a brief but memorable cameo) is also worth seeing, for the same reasons.

With "The Beautiful Stranger," Shirley Jackson proposes a different kind of sudden replacement: for the young woman in this story, things seem to be going well enough, though her husband is hardly the sensitive, supportive type. But once the "beautiful stranger" arrives, we find ourselves sharing in an unexpected and volatile exuberance -- could this be true? There are some shades of another story, The Return of Martin Guerre, an 1982 film based on a far earlier event of a war veteran's unexpected return -- a double one, in fact. Indeed, after enough time, how do we know that a long-lost loved one is in fact the same one we loved so long ago? Jackson's trick here is that it has not, in fact, been "so long" -- in fact, it's only just been yesterday. In a way, it's also an inverse version of Body Snatchers, the sort of snatching that gives a soulless person a soul -- and yet it somehow unhinges the main character, sending her into a strange world where she almost no longer seems ... herself!

45 comments:

  1. Shirley Jackson's The Beautiful Stranger appeals to the same worry many long-distance workers have during extended business trips; how will it be upon my return? This story reminded me of a friend that I served with who found out his wife was pregnant a week before leaving on deployment. He missed the entire pregnancy and the first months of his daughter's life. He had an entirely different set of responsibilities upon landing stateside than the single soldiers and constantly worried about how our experiences would shape him as a new husband and father. This fear of becoming an imposter in your own home was common amongst the rest of our ranks, as friends, parents, and loved ones all had a year to become accustomed to life without us. The scene that best depicts this is when Margaret is annoyed that John has retaken the driver's seat after a long absence.

    The tension felt when the husband first arrives speaks to how we can idealize the return of a long-awaited loved one; if the first interaction is anything but pleasant, we risk them leaving again. In Jackson's story, Margaret goes as far as shaking the baby for not fully embracing its father. When the family arrives home, and Margaret questions the authenticity of this "new" John, it reminds me of The Talking Heads' song, Once in a lifetime, "This is not my beautiful house, and you may tell yourself, this is not my beautiful wife." Shirley Jackson builds on Alfred Hitchcock's theme in Mr. Pelham, where a doppelgänger becomes more efficient than its original. The idea of an identical version accomplishing the things the original never could is almost more frightening than having an evil twin.

    I decided upon the 1978 version of The Invasion of the Body snatchers. Although I've read that the original was better, this was one of the few Jeff Goldblum films I had yet to see. Plant-like Pod people use mimicry to fly under the radar as they assimilate and replicate the human species before consuming all of their planet's resources and germinating into space to infect their next host. The body snatcher's theme has been reproduced so many times in popular culture since the 1950s that I had never ventured to watch the original form. The Simpsons take in one of their treehouse of horror segments was my first introduction to the pod people as an adolescent.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm glad to hear the someone out there is still watching the Simpsons!

      Delete
  2. "Invasion of the body snatchers" made me think about the type of clients I deal with daily. I deal with clients that suffer from delusions, paranoia, schizophrenia, hallucinations, and other mental illnesses. I encountered many clients that live in fear, they believe they're being stalked, spied on, or poisoned. Most people that suffer from mental illnesses don't receive help for their disorders. A lot of times people are afraid of being treated differently if they told someone how they feel. While reading this story they wanted to know who would believe them if they were to tell someone about the imposters. They just wanted to live a normal life and be treated with respect and dignity. ~Shante S.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The invasion of body snatchers was pretty creepy but felt like something I believe can actually happen in the near future. With technology advancing and robots created to perform everyday task and also have the ability to have emotions there is definitely a possibility. I loved the detail of alien plant spores falling from the sky which answers the question where the duplicated loved ones came from because I’m also an alien believer and fan lol.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Even today, Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a rather wonderful alien thriller. Carrying both a devilish tension and undeniable charm, the film pulls audiences in with both great characters and filmmaking.
    Every version of the story includes a scene where the protagonists are obliged to go among the transformed masses and pass for just another couple of pod people. But Siegel's original is still the best: After the above exchange, Miles and Becky manage to out-thwart Dr Kauffman and escape the office for what appears to be a perfectly normal American Main Street. The characters as played by Kevin McCarthy and Dana Wynter look as if they belong on such a street, because you have to have conventions before you can undermine or subvert conventions. But in fact they are trying hard not to betray that the essential spark of humanity still lives within them, underneath their glassy-eyed expressions.

