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Invasion USA
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Directed by Alfred E. Green.
A handful of strangers are suddenly thrown together as America goes face-to-face against the Communist threat in this curious example of Cold War exploitation. A few people are enjoying drinks in a Manhattan cocktail lounge - television reporter Vince Potter (Gerald Mohr), vacationing tractor tycoon George Sylvester (Robert Bice), cattle baron Ed Mulfory (Erik Blythe), Congressman Arthur Harroway) (Wade Crosby), aimless party girl Carla Sandford (Peggie Castle), and cheerfully dunderheaded bartender Tim (Tom Kennedy). As they discuss the state of the world and their disinterest with U.S. defense and paying taxes, one Mr. Ohman (Dan O'Herlihy) begins swirling his brandy snifter, and before long the other patrons are lulled into a hypnotic state, where they're given a sneak preview of what to expect when an unnamed Communist nation invades the West Coast. Mulfory is able to return home just in time to see his ranch flooded by enemy sabotage, armed troops take over Sylvester's factory, the Congressman watches as Reds seize power, and the suddenly patriotic Carla falls in love with Vince as he covers the brave but futile resistance dished out by our ill-equipped and poorly-prepared military forces. Spectacularly paranoid and loaded with often tattered stock footage, Invasion USA was shot in a mere seven days on a budget of $127,000, and ended up earning its producers well over a million dollars upon its initial release in 1952. Superman fans take note: Phyllis Coates and Noel Neill, both of whom played Lois Lane in the 50's television series The Adventures of Superman, appear in Invasion USA's supporting cast. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
A big hit with Cold War era audiences, Invasion USA may still have some appeal for audience members with an unquenchable thirst for all things anti-Communist, but even diehards may flinch at the heavyhandedness that permeates Invasion. Written with a sledgehammer rather than a typewriter, Invasion's screenplay hammers home its point relentlessly, and if it feels that someone in the audience may perhaps have missed a point, it is happy to repeat it again and again. Invasion also may set a new record for the amount of stock footage used in one film, as a huge percentage of the picture is made up of footage found in earlier movies, newsreels and other sources. Director Alfred E. Green is perhaps a bit more successful at integrating the stock film into the picture than he is at wringing real drama from the crudely manipulative screenplay -- but only a tiny bit more. The performances are as to-the-point as the material, with precious little time for anything resembling subtlety or nuance. As drama, Invasion is a total waste, but it does hold some interest as comedy for those who appreciate over-the-top films and as a social study of the era. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
 



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