FIRST MEN IN THE MOON
''For the earlier film, see The First Men in the Moon (1919 film)''
'''First Men in the Moon''' is a 1964 science fiction film directed by Nathan Juran. The film is an adaptation of the H. G. Wells novel ''The First Men in the Moon'' and is also known as ''H.G. Wells' First Men in the Moon''. (The title of the novel includes the word ''the'' twice; the film titles only once). The novel was adapted for the screen by the noted science-fiction scriptwriter Nigel Kneale.
Ray Harryhausen provides stop-motion effects, animated Selenites, giant caterpillar-like "Moon Cows", and a big-brained Prime Lunar.
Joseph Cavor is played by Lionel Jeffries, Katherine 'Kate' Callender by Martha Hyer, and Arnold Bedford by Edward Judd.
| Contents |
| Plot |
| See also |
| External links |
Plot
The film begins in the 1960s with a multi-national group of astronauts in a UN spacecraft, believing themselves to be the first lunar explorers. They discover a Union Flag on the moon's surface and a note naming Bedford and Cavor. American authorities trace the aged Bedford to a British nursing home, and he tells them the story of the true first lunar expedition.
In 1899, Victorian Britain, Professor Joseph Cavor invents ''Cavorite'', a substance that allows objects to deflect the force of gravity. He builds a spherical spaceship that travels to the Moon using the anti-gravity properties of ''Cavorite''. He and his companions travel to the lunar surface where they are captured by the insect-like Moon inhabitants, the ''Selenites'', which live in huge cities beneath the Moon's surface.
The Selenites quickly learn English and interrogate Cavor, who believes they wish to exchange scientific knowledge. The more practical Bedford eventually manages to persuade Cavor that the Selenites are interested in conquering the Earth using Cavorite. (In this, the film departs from the original, where that possibility in no way arises and in fact it is the Selenites who are threatened with colonization by Earth humans.) Cavor helps Bedford and Callender to escape but stays voluntarily on the Moon.
Returning to the present, the American astronauts break into the Selenite city, only to find it deserted and decaying. In a plot twist "borrowed" from Wells' other famous novel ''The War of the Worlds'', Bedford realises that the Selenites must have been killed off by Cavor's common cold viruses to which they had no immunity.
See also
★ List of stop-motion films
External links
★
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