    Claudia Rocha

    ReplyDelete
  5. Both Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Beautiful Stranger share the same ideas. You know something is off, but cannot tell what. I felt like The Beautiful Stranger was more of a psychological thriller as we couldn't tell what was happening was real or in Margarets head. Invasion of the Body Snatchers I feel like is an exaggerated form of the same idea as The Beautiful Stranger.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Rawan Altekreeti

    In the movie" Invasion of the Body Snatchers", we see how the Pod people look act and remember the same as the original but they do not feel love or compassion towards anything. During the movie we see how emotionless people are and that every pop person is the same. Throughout the film there are examples of this threat and how dangerous it can be if we all change to the communist way of life such as a dog almost being run over, an uncle telling stories without the same emotion, and the main characters no longer being in love because one turned into a pod person". While "Beautiful stranger" illustrates how each day people face challenges and stressors that affect them mentally. The stressors they face may cause anxiety, depression, and a feeling of being overwhelmed, but the way they handle these emotions is what matters most.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Invasion of the body snatchers and The Beautiful Stranger were both very good movies. Very frightening but good nonetheless. The concept of having someone you know body snatched is such an interesting concept. The fact that something is unsettling or is missing but you cant seem to place what. It reminds me of the twilight zone and how the film is trying to bring up emotions of anxiety or fear in a way that has to deal with the mind then physical scares. I like to think if there is another metaphor that could be placed instead of this concept. I like to think that if this concept was real it would be similar to people who are depressed. Some people hide it very well but there's always something missing and it can take over their entire well being. It's interesting to think of real life scenarios that you could swapped with these type of movies or shows.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Both films, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and "The Beautiful Stranger," feature quite frightening concepts. Despite this however, I always found the concept of the "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" to be rather interesting. While unsettling to say the least, the concept of aliens "snatching" someone and replacing them with an emotionless carbon copy of themselves is truly brilliant. - Abigail C

    ReplyDelete
  9. The film "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" has such an interesting idea/concept in the movie. The idea that each human is slowly being replaced by an exact alien replica of themselves, but only to show no emotion is such an eerie feeling that makes an watcher feel unsettled. The whole movie had me imaging what it was like for us to be in a world where no one shows any emotion. If the world was like that in real life and humans showed no emotion I feel like everyone would either be scheming against each other or nobody would be able to learn or get feedback from anything. Newborn babies feed off a mother's facial expressions and emotions. It's almost like a way for them be able to communicate with their parent without being able to talk to them. The world would extremely different if humans actually had no emotions.

    "The Beautiful Strangers" by Shirley Jackson reminded me of the movie "The Truman Show" with Jim Carrey in it where he realizes his whole life is being televised and the environment around him is being manipulated to make it seem like he is living a normal life in a normal world. The stories aren't really the same but the ideology behind The Beautiful Strangers reminded me of that movie.

    ReplyDelete
  10. The concept of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" is honestly quite terrifying. The idea that alien pods wait for you to fall asleep, in your most defenseless state, and then replace you with a copy of yourself. Unlike "Us" where the doppelgangers seek you out and try to kill you, there is still a chance to gain the upper hand. With the bodysnatchers, the switch is done while you sleep, which I find to be really disturbing to think about.

    ReplyDelete
  11. "The Beautiful Strangers" and "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" share similar ideas, but "The Beautiful Strangers" is more of a mental mystery about replacing someone psychologically rather than actually being replaced by emotionless aliens. Due to conflicts and tension in her marriage, Margret's husband upon returning from his business trip is perceived as a stranger. Over time she loses a sense of who she is and its not until she spends a day out of the house to remember her true self. What caused a change in Johns behavior?

    ReplyDelete
  12. Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a creepy concept, but I have (strangely enough) had conversations about a similar topic. If someone was replaced, how would we be able to notice? As much as I don’t think this is something that will happen, I have always said I wouldn’t rule it totally impossible. Maybe the aliens won’t be the ones to do it, but it’s a scary world out there— there’s a lot we don’t know as human beings.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I was a big fan of the film “Invasion of the Body Snatchers”. It may be because of my fascination with aliens but I found the movie to be interesting and unsettling. The idea of an alien snatching our body and making an emotionless carbon copy of ourselves caused an eerie feeling to flow within me. It made me question if that were to occur to us today how we would handle it. Due to the advancements with technology I feel as though it definitely would be possible for something like this to occur which is the scariest bit. By having no emotion I think it would have a negative impact on society because emotion is a big part of our lives and how we communicate. A lot of people have trouble talking about their feelings so with the use of emotions it helps get their story across. If those are taken away I feel as though we wouldn’t get very far as a whole and it would create a rather dull world.

