Patricia Neal had recently turned her back on Hollywood for the New York stage and married Roald Dahl (with whom she settled in Buckinghamshire to raise a family) when she was offered this cheap, cheeky and stultifyingly humourless British rehash of 'The Day the Earth Stood'.
Helmut Dantine - like Michael Rennie in the original - performs Christ-like miracles like healing the sick and speaking in tongues; but like this film lacks a pulse. Instead of Bernard Herrmann's eerie theremin we occasionally get twee musical contributions from Eric Spear (later immortalised by the theme for 'Coronation Street'). The agreeable Hertfordshire exteriors compensate for director Burt Balaban's stilted interiors, and since it's only 76 minutes long you keep watching.
Helmut Dantine - like Michael Rennie in the original - performs Christ-like miracles like healing the sick and speaking in tongues; but like this film lacks a pulse. Instead of Bernard Herrmann's eerie theremin we occasionally get twee musical contributions from Eric Spear (later immortalised by the theme for 'Coronation Street'). The agreeable Hertfordshire exteriors compensate for director Burt Balaban's stilted interiors, and since it's only 76 minutes long you keep watching.