    ReplyDelete
  14. The film, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" gives off a very eerie vibe. The title is exactly what the movie is as aliens come down to "snatch" our "bodies" and make emotionless copies, kind of like the way William Wilson could only whisper. This movie made it interesting because it creates the fear that anyone could be an alien. This movie reminded me of one I just watched called, "Sorry to bother You" in which a big company is turning humans into working machines without all of their investors and the rest of the world knowing. The problem with Invasion of the Body Catcher's doubles is that they evoke no emotion which is arguably one of the biggest parts of the function of humans and I agree with another commenter who said that this would create a rather dull world and that it would not get very far. The scariest part of it all I think is the fact that real people in this movie would be taken in their sleep and replaced with copies, taking away any ability to fight it or run away. I did enjoy the watch though!

    ReplyDelete
  15. The beautiful stranger and the invasion of the body snatchers project the same ideas. They both have terrifying concepts that creep me out because the thought of having your body and life stolen from you scares the living daylight out of me. And day by day I think we get closer to the fact that we might all have our life stolen from us after we get invaded by aliens

    ReplyDelete
  16. Invasion of the body snatchers is a scary concept that a lot of film makers use today. The idea of your life being taken away and lived by another person or thing is scary and easily draws in audiences. The same goes for the Beautiful Stranger. It reminds me of the movie US and the doppelgangers being like the original person, but there is something not right. The suspense of not knowing gives the horror movie factor and scares the audience because they are afraid of the unknown

    ReplyDelete
  17. Invasion of the body snatchers was an interested film, the idea that Dr.Miles having someone else living another person live is very weird and creepy to say, which did give me an idea that the film is most identical to the film "us". Both film gave the same idea but both convey different messages. The thing that I found the most interested was that they would create these double while people are asleep and not knowing would be replaced with someone else, giving no ability to run from this experiment. - Emily Dominguez

    ReplyDelete
  18. Both films, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and "The Beautiful Stranger," are very interesting yet so scary .The thought of having someone live your life is scary. It definitely makes you think of what will happen. Both films were similar and remind me of many movies and books I have watched. The suspense keeps you on edge.

    ReplyDelete
  19. The film, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" was very intriguing to me personally. I thought the film was very interesting and it definitely keeps your mind racing to know what is going on. I think it's pretty creepy to think about the idea of aliens invading earth and taking over people in their everyday lives because well what if that's truly happening, we just don't know since we aren't all going to check people's basements or following people around all day to see if their body has been taken over by an alien. Overall, I honestly do believe in aliens, and I just think that the government knows this too, but they definitely don't want to scare people more than they may already be. I also think that a lot of films with aliens and other worlds/ worldly creatures are definitely based on some sort of events that may have already happened because where do people come up with all of these crazy alien ideas if they weren't a little bit true.

    ReplyDelete
  20. The movie "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" really piqued my interest. I think the film is incredibly fascinating and a lot of today's directors are drawn to the scary idea. The horrifying idea of having your existence taken away and replaced by something or someone else is one that audiences easily relate to, including myself. The idea of aliens taking over Earth and controlling people's daily lives is really unnerving to me since, just like in the movie, it could be happening right under our noses without us even knowing it.

    ReplyDelete
  21. The suspenseful vibe of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" has us drawing connections to today's AI tech. While the movie's still sci-fi, AI's progress makes us think about its impact on our lives. AI can mimic human behavior, but remember, the film goes all-out with aliens taking over. It prompts discussions on AI's ethical use and its effects on our individuality. The film's like a warning to use tech responsibly while we ride the AI wave.

    ReplyDelete
  22. The film “Invasion of the Body Snatcher” does a good job in keeping us on edge and always guessing. The thought alone of your life being taken over is unnerving and the buildup created for Miles and Becky to be the last humans trying to escape the aliens is thrilling. Based on the time this movie was made, it could be interpreted that the producer, Walter Wagner, was trying to spread paranoia against harmful ideology. More specifically, raising concern over social communism or the mass hysteria of McCarthyism where many of the accused were blacklisted.
    - Hannah Parker

    ReplyDelete
  23. The Film “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” was interesting because it was said towards the end that it was aliens that were coming to invade the people, but without that narration, the viewers wouldn’t have known that it was aliens. The characters made it seem like it was some kind of neurosis or sickness that was overtaking people, when it actually was aliens. There have been a lot of different takes on aliens, but the idea that they take over the entirety of the human form is new to me.
    - Sara Skadberg

    ReplyDelete
  24. The film “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” is very unique and suspenseful. Definitely keeps your mind thinking throughout the whole thing. The idea that these actual people would be kidnapped while they slept and replaced with duplicates, stripping them of their power to defend themselves or flee, struck me as being completely ridiculous. The film's key themes include the loss of identity, the anxiety associated with fitting in, and the mistrust of others. It involves the invasion of aliens that produce emotionless human replicas, resulting in a society in which individuals are no longer unique.

    ReplyDelete
  25. The film the invasion of the body snatchers was interesting to me and eerie. The idea that someone we may know might now be who we have always known to be is a frightening concept. This reminded me of the sandman when Nathaniel didn’t realize Olympia was an automaton but everyone around him could see that she was lifeless. This also reminds me of the movie Us when the family had known Adelaide to be their mother and it is not until the end of the movie where the boy had realized that she was not their real mother. In both stories neither of the individuals seemed to realize that who they knew was not entirely real. I thought the beautiful stranger was interesting as well and has a different take on those we know being different or imposters. In her mind she is imagining her husband as a new person with a different personality; however he is the same but it is she that is making the change in her mind. She starts living in this fantasy and now has confused reality to fantasy similar to Nathaniel in the sandman.
    - Ashley Hernandez

    ReplyDelete
  26. The film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was suspenseful. I didn’t expect Becky to be replaced so quickly near the end of the film. As I was watching, I was wondering if Becky and Dr. Bernell were doing to get away from the pod people. I think there was some curiosity over the pod people/doppelgangers as well as them being scary. In the movie, Dr. Bernell encountered the pods in the greenhouse, and didn’t want Jack to kill them. The pods were scary and interesting because no one really knew where they came from, and no one had seen anything like it. Extraterrestrials seem fascinating and also frightening to people, because it's something so out of this world. People want to know more about them while also getting scared.
    -Jessyca Iswanto

    ReplyDelete
  27. Unease grips San Francisco when strange pods arrive from outer space. As psychiatrist Dr. Matthew Bennell and his colleagues investigate, they uncover a terrifying truth that no one wanted to know... the pods are replacing humans with emotionless duplicates. The city plunges into paranoia and mistrust as the invasion spreads. With their identities at stake, Dr. Bennell and his friends must stay vigilant, unsure whom they can trust. More than just a highly effective sci-fi thriller, the film features a loss of individuality with intelligence. a world without emotion would affect everything, which is more scary than the aliens themselves.

    ava Perry

    ReplyDelete
  28. The film "Invasion of the body Snatchers" was intriguing to me. I was captivated by what was happening during this film. It's crazy to think that these aliens are taking over other people and no one even knew. I felt connections in this film to the movie "Us" that we watched the other week. No one knew that the main character in that movie switched places as a child till the very end of the movie and same goes along with "Invasion of the Body Snatchers".
    - Rebecca Fyrer

    ReplyDelete
  29. Invasion of Body Snatcher is quite an interesting movie starting with the town becoming infiltrated with aliens and falling in love with Becky who is also one of ‘them’; what was more disturbing was that no one believed him. The movie's intention was to show that a virus of some sort can infiltrate a system and cause it to ramble from the inside out. The doctor had to destroy the threat.
    Ololade Ojekunle

    ReplyDelete
  30. I feel like the Invasion of Body Snatcher is interesting but also very scary to think about. Thinking about how people we know or are around could be something completely different and not what we imagine is frightening. Having aliens control human bodies and not realize it whatsoever. Not knowing where they came from or who around you could be one. It was very interesting to watch.
    Geneveve Provencial

    ReplyDelete
  31. "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" cleverly presents the infiltration of a small town by aliens that produce perfect duplicates of humans, devoid of emotion. The film taps into the fear of conformity, the loss of individuality, and the erosion of human connections. The tension builds progressively as the characters grapple with the horrifying realization that their loved ones are being replaced by these soulless replicas.- Katherine Arthurs

    ReplyDelete
  32. I found “The Invasion of the Body Snatchers” a good movie because it plays on our most fundamental anxieties about losing control and having our minds taken over by something we can't comprehend. It also plays on our inability to trust those around us because anyone may be a body snatcher masquerading as someone else. The idea that someone may become a mindless, soulless thing and lose their individuality is just as troubling.

    ReplyDelete
  33. I believe "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers" presents the idea of loss of identity and the threat to that identity. I can see similarities in this film to movie Us when the family always percieved Adelaide to be their mother and not until the end of the movie did they realized that she was not their real mother.

    Kaleigh Hopkins

    ReplyDelete
  34. I found "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" to be quite creepy to watch, and I can certainly understand why this movie is still well-known today. The theme of the doppelganger has been present in literature for centuries, and I believe it will continue to be a prominent theme for many more years. The fear of having one's life taken over by someone who is identical to you is possibly worse than the fear of death itself. It's deeply disturbing to humans because it feels as though everything you've lived for and achieved will no longer be yours, but instead, someone else's. In most stories, the doppelganger is portrayed as evil, and the thought of something impersonating us and doing harmful things is very unsettling. Moreover, the ending of the movie keeps you on edge, leaving you wondering about the ultimate outcome. Will the humans or the body snatchers emerge victorious?

    ReplyDelete
  35. Invasion of the body snatchers was a suspenseful, yet disturbing film to watch. A health inspector and his colleague discover that humans are being replaced by aliens that lack human emotion. This concept was terrifying, as the alien pods waited until humans were asleep to replace them. The idea of having your entire life and existence taken away in the blink of an eye is scary, especially in a vulnerable state. Considering it is still up for discussion if aliens are even real or not makes this whole idea when more frightening. This film was very similar to the last few discussions we have had, with loss of identity and fear being a major theme. Being able to connect these stories and films to one another the past few weeks has really peaked my interest.
    -Nicollette DeFusco

    ReplyDelete
  36. Well, to start it off both of these are WOW."The Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and "The Beautiful Stranger" are quite in sync, I feel like they truly feed off of each other. I was interested in the way the author used such harsh concept of people being taken by aliens and turned into an emotionless identical copy of themselves. While "The Beautiful Stranger" emphasis more on the challenges people face mentally on a day to day basis that most people aren't aware of. It honestly reminds me a little of one of my family members, where they served back in the day he was exposed to contaminated water. Leaving him with tremors and Parkinson's. Watching someone go from being able to ride a bike to not even being able to hold a cup of coffee without shaking every last drop out is hard. Not to mention them personally having to see that. Of course not making it known to use his worries and his depression, it is there. We just may not know fully all the time the issues people actually have going on in their head over things their body is doing that they don't have control with.

    ReplyDelete
  37. "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" The townspeople are being replaced by emotionless duplicates grown from plant-like pods. As Miles investigates, he discovers the sinister plot of an alien invasion aiming to take over humanity by replicating and replacing individuals with soulless duplicates. The stranger becomes the focus of fascination and obsession for the townspeople, leading to various reactions ranging from admiration to suspicion. The story explores themes of human nature, societal dynamics, and the impact of the unknown on a close connected community.

    ReplyDelete
  38. I enjoyed watching the "Invasion of the Body Snatchers". I thought the pods looked bizarre, and how the people acted as if they had no type of emotion and wanted everyone to become like them was creepy. I also thought it was ironic how Becky ended up becoming one of the emotionless aliens and Miles was left to go to the other city to warn everyone by himself. "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" has some correlations to the movie "Us" because in both movies the dopplergangers/duplicates are all emotionless who have a strong desire to achieve making everyone else become just like them or extinguishing their existence by killing them.
    -Elena Ruggieri

    ReplyDelete
  39. Invasions of The Body Snatchers is a highly entertaining science-fiction film that I found to be especially effective due to how it reflects societal fears from the era. There’s an underlying panic throughout the film — understandably, as people are being replaced by extraterrestrial pods. This taps into the fear of doubles our class has explored throughly this semester, as well as the fear of being replaced. Loss of identity is a prominent theme in Body Snatchers as well, as when captured, a ‘pod person’ loses all the features and characteristics that make up that individual’s personality. Initially I had suspected that the film may be a metaphor for the panic stirred by the ongoing Red Scare in the 1950s. However I feel that Body Snatchers only lightly taps into this at the start of the story, where the lingering “unknown” sows doubt and suspicion within the community. It’s a relatable human behavior to show fear for things we do not understand and that’s no different here. Most stories typically dismiss this attitude but I found the film to be somewhat unwilling to do so. The fear depicted in Body Snatchers is something of a worst case scenario, where suspicion is warranted and silence results in conformity. — Jaymes Raymond

    ReplyDelete
  40. Invasion of the body was disturbing to watch, but had its interesting parts. The main thing from the film was humans being replaced by aliens. It is a health inspector and another worker that discover this. I found this disturbing because of the lack of emotion, giving that lack of humanity feeling. The film shows a side of the conspiracy that aliens are real. Especially the part where they would wait until everybody was asleep to go in and replace them. There are theories that like this story line, take over the human species. It's what makes it interesting, since these theories have existed for a while. This film makes you reconsider the possibility of these things.

    - Emily Torrez

    ReplyDelete